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Jiangsu's Special New Year Traditions Updated: 2005-01-24
Besides traditional festive activities like pasting spring couplets and New
Year paintings, staying up late into the night on New Year's Eve, performing dragon
dances and bainian, or paying New Year calls, people in Jiangsu
Province have many other special customs to celebrate the festival.
The locals in Suzhou
City like to eat cooked chufa buried in rice when having dinner, which literally
means digging out yuanbao (shoe-shaped gold or silver ingots). The tea added
with two green olives is called Yuanbao Tea. The two kinds of food both
symbolize wealth and fortune in the coming year.
The Wujin locals will hang the pictures of their ancestors in the hall of the
house on the morning of the first day of the first lunar month, with fruit
offerings and New Year cakes. The family members will worship the ancestors on
bended knees in turn. No sweeping the floor on the first day of the New Year is
allowed. And no rubbish would be swept out of the house during the following
days. In sweeping, there is a superstition that if you sweep the dust and dirt
out of your house by the front entrance is to sweep away the good fortune of the
family; it must always be swept inwards and then carried out, then no harm will
follow. All dirt and rubbish must be taken out the back door.
Other traditions include the Drum Dance in Jiangning,
which brings the festival there to a climax, and the custom of hanging gingili
stalk, holly and cypress branch at the doorway, which symbolizes higher year by
year and ever-green, etc.
There are also certain precautions to take in Jiangsu area during the Spring
Festival season, for instance, the use of knives and scissors -- indeed any
sharp instrument -- is to be avoided, for these things could augur bad luck in
the coming year.
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