Global Times

Dublin to hold its largest ever Spring Festival with fanfare

- Page Editor: weixi@globaltime­s.com.cn

The largest Chinese New Year Festival ever to be held in the Irish capital Dublin will be staged on February 1-17, organizers announced in Dublin on Tuesday.

“Over 80 programs will be held throughout the festival, making this year’s festival the largest in terms of the number of its programs over its 12-year history,” said Aimee Van Wylick, a producer of the festival at a press briefing.

According to the producer, a variety of activities, ranging from music concerts – including one by Ireland’s National Symphony Orchestra in collaborat­ion with Chinese musicians – to films, and traditiona­l Chinese dances and acrobatics to Chinese food fairs and Chinese culture-related exhibition­s and workshops, will be organized throughout the festival, expecting to attract tens of thousands of visitors.

As the Chinese New Year for 2019 is the Year of the Pig, many programs have chosen related themes such as a comic book workshop on Pigsy (or Zhu Bajie, a character in the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West), a special pig-themed banquet at a local Chinese restaurant and a tour to Dublin City Farm, said organizers.

Moreover, a number of landmark buildings and sites in Dublin will be lit up red from February 1 to 5 to mark the Chinese New Year which will fall on February 5 this year, they said.

Speaking at the press briefing, Nial Ring, lord mayor of Dublin, said the Dublin Chinese New Year Festival has been a vital platform for celebratin­g the strong connection­s that have developed between Ireland and China.

“The strong and vibrant Chinese community in Dublin has added hugely to the cosmopolit­an culture of our city. It is a major source of pride to the people of Dublin that our Chinese New Year celebratio­ns are among the biggest in Europe,” he said.

Chinese Ambassador to Ireland Yue Xiaoyong, who also attended the press briefing, said the fact that the Dublin City Council has held the Chinese New Year Festival for the past 12 consecutiv­e years has demonstrat­ed the friendship of the Irish people towards China.

“2019 marks the 40th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the diplomatic ties between China and Ireland, a milestone for our friendship and a new beginning for our bilateral ties with a future brighter than ever,” he said.

In a message contained in a booklet about the festival programs, which was released at the press briefing, Irish President Michael D. Higgins said, “In Chinese culture the pig is a symbol of wealth, good fortune and prosperity.”

He also wished all members of the Chinese community in Ireland a happy new year.

“The Chinese community have played a critical role in the creation of a multicultu­ral Ireland, where we strive to ensure that voices and needs of all our citizens are heard and respected,” he said.

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