The Saline Courier Weekend

New Year celebratio­ns date back to 713 BC

- KEN BRIDGES

Once Christmas has passed, the world looks to a new year. Many wonder what the new year will bring while planning their own ways of ringing in 2023.

It will be a year marked with war in some nations and peace in others. There will be triumph, and there will be heartbreak. But in the meantime, the world will pause to celebrate the end of one year and the hopes for the next.

In New York City, the famous dropping of the Times Square Ball will mark the new year. It is a tradition dating back to New Year’s Eve 1904 when Adolph Ochs, then owner of The New York Times, devised it as a way of celebratin­g the new year by having the glass ball lowered on the roof of his newspaper building.

The modern ball, its fifth incarnatio­n, is glass, six feet in diameter, and weighs more than 1,200 pounds. It was manufactur­ed by Waterford Crystal and has more than 9,500 LED lights illuminati­ng it. It is the most popular new year’s observance in the United States.

Observance­s of the new year date back thousands of years as ancient peoples recognized the regular shifting patterns of stars at night and the sun in the day and their connection to particular seasons.

The earliest observance­s of January 1 for the beginning of the year began with the Romans around 713 BC. The Romans named the first month of their lunar calendar year January after the Roman god Janus, who supposedly was the god of time and also the god of beginnings and transition­s.

According to legend, Janus had two faces, one looking into the past and the other looking into the future. It was a day marked with great celebratio­ns.

The tradition of Rosh Hashanah marks the tradition of the Jewish new year, which means “head of the year” in Hebrew, a tradition dating back to the Old Testament. This holiday is not observed in January but sometime in September or October, depending on the lunar calendar. The two-day celebratio­n includes many symbolic foods, including apples dipped in honey to mark a sweet new year. It is a national holiday only in Israel and Ukraine. In 2023, it will begin at sunset on September 15 and run through September 17.

In most countries throughout the world, January 1 is an official holiday to mark the beginning of the new year.

Even many non-western countries will observe January 1 as New Year’s Day because of the overwhelmi­ng influence of European and American business and culture for the past few centuries as they ultimately adopted the modern Gregorian calendar used throughout the West, even in officially atheist nations like China.

The Chinese New Year will not start until January 22. Under the Chinese Zodiac system dating back many centuries, 2023 will mark the Year of the Rabbit. In China, the rabbit is associated with luck, so the Year of the Rabbit is usually considered a lucky year. In China, fireworks are set off to mark the new year and to also scare off demons and forces of darkness.

Similarly, January 22 will mark the traditiona­l Vietnamese New Year, known as Tet. The Vietnamese lunar calendar is very similar to the Chinese calendar.

The Vietnamese Zodiac, however, makes the cat a symbol of 2023 instead of the rabbit but similarly considered to be lucky.

By tradition, a great feast is prepared, family reunions are held, and many celebratio­ns are held in cities across the country. Many in Vietnam see Tet as the beginning of spring as well. Cleaning the home is also part of the traditiona­l observance­s to symbolical­ly clean out the bad spirits from the previous year.

Different types of food are also associated with the New Year’s celebratio­ns. In India, rice is eaten for prosperity in the new year. Buttered bread is supposed to be good luck in Ireland.

In Spain, people traditiona­lly eat 12 grapes at midnight, one at each chime, to bring luck for the year. In the American South, black-eyed peas are eaten for good luck for the new year. Leafy green vegetables like collard greens are supposed to symbolize prosperity.

In some cultures, it is also customary to exchange gifts on New Year’s Day. In Ancient Persia, eggs were given as symbols of fertility in the new year. When observance­s of Christmas and religion were outlawed in the Soviet Union, Russians responded by shifting gift-giving from Christmas to New Year’s Day. In Scotland, gifts of silverware or pastries are traditiona­lly given for luck. In the Philippine­s, Christmas and New Year’s Day celebratio­ns are often combined.

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