Feature: Celebrating Chinese Lunar New Year in Philippines
By Alito L. Malinao
MANILA, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese New Year, or the Spring
Festival which falls on Thursday this year, is celebrated not only
by the Chinese community in the Philippines but also by other
Filipinos who have been influenced by the Chinese culture and
traditions through the years.
The celebrations gained added significance four years ago after
Philippine President Benigno Aquino III declared the Chinese New
Year as a nationwide holiday.
In November 2011, Aquino said the declaration of the Chinese New
Year as a special non-working holiday would allow Chinese-
Filipinos, locally known as Tsinoys, and Filipinos themselves to
fully celebrate the Spring Festival.
The holiday "is a manifestation of our solidarity with our
Chinese-Filipino brethren who have been part of our lives in many
respects as a country and as a people," said the president.
Aquino himself has Chinese ancestry. His mother, the late
president Corazon Cojuangco-Aquino, came from the large Co-juang-
co clan that originally came from Fujian province in southern
China.
Even before the arrival of the Spanish colonizers in the early
16th century, Chinese immigrants have already settled in various
parts of the Philippines.
Chinese-Filipinos are one of the largest overseas Chinese
communities in Southeast Asia.
Unofficial figures said while there are only about 1.5 million
Filipinos of pure Chinese ancestry, or 1.6 percent of the
population, Filipinos with Chinese descent comprise about 18 to 27
percent of the total Philippine population of over 100 million.
It is understandable, therefore, that Tsinoys have their
presence felt not just in commerce and business but even in
politics and other social, cultural and professional
activities.
Because of their pioneering spirit and Confucian work ethics,
many Chinese-Filipino families now control major business
establishments in the country.
This will also explain why the traditional Chinese celebrations
of the Lunar New Year is very popular not only in Manila but also
in other urban areas in the country.
Just like in other parts of the world with large ethnic Chinese
communities, the Chinese New Year is considered the single most
important holiday among the Chinese in the Philippines.
The celebrations usually last for 15 days and culminate with the
Lantern Festival. Each year is associated with one of 12 animals in
the Chinese zodiac. For 2015, it is the Year of the Sheep.
According to old-timers in the Binondo District, Manila's
Chinatown, the vigor and enthusiasm in the celebrations of the
Chinese New Year have not diminished even with the passage of
time.
During the Chinese New Year, there is a big parade of dancing
lions or dragons that snake through the narrow streets and alleys
of Binondo with participants dressed in colorful red costumes
dancing to the sound of drums.
Such festive atmosphere is duplicated in other cities with big
Chinese population, such as Cebu city in the Visayas and Davao city
and Cagayan de Oro city in Mindanao.
During the celebrations, people in the streets and storeowners
greet each other with "Kiong Hee Huat Tsai" in the Hokkien dialect
or "Kung Hei Fat Choi" in Cantonese, which means "Congratulations
and Be Prosperous" in the incoming year.
Of course, amid the noise and bustle, are the sounds of lighted
firecrackers which, in the Chinese customs, would drive away the
evil spirits and bring good luck in the year ahead.The food most
locally looked forward to during the Chinese New Year is tikoy, a
delicacy made from sticky rice. It has to be fried first before it
can be eaten.
During the Spring Festival, everyone, especially the women, wear
red dress, considered by the Chinese as a lucky color. Also during
this occasion, children look forward to receiving fresh peso bills
placed inside bright red envelopes, called "ang pao" in Hokkien,
with Chinese characters written in it.
Storeowners usually put "ang pao" at the entrance of their
stores so that dancers participating in the dragon parade can pick
them up as New Year's gifts for them. Enditem