Little New Year
The evening before Little New Year, the image of the Kitchen God that has
been overseeing the household for the past year is taken down from its position
by the stove. While the image is dried in preparation for burning, offerings and
firewood are prepared. The firewood may include bundles of pine, cypress, holly,
and pomegranate twigs. A new image of the Kitchen God is purchased, and figures
of horses and dogs are plaited out of sorghum stalks. The offerings include
pig's head, fish, sweet bean paste, melons, fruit, boiled dumplings, barley
sugar, and guandong candy, a sticky treat made out of glutinous millet and
sprouted wheat. Most of the offerings are sweets of various sorts. It is thought
that this will seal the Kitchen God's mouth and encourage him to only say
good things about the family when he ascends to Heaven to make his report. The
Kitchen God will be invited to sit in a sedan chair for his trip to Heaven. Consequently, the day
before Little New Year, streets and alleyways everywhere are full of vendors
selling papermache sedan chairs and paper gold and silver ingots for the Kitchen
God's journey, and singing songs in his honor.
When a family makes offerings to the Kitchen God, it is in the hopes that he
will ask Heaven to protect their household. According to an old maxim, "In
Heaven good deeds are reported, on Earth safety is ensured." The new image of
the Kitchen God is not pasted up until Lunar New Year's Eve or New Year's Day,
in a ceremony known as "welcoming back the Kitchen God." According to a saying
from southern China, "On the twenty-fourth day he ascends to Heaven; on New
Year's Day he returns to Earth."
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