Weekend Herald

‘Think big’ the rule for new year fun

Prevented by Covid from homeland trips, East Asians are celebratin­g all over NZ

- Qiuyi Tan

East Asian communitie­s across New Zealand are gearing up for the most important event on their cultural calendar. Joanne Chin and her sister-in-law thought they were organising a Chinese New Year potluck for family and friends, until it ballooned into a festival of 160.

Everyone is still expected to bring a dish to the party next month, which will be at a local community centre with a bouncy castle, firecracke­rs, and a lion dance performanc­e.

The headline act is lou yee sang, a Malaysia and Singapore tradition of tossing a salad of raw fish on colourful shredded vegetables with a sweet and sticky dressing. Eating it afterwards is optional.

“We were thinking 50, maybe 60 people at most,” said Chin, a motherof-three who runs a dumpling and bao restaurant in downtown Auckland.

“We invited family and close friends, they asked more friends and friends of friends. Then boom!”

The overwhelmi­ng response to Joanne’s surprise festival is a common thread running through many Chinese New Year celebratio­ns this year.

Asians in New Zealand are celebratin­g in situ, unable to travel to their countries of origin or anywhere else for the festivitie­s because of closed borders and travel restrictio­ns. Many are coming together or reaching out to Kiwi friends to celebrate.

“We have non-Asian friends coming too,” Chin said, “Like my Samoan colleague and his wife from the Cook Islands.”

Chinese New Year, or Lunar New Year to be more accurate, marks the first day of the lunar calendar, the most important event on the Chinese cultural calendar.

Known as Spring Festival in China, Tet in Vietnam, Seollal in Korea, it is celebrated across many parts of East and Southeast Asia, and in global cities with significan­t Chinese diasporas.

The first day of the New Year will fall on February 12, 2021. It is the Year of the Ox, known as the most hardworkin­g animal on the Chinese horoscope.

Celebratio­ns vary across cultures and regions but there are key similariti­es. Visiting friends and family on the day, red packets of lucky money for children, and the most important meal of the year — reunion dinner — on New Year’s Eve.

But before any of that, a deep spring clean in the run-up.

“We need to clean the house before the New Year and not during the actual celebratio­ns, because cleaning can literally sweep away all your good luck,” explains Victor Diem, deputy chairman of the Wellington-based Vietnamese Community in New Zealand.

Diem is expecting at least 350 people at the Vietnamese celebratio­n in Wellington tomorrow, double the attendance of pre-Covid years.

Lunar New Year is not a public holiday here and the festive atmosphere is often lacking, Diem says, so preCovid-19, many Vietnamese usually went home for Tet.

Seollal is also a low-key family affair for many in Koreans in New Zealand, says Imsoo Kim.

His family tradition is making mandu, or Korean dumplings, says the counsellor and father of two.

“My sons [both in their 20s] will come home for Seollal and we make dumplings together.

“The saying goes that whoever makes a well-shaped dumpling will get a good-looking partner,” he says.

We’re celebratin­g the freedom to celebrate, says Linda Lim, one of the organisers of Wellington’s Chinese New Year Festival.

“People feel very lucky to have to have the freedom to get together with family and friends over food, which is indeed core to Chinese New Year celebratio­ns.”

If New Zealand remains at alert level 1, the festival will roll out its flagship street parade, food and craft market, and fireworks in the Wellington CBD in February. Organisers are prepared for all alert level changes, including a fully digital programme for alert level 4.

“The pandemic has permanentl­y changed the arts and events landscape,” Lim said, referring to the added challenges of organising major events with health and safety and risk assessment plans in place.

But there is a sense of recovery and positivity, leaving behind a tumultuous, “ratty” Year of the Rat, says Kai Luey, chairman of the Auckland Chinese Community Centre.

Equally important is a celebratio­n of the resilience of Asian communitie­s who have survived crises far worse than a pandemic, says Diem.

“The Vietnamese have suffered years of war and hardship.

“Many of us are grateful for the social welfare, the political and economic structures in New Zealand that have taken care of the people and been a source of healing for those affected by the pandemic.”

Auckland celebratio­ns kick off today with the Auckland Chinese Community Centre’s annual festival and market day at the ASB Showground­s in Epsom.

The city’s Lantern Festival is also set to return in February after last year’s cancellati­on, to take place for the first time on the waterfront.

The event producer, Eric Ngan, describes a “cosmic coincidenc­e” of central city buzz, public transport accessibil­ity, and proximity to the America’s Cup Village that is bringing the festival to the Ports of Auckland.

Also for the first time, this year’s festival will have daytime sessions at the weekend, handy for families with young children “who tend to crack and get grumpy by 7pm”, Ngan said.

Children are one traditiona­l focus of the new year and keeping them happy is key to Chin’s surprise private festival. “I’m a mum,” she said. “Having an activity for the kids to have fun at the party is important, so the parents can have fun too.”

 ?? Photo / Alex Burton ?? Joanna and Audrey Chin’s potluck for family now encompasse­s 160 guests.
Photo / Alex Burton Joanna and Audrey Chin’s potluck for family now encompasse­s 160 guests.

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