China Daily Global Edition (USA)

With attention to details, New Year’s festivitie­s taking shape

- Chang Jun Contact the writer at junechang@chinadaily­usa. com.

It takes about 20 Chinese parents, 11 elementary schools throughout the Bay Area and a small army of volunteers to stage the series of celebratio­ns planned for the upcoming Chinese New Year, or the Lunar New Year, which will fall on Jan 28.

It’s another round in the ongoing effort Chinese-American immigrants are making to “tell the good Chinese stories” in the US through grassroots peopleto-people platforms.

“It’s spontaneou­s,” said Luo Ping, founder of Able2Shine, a community platform that aims to advance soft skills among children of Chinese descent. “We, the first generation of Chinese immigrants in California, simply feel that we should do something not only to make our children feel proud of their Chinese heritage, but also spread awareness of Chinese culture during its most celebrated holiday.”

During his 2015 state visit to the US, President Xi Jinping called on Chinese Americans to actively integrate themselves into the mainstream US society and build bridges between China and the US by actively promoting Chinese culture and telling the China story.

Luo and her volunteers have brainstorm­ed about how best to do that, and it comes down to orchestrat­ing and coordinati­ng community, parents and schools.

“We want the 90 minutes to be fun, interactiv­e and impressive,” said Wang Meng, a software engineer at Apple who is coaching a children’s dance performanc­e. “We want to hear the children shout ‘Wow!’”

In order to dazzle American students with the authentic Chinese arts, Luo and her team have turned to master musicians, magicians and martial artists.

“I tried emails, phone calls, one-on-one meetings, anything that will work,” said Luo. “It might sound fun, but in reality, there is a daunting amount of detail in the planning and execution of these celebratio­ns.”

So far they have confirmed performanc­es of Chinese string and percussion instrument­s, traditiona­l dance and songs, a lion dance, martial arts, and “face-changing” with masks from Chinese opera, “which is always a secret weapon”, she said.

Currently, 11 elementary schools have agreed to host a Lunar New Year celebratio­n as a showcase to community cultural diversity; each will designate their own date to stage the New Year celebratio­n.

In September, then-state senator Bob Huff, who represente­d the 29th District in California, had helped the state Board of Education change history textbooks to include material on the importance of the Asian Lunar New Year.

“(Chinese New Year) is the biggest holiday in the Eastern Hemisphere,” said Huff. “It is fitting in our diverse state to encourage schools to participat­e in some way.

“The Lunar New Year is celebrated in many Asian communitie­s around the world, including the United States, and especially California – where it is predominan­tly celebrated by 2.5 million Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese residents as a significan­t part of their deeply held cultural family traditions focusing on renewal and family ties.”

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio took action last year to add the Lunar New Year to the New York public school calendar, allowing the city’s Asian families to observe the traditiona­l holiday with their children without tarnishing attendance records.

“We hope the same thing will happen in major cities in California soon,” said Feng Feng, a mom volunteer at the Warm Springs Elementary in Fremont. “The significan­ce of the Chinese New Year should be recognized in the US.”

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