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Traditional Chinese New Year Customs, Part 2
(Clearwisdom.net) Open-door Firecrackers On Chinese New Year's Day in the morning, the first thing people do after
opening the door is set off firecrackers to bring great luck for the new year.
This is called "open-door firecrackers." Pieces of red firecracker
paper cover the ground like a brocade. This is called "full house
red." The streets are covered with red, which creates an auspicious and
jubilant atmosphere. Bai Nian--Paying New Year's Call Another important traditional activity is to visit friends, relatives and
neighbors, to convey New Year greetings. This is called "Bai Nian"-
paying New Year's call. This tradition is from the Han Nationality, which
started in the Han Dynasty and became very popular during the Tang and Song
Dynasties. Those who do not visit in person may use cards to send their
greetings. From the time of the Ming Dynasty on, many families placed a red
paper bag on the gate of their house to collect greeting cards. This is called a
"gate book." According to social conventions, there are perhaps four categories of
reciprocally paying New Year's calls: The first is visiting relatives. One must take presents on Chinese New Year's
Day to one's parents-in-law's home. After entering the house, each person must
first kowtow, three times, to the Buddha's statues and ancestors' pictures and
memorial tablets. Then one kowtows to every older family member. One may stay
there for meal and play. The second category is the courtesy visit. For example, when visiting at a
friend or colleague's home, one only kowtows to the Buddha's statue. If the
visitor and the host are of the same generation, one only bows with hands
clasped. If the host is older than the visitor, the visitor should take the
initiative to kowtow while the host should leave his seat to raise him up by the
arm and repeatedly say, "forgo formalities," to show humility. This
kind of visit should be brief. After exchanging conventional greetings the
visitor should take his or her leave. The host should then choose a date to pay
a return visit. The third category is a visit of appreciation, which is to take an
opportunity to deliver New Year's greetings and presents while visiting those
who have done one a favor in the past year. They include teachers, doctors and
others. The fourth category is a drop-in visit. Neighbors who usually don't have much
contact customarily go into each others' yards during the Chinese New Year and
offer greetings, with hands clasped saying, "Wish you great wealth!"
"May everything be smooth in the New Year!" The visitor only stays
briefly in the host's house without exchanging excessive courtesies. In ancient times there was a difference between paying a New Year's call (Bai
Nian) and extending New Year greetings (He Nian). Paying a New Year's call is to
deliver greetings to one's elders, while extending New Year's greetings is the
reciprocal greeting among people of the same generation. Paying a New Year's call is a traditional Chinese custom. It is a way for
people to discard the old for the new, and mutually express their best wishes.
In ancient times, "paying new year's call" originally meant to greet
and celebrate the new year with one's elders, including kowtowing to the elders,
wishing them a happy new year, good health, good life and so on. When meeting
relatives and friends of the same generation, one should salute and greet them
as well. In ancient times, if there were too many neighbors, relatives and friends to
personally visit in turn, a person might have dispatched a servant to deliver
cards to pay New Year's calls. These are known as "flying cards."
Families usually placed a red paper bag by the main house gates with the words
"meets the luck" written on the front of the bag to collect the
"flying cards." This custom started with the upper classes in the Song
Dynasty. Rich people use a "gate book" to record visitors' information
and "flying cards" received. Today, people send New Year's greeting
cards, which is a variation of the original "flying card" delivery of
ancient times. The upper class literary intelligentsia used cards to send New Year's
greetings to one another. At that time the literary intelligentsia was a wide
circle of friends. It was time and energy consuming to pay all the New Year's
calls in person. A special way existed to contact those with whom they were not
too close; they used a specific kind of writing paper, printed with a plum
blossoms design and cut into two-inch wide and three-inch long cards. They wrote
the recipient's name, address and congratulatory words on it, and asked servants
to deliver this personalized card instead of paying a personal New Year's call.
In the Ming Dynasty, people used greeting cards to pay their respects, which
took the place of paying a personal New Year's call. Greeting cards are a
convenient and practical way to send regards and keep in touch, one that is
still popular today. Probably from the Qing Dynasty on, paying a New Year's call added the
formality of "group respect" in which people gathered in groups to
celebrate and salute one another at the beginning of the New Year. Paying New Year's calls lasts until the Lantern Festival, which is January 15
of the lunar calendar. Visiting others' homes at night to express New Year's
greetings is called "paying a night call." Paying a New Year's calls
after January 10 of the lunar year is called "paying a lantern call."
If for some reason one cannot pay a New Year's call in time and one pays a
makeup visit later, it is called "paying a late New Year's call." Predicting the coming year In old times people predicted the outcome of the year by the weather of the
first few days of a new year. This is based on a book, "Year
Prediction" by Dongfang Shuo of the Han Dynasty. It counts the first eight
days of a new year. The first day is the day of the chicken, the second day is
the dog, the third is the pig, the fourth is the sheep, the fifth is the cow,
the sixth is the horse, the seventh is human, the eighth is grain. If the day is
sunny, then the corresponding things will breed well and prosper in the coming
year; if the day is cloudy, the corresponding will not prosper. The descendants
follow this custom and think it is auspicious if the weather for the first ten
days of a new year is clear and bright, without wind or snow. The descendants
also developed a series of sacrificial offerings and celebrations. The custom
includes no killing of chickens on the first day, no killing of dogs on the
second day, no killing of pigs on the third day, etc., and no execution of a
death sentence on the seventh day. Posting Pictures of Chickens In ancient times people drew pictures of chickens on doors and windows to
disperse ghosts and evil spirits. A book in the Jin Dynasty speaks of the
heavenly chicken on Dushuo Mountain. When the first sunshine arrived at a big
tree, the heavenly chicken crows. As soon as it crows, worldly chickens start to
crow as well. Therefore, a paper cut of a chicken displayed during a new year
actually symbolizes the heavenly chicken. Ancient myths also told that a chicken
is a transformation of the Chongming bird. During Emperor Yao's time, a
neighboring country paid tribute to the Chongming bird. The Chongming bird is
said to exorcise evil spirits. Everybody welcomed the arrival of the Chongming
bird. Nevertheless, the tribute ambassador did not arrive every year, so people
put engraved wooden or brass casts of the Chongming bird on the gateway, or drew
an image of the Chongming bird on windows and doors, to drive away the evil
spirits and ghosts. Because the Chongming bird looks like a chicken, later on
people gradually changed it to the picture of a chicken or chicken paper-cut and
pasted it on windows and doors. Legend has it that this is how the art of paper
cutting originated. Ancient Chinese people especially valued the chicken and called it "bird
of five virtues." It has a crown, which represents the virtue of art; its
feet are good for fighting, representing military virtue; a chicken dares to
fight the enemy, which represents courage; a chicken summons others after
finding food, which is the virtue of kindness; a chicken reliably announces the
dawn, which represents the virtue of trust. People not only use a paper-cut
chicken as part of New Year's celebration, but they also call the first day of
the New Year "chicken day." Gathering Wealth There is another saying, that the first day of the New Year is "the
broom's birthday." On this day one cannot use the broom; otherwise one
might sweep away luck, suffer unexpected financial loss and bring in "the
comet" which causes bad luck. If one must sweep the floor, one must sweep
from outside to inside. This day one cannot splash water or dump trash, either,
fearing that it brings suffering and unexpected financial loss. Today, many
places also preserve this custom. People do a thorough cleaning on New Year's
Eve, and on New Year's Day they do not use the broom or dump the trash. They
prepare one big barrel to hold waste-water without splashing it outside.
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