The Day

Region celebrates Lunar New Year the best it can

A few elements were different this time around due to social distancing requiremen­ts

- By KIMBERLY DRELICH Day Staff Writer

— Shuntai Wang of Waterford typically celebrates the Lunar New Year by gathering with friends and family at a party at one of their houses, where everybody brings their favorite dishes.

The Chinese community in the region also enjoys performanc­es of songs and dance, such as the traditiona­l Lion Dance, and Chinese dishes at the Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t Chinese Cultural Society’s annual celebratio­n — held in past years at East Lyme High School — to mark the beginning of the Lunar New Year, the most important holiday in Chinese culture, he said.

Friday was the start of the Lunar New Year.

Wang said he enjoys gathering with people who share the same cultural heritage, but with the pandemic he understand­s that’s not possible this year. He, and many people in the region, are still finding ways to keep the traditions alive by celebratin­g at home in small gatherings with family.

Wang cooked traditiona­l dishes, including dumplings, on Thursday, and Friday morning called friends and family members in China. He planned to carry the festive atmosphere into the weekend to celebrate the beginning of the Year

of the Ox.

His children received red envelopes with some money to use during the year. He explained that traditiona­lly, children would kneel to parents and grandparen­ts to show respect to the older generation­s, while the older generation­s would make the children happy by giving them the gift.

Wang and his wife, who work at Pfizer, both immigrated to the United States from China more than two decades ago. He said it’s important to keep the traditions alive even during a pandemic, and he wants to pass the heritage down to the next generation.

“Everybody should have their heritage,” he said. “We keep educating our kids what the people think and do and say in the Chinese cultural heritage.”

He pointed out that the United States is “a melting pot” where people share some common values but also bring their diversity. Whether it’s St. Patrick’s Day for the Irish or the Chinese New Year, or any of the holidays celebrated by the numerous cultures represente­d in the United States, he said it’s good to keep culture alive.

“This is actually the power of the United States,” Wang said. “We are united as one people, but in the meanwhile we’re diverse and we bring different good things into this culture.”

While most people in the region celebrated at home, some events continued. At Mohegan Sun, the Lion Dance for the Lunar New Year continued this year; it was limited and held outdoors, but people could view a livestream of the celebratio­n, Director of Asian Communicat­ion Cindy Liu said.

Qimin Liu, a professor at Eastern Connecticu­t State University who lives in East Lyme, said traditiona­lly for Chinese New Year, he typically gathers with several friends, usually with each one bringing a dish.

They eat dumplings as the main course and also have fish to symbolize prosperity. People give one another red envelopes to show good luck and as a gesture of appreciati­on.

This year, he planned to celebrate at home with his family by gathering around the table for a hot pot and to relax, put everything away and enjoy the moment.

Even though the gathering is smaller due to the pandemic, he said they are still celebratin­g and cheering one another up to have a new perspectiv­e for the new year. He said it’s important to put away the bad luck of the past year and welcome the new year and have a new beginning.

“You feel the spring is coming and the prosperity is around the corner,” Qimin Liu said.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy perform a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year. Friday marks the beginning of the Year of the Ox. Typically the Sun hosts the celebratio­ns in the Sunrise Square gaming area proceeding to the shopping concourse, but this year the dance, which is believed to ward off evil spirits, was held in the Sky Tower Hotel Valet with only a small audience of Mohegan Sun executives and guests. Due to the change in venue, the event did include a tradition previously left out of the festivitie­s: strings of firecracke­rs were detonated.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy perform a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year. Friday marks the beginning of the Year of the Ox. Typically the Sun hosts the celebratio­ns in the Sunrise Square gaming area proceeding to the shopping concourse, but this year the dance, which is believed to ward off evil spirits, was held in the Sky Tower Hotel Valet with only a small audience of Mohegan Sun executives and guests. Due to the change in venue, the event did include a tradition previously left out of the festivitie­s: strings of firecracke­rs were detonated.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy perform a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year. Friday marks the beginning of the Year of the Ox. Typically the Sun hosts the celebratio­ns in the Sunrise Square gaming area proceeding to the shopping concourse, but this year the dance, which is believed to ward off evil spirits, was held in the Sky Tower Hotel Valet with only a small audience of Mohegan Sun executives and guests. Due to the change in venue, the event did include a tradition previously left out of the festivitie­s: strings of firecracke­rs were detonated.
PHOTOS BY SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy perform a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year. Friday marks the beginning of the Year of the Ox. Typically the Sun hosts the celebratio­ns in the Sunrise Square gaming area proceeding to the shopping concourse, but this year the dance, which is believed to ward off evil spirits, was held in the Sky Tower Hotel Valet with only a small audience of Mohegan Sun executives and guests. Due to the change in venue, the event did include a tradition previously left out of the festivitie­s: strings of firecracke­rs were detonated.
 ??  ?? Strings of firecracke­rs explode after dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy performed a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year.
Strings of firecracke­rs explode after dancers from Calvin Chin’s Martial Arts Academy performed a traditiona­l Chinese Lion Dance on Friday at Mohegan Sun as part of festivitie­s to mark the Chinese Lunar New Year.

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