BEIJING, May 28 (Xinhua) -- Zhang Xuanqi got up
Thursday morning and fastened a small hand-made scent bag on his shirt. This
kind of adornment has been a must for him on this special day every year since
his childhood.
"Inside the bag is cinnabar that can keep away
evils," said Zhang, a middle school student in Quwo County, Shanxi Province.
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Local people take part in the dragon
boat race to mark the Duanwu Festival, also known as the Dragon Boat
Festival, in Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan Province, May 28, 2009.
The Duanwu Festival falls on May 5 of Chinese lunar calendar. This year's
Duanwu festival falls on Thursday.It is generally believed that the Duanwu
Festival is marked to remember to Qu Yuan, one of the greatest ancient
Chinese poets who drowned himself in the Miluo river to protest the
corrupt court. (Xinhua/Jiang Hongjing) Photo Gallery>>> |
As Chinese celebrated the Dragon Boat Festival, or
Duanwu, which fell on Thursday this year, folk customs for this event have been
reviving among both the old and young in this fast developing country. To wear
small bags, usually with cinnabar, medicinal herbs or aromatic materials inside,
is one of the traditions.
The festival is for people to remember Qu Yuan, a
patriotic poet more than 2,000 years ago, who, according to legend, drowned
himself in the Miluo River in Hunan Province to protest the then corrupt
kingdom.
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Residents take part in a Zongzi making
competition in Zhoushan, east China's Zhejiang Province, May 28, 2009, to
celebrate the Chinese traditional Duanwu Festival, also known as the
Dragon Boat Festival. (Xinhua/Hu Sheyou) Photo
Gallery>>> |
People
also eat glutinous rice dumplings wrapped in bamboo leaves, or called zongzi, to
observe the festival. Legend has it that people drop zongzi into the water to
feed Qu Yuan's spirit. Others say that they are meant to keep fish from feeding
on Qu's body.
VARIOUS ACTIVITIES
On Thursday, dragon boat races were organized in many
places across the country.
To mark the event, the 2009 National Dragon Boat
Month and the Fourth China International Dragon Boat Tournament kicked off on
the Miluo River. Ten domestic teams and an American team joined the competition.
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Chinese folk artists perform lion dance
to mark the Duanwu Festival, also known as the Dragon Boat Festival, in
Baoshan, east China's Shanghai Municipality, May 28,
2009. (Xinhua/Liu Ying) Photo Gallery>>> |
"Our fishermen members have been making use of the
fishing ban period from late January to September to have dragon boat race
training," said Jin Fangming, coach for the team from eastern Jiangsu Province.
In southern Guangdong Province, 68-year-old farmer
Yao Songjie in Yangqi Village joined a boat race with dozens of other
participants .
"This is an activity we farmers love most," he said
before the race began.
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Chinese folk artists perform for local
residents to mark the Duanwu Festival, also known as the Dragon Boat
Festival, in Taiyuan, capital city of north China's Shanxi Province, May
28, 2009. The Duanwu Festival falls on May 5 of Chinese lunar calendar.
This year's Duanwu festival falls on Thursday.It is generally believed
that the Duanwu Festival is marked to remember to Qu Yuan, one of the
greatest ancient Chinese poets who drowned himself in the Miluo river to
protest the corrupt court. (Xinhua/Yan Yan) Photo Gallery>>> |
As part of the First Beijing Duanwu Cultural Festival
that opened Thursday in Yanqing County, 220 people, all Yanqing residents,
joined a competition of wrapping rice dumplings.
"The festival helps spread the traditional culture
and also enriched residents' life," said Sheng Guirong, a Yanqing government
public relations official.
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Players on the dragon boats splash water
to each other at Nan'ao of Shenzhen City, south China's Guangdong
Province, May 28, 2009. A dragon boat race was held here to celebrate the
Chinese traditional Duanwu Festival, also known as the Dragon Boat
Festival, with 12 teams attending. (Xinhua/Yuan Shuiling) Photo Gallery>>> |
FURTHER EXPLORATION
At the end of 2007, China rescheduled its national
holidays, adding three traditional Chinese festivals, including the
"Tomb-Sweeping Day," "Dragon Boat Festival" and "Mid-Autumn Festival," as legal
holidays. The move, in response to public calls, has been believed helpful to
revive traditional culture in the modernizing nation.
"It is a proper time to restore the traditional
festivals and let them go into our modernized life," said Chen Jianxian, a China
Folklore Society member.
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A student who studies Chinese national
culture attends a commemorative ceremony for Qu Yuan, the venerable
patriotic poet of the Chu State in the Warring States Period (476 - 221
BC), in Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei Province, May 28,
2009.(Xinhua/Cheng Min)
Photo Gallery>>> |
"To set the Dragon Boat Festival is not only an
adjustment of the pace of daily life, but also serves as an important way of
strengthening ethnic solidarity and promoting patriotism."
The dragon boat racing has developed into an
international competition sport, he added. Dragon boat race will be a new
competition at the 2010 Asian Games to be held in Guangzhou, capital of
Guangdong Province.
But Chen feared that like other festivals, the
practical function and religious content of the Dragon Boat Festival may reduce
while functions of commemoration and amusement will get big development.
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Two foreign children learn making
Zongzi, a cone-shaped food with glutinous rice stuffed with assorted tasty
fillings wrapped in fresh bamboo or reed leaves to be cooked by steaming
or boiling, as the foreign experts and their family members were invited
to a gathering with their Chinese counterparts to spend a happy Duanwu, or
Dragon Boat Festival, at campus of Tianjin Normal University in Tianjin,
north China, May 27, 2009.(Xinhua/Liu Dongyue) Photo Gallery>>> |
Chen Peiai, a professor of Xiamen University, said it
is highly necessary to explore and spread the cultural essence of festivals.
"We should not simply regard the three newly added
national festivals as ordinary ones. Rather we should pay more attention to
their historical and culture values," the professor said.
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Actors perform traditional dance during
the opening ceremony of a culture festival in Jiaxing, east China's
Zhejiang Province, May 26, 2009, to celebrate the Chinese traditional
Duanwu Festival which falls on May 28 this year. A culture festival with
the theme of Duanwu folk custom was held here from May 26 to 30 in the
city.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
HERITAGE APPLICATION
China has submitted an application to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to nominate the Dragon Boat Festival as an intangible cultural heritage.
The application was submitted to the UNESCO by
central China's Hubei Province on behalf of the nation, upon approval by the
Ministry of Culture and the national intangible cultural heritage protection
center, according to Hubei officials.
The application work began last September and the
application was handed to the UNESCO in December, said Jiang Qing, director of
the Hubei provincial center for protection of intangible cultural heritage.
UNESCO's evaluation process has started, Jiang said.
China's application includes four parts: the Duanwu
customs in Qu Yuan's hometown in Zigui County of Hubei Province, boat race of
Huangshi city in Hubei, Duanwu customs on the banks of the Miluo river in Hunan
Province, and Duanwu customs in Suzhou city of Jiangsu Province.