HONG KONG, June 19 (Xinhua) -- "I enjoyed the Dragon
Boat Festival very much and this is the tenth year for me participating the
annual boat race," John Pache, a paddler from Royal X Men team said on the beach
of Stanley, south coast of Hong Kong Island, as thousands of Hong Kong people
gathering along the bay enjoying the Dragon Boat Festival Tuesday.
Dragon Boat Festival, a traditional Chinese holiday
(on May 5 according to Lunar Calendar) originated from the Warring States
period, is said to be a day commemorating patriotic poet Qu Yuan, who drowned
himself in a river to protest the corruptive government. In order to prevent his
body from eaten by fish, villagers rowed boats and tossed rice dumplings into
the river to feed the fish. And therefore boat races and rice dumplings become
the features of the festival.
Yet, the sad story of Qu Yuan is not that clearly
remembered, instead the dragon boat races, rice dumplings and the happy festival
spirit are the major elements when people think about Dragon Festival.
The famous dragon boat races in Stanley started late
1960s has now developed into an international event involving about 140 teams
each year, which attract individuals, clubs and companies as participants and
thousands of locals and visitors as sightseers.
According to the Stanley Boat Race organizer, the
annual boat race this year has attracted over 200 teams and half of them are
multinational with foreign racers who enjoyed traditional Chinese culture and
dragon boating as much as local people.
"I love dragon boating and rice dumplings. It is good
for Hong Kong to organize a event like this every year and pass the tradition
from generation to generation," said John about his impression on this Chinese
holiday.
And for Kathy, a paddler just finished the final
competition with her team members, the whole race is just fun. "I just love it.
Riding on a narrow, long boat under the beautiful sunshine, paddling with other
girls and listening to the drums. We all have fun," said Kathy excitingly.
Kathy is right. Every racer looks so happy after the
race that it is hard for the audience to tell which team is the winner. Or
perhaps, to win or lose is not important at all both for the racers and audience
because the most important thing is they all have fun.