BEIJING, Jan. 13 -- Within this poem, we can discover some of the many traditions for this special occasion, including exploding firecrackers, drinking wine and decorative couplets. Meanwhile today on In the Spotlight, ... will take a look at some of the more practiced traditions from the modern Spring festival
season.
Currently, everywhere you go in China, you should be able
to find hoards of decorations, including Spring couplets, images of the Chinese
character "Fu" for luck and happiness, paper cuts, Chinese tassels and red
lanterns. Moreover, these sights will dazzle your eyes in whatever direction you
may peer, from doors and frames, windows and walls, ceilings and eaves, shops
and offices.
This wealth of imagery is no surprise though, since
decorating the home has long been an important task during the Spring Festival
season. Indeed, the period before Spring Festival is an extremely hectic once,
with shoppers scurrying around to buy that must-have red stuff needed to usher
in the Lunar New Year.
I've bought some New Year's Paintings. I hope that
these paintings will bring fortune to my home and happiness in the new year.
I've bought a pair of Spring Couplets. The head reads
'Safe and sound with everything proceeding well in the New Spring', while the
tail reads 'Congratulations for the Festival and may your family be blessed with
auspiciousness and wealth'. By this I hope my family will be healthy, happy,
lucky and prosperous in the new year, and that all the best things will come to
us."
"I want to make this Spring festival a jolly one, so
I'm getting some lanterns, and Spring couplets to make my family safe and sound
in the new year. I've also bought a 'Fu' character to make the new year a happy
new year."
"I also bought some window paper-cuts. They'll make
my room livelier. I'm going to paste different patterns in different rooms, so
that happiness and good fortune will come to our house from every direction."
While the importance attached to these decorations
reflect people's natural wishes for a happy new year, they also hold up a mirror
to extremely old cultural traditions. As a first example, the red Spring
couplets are an interesting variation on an old Chinese custom. Here's Prof.
Duan Baolin, vice-Secretary general of the China Folk Artists Association.
"Red Spring couplets are intended to scare off the
monster Nian. They evolved from "peach wood charms," which reputably had the
power to scatter evil spirits when hung on door frames in earlier times. Later,
painted door gods replaced these peach wood charms. Subsequently, more and more
people these days use Spring couplets to replace these door gods. Spring
couplets are a congregation of many cultural elements, such as calligraphy,
poetic art and meaningful language. A couplet is made up of two lines of verse,
which are called the "head" and the "tail" respectively, and which should
correspond with each other phonologically and syntactically, word for word,
phrase for phrase."
As one of the main forms of Spring Festival
decoration, couplets are Chinese good luck sayings written in black on red
paper, often with gold trimmings thrown in. These verses usually dwell upon good
fortune, longevity and happiness. In choosing such topics, they cater to the
different needs of a varied demographic, suggests a retailer at one of Beijing's
markets.
"Couplets like 'Everywhere you go, important people
will help you out in times of trouble; from every direction, money and treasure
will gather to your threshold'- these are most favored by business oriented
families. Meanwhile, couplets like 'Good year, good luck and good fortune; more
money, more happiness and more auspiciousness' - these find favor with more
senior buyers."
However, couplets do not have a complete monopoly in
the market of achieving luck through decoration. As one of the characters that
best epitomizes Chinese culture, the word Fu, meaning happiness, luck and
fortune, is also a mandatory part of the Spring Festival. Written on a square
piece of red paper, Fu can be pasted normally or upside down, since in the
latter case, the character implies that "good fortune has arrived". In this way,
these paper squares also represent the "arrival" of a prosperous year.
Chinese tassels are another favorite adornment during
Spring Festival. Like paper-cuts, they mainly serve a decorative function,
although they also possess underlying meanings of auspiciousness. Here's a
seller showing off his collection to potential customers.
"Owning China knots at home during Spring Festival
will fill your house with a happy mood. This one here has a small cloisonn¨¦ vase
weaved into its pattern - it signifies safety all year round. We've also got
auspicious knots, lucky star knots, safety and fortune knots. Meanwhile, those
fish, corn and peanut patterns represent good harvest."
Red couplets, red lanterns, red 'fu' characters, red
paper-cuts, red tassels; seemingly all the decorations for this festival are
red. Vice secretary general of the China folk Artists Association, Duan Baolin,
explains the Chinese fascination with this color.
"Firstly, Chinese people love the color red because
it represents bright future and prosperity. However, another reason for this
special favor towards red relates to the legend of Nian, a kind of monster,
which came at the end of every year to eat human beings and animals. Gradually
people found that this monster Nian was afraid of three things, all relating to
fire, that is, light, the sounds of explosion and the color red. From this
discovery comes the custom of letting off firecrackers, lighting red lanterns
and pasting red couplets. If people passed the year's end without being hurt by
this monster, then they'd say that they had passed the Nian, or passed the
year."
With all these decorations complete, Chinese people
can settle down to their lively new year celebrations. Yet having said that,
they still have to pay attention to avoid certain taboos, otherwise all their
previous work will have been in vain. Therefore, if you're not very familiar
with Chinese traditions but currently live here, you should pay special
attention to professor Duan Baolin, as he explains the dos and donts of Spring
Festival:
"The Spring Festival marks the beginning of a new
year. In Chinese people's minds, a trouble-free, happy day signals that the
whole year will be smooth and easy, while any mishaps indicate a turbulent year
ahead. So on this very first day of the new year, people avoid using scissors
and knives; this expresses their hope for peace and also symbolizes that those
who have labored all year long will not have to work as hard in the new year.
Also on this day, you should refrain from saying anything inauspicious, such as
'death' or 'bad luck' while any quarrelling should certainly be avoided.
Obviously, you should also take care not to break household items such as vases
and cups, as this would be regarded as a very unlucky sign. However, if you do
happen to break something, then you should say 'Safe and Sound Year after Year'
to ward off any bad luck. Finally, do not sweep the floors or throw out rubbish
on the first day of the Spring Festival, because you may unwittingly sweep your
fortune out of the front door as well."
Nowadays most people no longer pay serious attention
to these taboos. On the other hand, many of them are still followed, since, as
people like to say, they certainly do no harm, and certainly make Spring
Festival a lot more interesting.
(Source: CRIENGLISH. com)