Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Chinese Way>Custom
 
 
 

Half Year Festival celebrates family reunion

2013-07-08 11:21:23

(Shanghai Daily)

 

Today is the day to look forward and back, hold a feast, enjoy family reunion and pray for good weather.

This is the midpoint in the Chinese lunar calendar, the first day of the sixth month and it is known as Ban Nian Jie, or the Half Year Festival.

Traditionally, everything required for a Spring Festival feast to welcome the lunar new year is needed to celebrate the half year, however, it's not observed nationwide.

Among Han people it's traditional to celebrate the achievements of the first half year and to pray for food fortune in the next.

It's still a big day for people in the south, such as Zhejiang, Fujian and Hunan provinces, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Taiwan.

A big feast with family reunion, firecrackers, zong zi (glutinous rice stuffed with fillings and wrapped in leaves) and balls of sticky rice and red yeast rice are necessary on the day.

In some regions, it is the second-biggest festival of the year after Spring Festival.

The tradition dates back 800 years. According to legend, a drought hit Jiashanwu Village in Louta Town of Hangzhou. The sun blazed and scorched the fields for 81 days after the Qingming Festival and people suffered greatly in a famine.

One day an old man with silver hair visited the village and was moved by the suffering. He promised to help on one condition - everyone should have fun for three days, as if they were celebrating the new year.

Villages had nothing for a feast, but they still managed a lively celebration. They used paper to make chickens, ducks and pigs and lighted bamboo joints as firecrackers.

On the third day, when all villagers knelt in a field and burned incense, thunder cracked the sky and a heavy rain fell.

The villagers started farming immediately and the harvest was excellent.

We recommend:

Scenery of stilted houses of Tujia ethnic group Scenery of Zhaoxing Dong Village in Liping, SW China Worshipping protector of women & children
1 2



8.03K

 

 


 
Print
Save