Local cultural traditions merge with Spring Festival to enrich celebrations across the country, Zhao Ruinan reports.
Dates for the Tibetan New Year can vary in the Xizang Autonomous Region, depending on altitude and harvest time. But this year the festival — known as Losar — coincides with Spring Festival on Feb 10. As it draws near, Tsetan Wangmo, a resident of Lhasa, Xizang, eagerly awaits.
For Tibetans, Losar is a time of joyous gatherings and lively parties, symbolizing new beginnings and providing an opportunity to rekindle friendships and express love.
"Losar is one of the most important holidays for Tibetans," Tsetan Wangmo said. "It represents a fresh start, new plans and hope for the coming year. It brings people together. It allows us to reinvigorate our relationships."
Preparations for the Tibetan New Year have already commenced in her household. House cleaning plays a significant role. Along with many other Tibetans, she will consult a monk or astrologer to pick an auspicious day for the annual cleaning ritual, followed by the symbolic act of discarding rubbish in a specific direction based on the consultation's outcome.
Preparations also include traditional activities — frying pastries, air-drying meat, purchasing new clothes or stocking up on various snacks, fruits and nuts. Tsetan Wangmo said her family has already prepared air-dried yak meat and plans to do more shopping in the next few days.
On the first day of Losar, families typically celebrate within their own homes. From the second day onward, they invite relatives and friends to gatherings, which last for at least 15 days and include plenty of barley wine and beer.
The Tibetan New Year, one of the most important traditional festivals for the Tibetan people, is not just about the harvest, reunions or blessings. It also serves as a vehicle for preserving ethnic culture and showcasing ethnic characteristics and spirit, said Zhong Jinwen, a professor at Minzu University of China's School of Chinese Ethnic Minority Languages and Literature in Beijing.
In China, ethnic groups typically have their own traditional calendars. The timing of the Tibetan New Year is determined by one of those unique calculations.
A member of the Va ethnic group performs a wooden drum dance in Cangyuan Va Autonomous County in Yunnan. [Photo/China Daily] |
"Paying respect to elders, preparing delicacies, offering sacrifices and performing dances and songs are all important rituals for the New Year's celebrations of various ethnic groups," Zhong said.
In Yunnan Province, the Va people kick off their celebration on the 30th day of the 12th lunar month, their most joyous day of the year.Leading up to the event, every Va household begins making rice wine from locally grown red rice at least a month ahead of time.
The year's final day is a busy one: Residents prepare food, soak glutinous rice, slaughter pigs and kill chickens. The elders interpret chicken omens by observing the part of the bird's thigh that is connected to its body. This tells them whether the household will have good fortune and abundance in the coming year.
The jubilant festivities go on and on. The village's elders ignite bonfires while reciting blessings and prayers for the community, hoping for a year of favorable weather and a happy and healthy life for all. People of all ages in the village play drums and gongs to accompany songs and dances. The revelry often extends late into the night.
Yang Fuquan, a researcher at the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences, said Spring Festival is not just for the Han people.
"Many ethnic minorities also celebrate it, each with their unique customs," he said. "Virtually all of the 56 ethnic groups in China now celebrate Spring Festival, but many have also integrated their own cultural elements, further enriching the cultural connotations of the festival."
Zhong, the professor, said that at some level Spring Festival serves as "a stage for the display of various ethnic cultures".
"For example, people from different ethnic groups wear traditional costumes, conduct their ethnic ceremonies and perform dances and songs in different styles," he said. "It is a form of social unity in the context of ethnic diversity."
Women present a unique hair-swinging dance in Ximeng Va Autonomous County in Yunnan Province. [Photo/China Daily] |
This unity is reflected in the Dong ethnic culture as the ethnic group celebrates two New Year's festivals — their own and that of the Han people.
Before the lunar calendar was introduced to the Dong, New Year's celebrations were already taking place. Traditionally, they consider the completion of agricultural activity after the autumn harvest to mark the beginning of a new year — around the end of the 10th month or the beginning of the 11th month of the lunar calendar.
