Happy New Year of the Rooster!
Today is Chinese new year. Not only the Chinese, but some other Asian countries follow the Lunar Calendar, that's why their year starts today and their New Year's Day moves from year to year, but is always around this time, between end of January and mid February.
The change of the year is a big event, as it is for us. The difference is, that in Asia, the festivities are more traditional and date back not centuries, but millennia. It is a very colourful and noisy event and whoever happens to witness it, will remember it for a lifetime.
Something else is different. With the new year comes a new star sign. The year of the monkey just passed, and we welcome the year of the rooster, and not the year of the cock or chicken as some might say. People store or throw away whatever monkey decoration they had and bring out or buy rooster decoration and decorate their premisses and especially their doors and windows. People, especially the Chinese, are very superstitious and believe in spirits and supernatural powers.
New year means also the days of the Red Packages. Red is the lucky colour and whenever you want to give some Hongbao, you either put money in a red envelope and hand it to the person you want, or you do it electronically via WeChat and send a red packet up to 200 yuan (23 pounds) to a friend of yours. If you are a member in one or more groups on WeChat, click on the symbol as quick as you can before the money is gone and see how much you've got. The more people are in a group and the more groups you're in, the higher the chances you have to earn some money.
This is what it looks like on WeChat. In this photo you see my group and the Red Packet I sent. I donated 50 yuan to be shared among 20 people. You can write a message on your packet. Underneath there are the names of the people who opened the red packet. 42 is the name of my group (readers of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy will understand the reference) and 142 are the members in the group).
This is what you see if you click on the symbol above. You see the name of the donor, the message and some notification/information, which is usually in Chinese. Now you have to click on OPEN.Once you've clicked on OPEN, you'll see how much you've got and a list with the names of the people who also got lucky and the amount they received. As you can see the amount is random. You can set a fixed amount for everyone if you want.
This is a Red Packet I received from my dear friend Mi. Eight is the lucky number, so triple eight means lots of luck for me.
And here's some New Year's fun.
That's what decorated doors and windows look like (banners are usually in Chinese)
Here are some funny videos (may not show or play on iPhones and/or iPads).
This is what my friend Jia Jia says (opens in a new window)
This is what a Chinese man says (opens in a new window)
No comments:
Post a Comment