Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Chinese New Year Myths

- By Amanda Xi

We’re all familiar with myths, legends and fairytales. It’s always interestin­g to see how they explain traditions that we still have in modern society today—the things we feel are normal, but are actually quite weird if we think about it.

So why do the Chinese celebrate the Spring Festival (Chinese New Year) the way they do? Why do people put up red decoration­s and light firecracke­rs? Who chose the 12 Chinese zodiacs? What‘s the point of malt candy? The stories date back to thousands of years ago. Here is a collection of a few popular and interestin­g Chinese New Year myths.

The Monster and New Year’s Eve

In ancient times, there was a monster named Nián. It usually lives at the bottom of the sea and comes up once a year to feast on animals and humans. On this day, the villagers would all escape into the mountains. One year, a beggar came to seek shelter, but everyone was hurrying away. Only an old woman took him in and he promised to chase Nian away.

He busied himself with decorating the homes.

At midnight, Nian lumbered in but stopped short when it saw the red paper on the doors. As it roared in anger, firecracke­rs suddenly sounded and it trembled in fear. When it saw the beggar, dressed in red, laughing at it, it could only run away.

The villagers came back the next day and were pleasantly surprised that the homes were all still standing. They realized that loud noises and the color red were Nian’s kryptonite.

This is why, on New Year’s Eve, families eat dinner in their homes fortified by red decoration­s. At midnight, firecracke­rs are sounded. In addition, people will wear new and festive red clothing to celebrate.

Evil Spirits and Poetry

One of the red decoration­s that Chinese people love is Spring Festival couplet poems. They are pasted on both sides of the doorframe. And Nian isn’t the only monster that these poems protect you against!

More specifical­ly, they guard against demons who wander around the human world at night looking for trouble. They must return to the underworld at dawn. Two gods guard the entrance, which is under a giant peach tree. Any demons that harmed humans during the night would be seized and fed to the tigers.

To safeguard their homes, people began to carve the gods’ names into peach wood tablets. By placing them outside their doors, they were able to scare the demons away.

Fortune has Arrived!

Another decoration is calligraph­y. The most common word is fú , meaning happiness or fortune. But you’ll rarely see it upright.

It is said that in the Ming dynasty, the

Emperor ordered every household to decorate by pasting fu onto their doors. On New Year’s Day, he sent soldiers to check. They found that one illiterate family pasted the word upside down.

The Emperor ordered the family to be punished by death. Thankfully, the Empress was there and came up with an explanatio­n: “Upside down” ( dào) is a homophone of “here” ( dào). When it’s upside down, it means that fu is here.

The explanatio­n made sense to the Emperor and he set the family free. From then on, people would hang the word upside down, both for fortune and in remembranc­e of the kind Empress.

Dumplings and Ears

Some people say that dumplings are shaped like gold and silver ingots. Others say they look like ears.

That may be due to a myth about the goddess Nuwa. She created humans out of yellow clay. But she realized that the ears would freeze and crack off in the winter. To solve this problem, she sewed the ears in place and put the end of the thread in the humans’ mouths.

Later, to thank Nuwa, people molded dough into the shape of ears. They then stuffed it with meat and vegetables rather than thread.

So next time your ears are so cold you think they’ll fall off, be glad they won’t and eat some dumplings!

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