"From the second day of Lunar New Year until the 15th day of the first lunar month, we have a village celebration every evening," said Meng Yongfan, Party secretary of Guangnan Village in Longsheng County in the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
Meng described how Dong villagers sing folk songs and play the pipa. Every evening, the village's auditorium hosts a "fantastic" show, whose participants are chosen from among the villagers by casting lots. The selected group is responsible for the evening's performance until the 15th day of the first lunar month. Every evening features a lively Dong cultural feast.
"Do not underestimate the troupes in each village. These groups, consisting of just five or six members, or maybe a dozen, encapsulate the essence of minority culture," said Huang Zhongjing, a folk customs expert in the county.
"Folk culture significantly influences our daily lives, from the food we eat to the clothes we wear, the places we inhabit and the way we move," Huang said. "Cultural troupes showcase our lives through their performances. For instance, the dragon lantern dance, which originated more than 1,700 years ago, is performed during Spring Festival to honor the dragon for saving lives, to pray for rain and to seek blessings."
Over time, the event evolved into a form of entertainment, sports and dance.
"Now, during festive occasions, the cultural troupe will perform dragon lantern dances in many situations," Huang said.
Professor Zhong said the celebration of Spring Festival across various ethnic groups affirms social unity and shows respect for ethnic differences. Also, in addition to serving as carriers of the cultural traditions of ethnic minorities, the rich and colorful festival customs have become a significant draw for tourists in recent years.
Students from major universities across the country visit Guangnan Village regularly for pleasure and study, listening to Dong folk songs and admiring the traditional architecture. Many characteristic festival activities have become attractions.
In Tuanbao Town in Lichuan, Hubei Province, more than 200 tourists gathered at the Fenshui Resort to experience the unique customs of the Tujia ethnic group as the people greet the new year and say goodbye to the old.
For the Tujia people, ciba, a glutinous rice cake, is an essential element of Spring Festival.The process of making it is hard work, as the glutinous rice must be soaked in water for at least three days and washed three times until clear.Then, it's steamed for at least an hour before being put into a stone tank for men to pound, taking turns with wooden hammers.
"It was my first time making ciba," said Xiong Xiumei, a resident. "We all took turns pounding the rice. It was a lot of fun."
Along with making ciba, traditional New Year's customs for the Tujia and Miao ethnic groups include slaughtering pigs and enjoying a special soup called paotang. These customs have evolved into a rich set of folk activities and have become a significant attraction for tourists in the town.
After a busy morning, with pig's blood and meat cooking, the official paotang soup ceremony begins.
The feast involves serving seven large bowls and eight large plates filled with various dishes made from fresh parts of the pig. The traditional activity marks the successful conclusion of the year's harvest and serves as a prayer for favorable weather in the coming year.
Traditional sports activities — spinning tops, jumping rope and kicking shuttlecocks — were also organized at night during shousui, a custom in which people stay up all night to ward off evil and disease and welcome a new year.
A tourist commented: "Attending this event not only allowed us to experience the culture of ethnic minorities, listen to the unique mountain folk songs of Lichuan and play with spinning tops but also gave me a deeper understanding of the culture and customs of the Tujia and Miao minorities. The experience was completely different from a typical sightseeing tour."
Minzu University's Zhong believes that promoting the ethnic groups' customs will help preserve and develop cultural heritage and attract tourists from other regions.
"It is important to support and preserve traditional ethnic festivals and their unique celebrations, such as the Dai water-splashing festival in Yunnan, which was popular last year," Zhong said.
Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, received more than 2 million tourists in April, a 300 percent increase over the previous year. They brought in revenues of around 2.12 billion yuan ($295 million).
Dai people, clad in traditional costumes, danced and sang while splashing water on each other as a prayer for good fortune and to express good wishes.
"This will promote mutual understanding and exchanges among various ethnic groups," Zhong said. "For example, many tourists from non-ethnic minority areas will have a better understanding of local minority cultures. At the same time, exchanges between tourists and locals will diversify local culture. This is a two-way interaction and integration."
Palden Nyima in Lhasa, Li Yingqing in Kunming, Shi Ruipeng in Nanning and Liu Kun in Wuhan contributed to this story.
(Source: China Daily)
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