Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

DRAGONS MARCH DOWN FREMONT

Downtown festival mingles party time with Asia traditions

- By PASHTANA USUFZY

Dancers donning colorful dragon costumes marched down Fremont Street as paper lanterns swayed in the trees during the Las Vegas Spring Festival’s Chinese New Year parade downtown Saturday morning.

The parade, organized by nonprofit organizati­on CNY in the Desert, was just one of the events during a four-day Lunar New Year celebratio­n that focused on entertainm­ent, food, family and tradition.

Incorporat­ing local schools, Asian heritage organizati­ons, community service organizati­ons and other groups, the event drew scores of attendees.

“It’s our culture,” said organizer Jan-Ie Low. “It’s a family tradition.”

Downtown Las Vegas welcomed the Year of the Rooster with a parade, performanc­es and an after-party Saturday during the sixth annual Las Vegas Spring Festival.

The celebratio­n of the Chinese new year, also called the lunar new year, was a feast of sights and sounds: Children gazed as grinning women sang traditiona­l songs, and painters made careful brushstrok­es on images of roosters, monkeys and lions.

The downtown festivitie­s, which began Saturday morning and lasted into the evening, were part of a fourday celebratio­n that kicked off Friday evening and was organized by the nonprofit CNY in the Desert.

“It’s important to us because it’s bringing the whole community together,” event organizer Jan-Ie Low said.

Groups of people lined up to watch people in dragon costumes and traditiona­l dress on Fremont Street before heading to Container Park, where there were performanc­es and crafts for children.

To Alicia and Jim Miller, it was a sort of welcome to the city.

The Northern California couple are moving to North Las Vegas, and Alicia Miller, who is a Chinese-American, said she was glad to see that Las Vegas celebrates the holiday she enjoyed as a child.

“They did a very good effort to be representa­tive,” she said. “It’s just a continuati­on of a cultural tradition.”

Miller fondly remembered collecting red envelopes with money inside as a kid and devouring noodles, chicken and oranges, what she called the staples of the celebratio­n. But the most important part is gathering with family, she added.

To local Suggie Oh, the new year is an important opportunit­y to be immersed in her culture and family, and the parade and other festivitie­s make that possible.

“It’s a good way to hold on to your identitity,” Oh said.

Her friend Peter Lee said it’s hard to overstate the importance of the celebratio­n.

“It’s the biggest holiday in China,” he said. “It’s kind of like the Christmas over there.”

Though it’s often referred to as the Chinese new year, the lunar new year is also the basis of new year celebratio­ns in Korea, Vietnam and other Asian nations. Each annual celebratio­n has an animal symbol, and this year’s symbol, the rooster, appeared on small and large paintings as well as banners downtown during the celebratio­n.

Local artist and co-founder of the Guerrilla Artz Foundation Kim Johnson painted the symbol of last year’s celebratio­n, a monkey, on a crate in front of Container Park.

Johnson said she was grateful for the chance to show off her take on the playful monkey as she painted in front of a crowd, and she showed off artwork contribute­d to the event by children at Andre Agassi College Preparator­y Academy and Opportunit­y Village.

“It’s a great way for all of us to celebrate our artistic vision in such a wonderful city of diversity,” she said.

 ?? ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @ERIK_VERDUZCO ?? Members of the Sichuan Song and Dance Theater Company wait to perform during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event Saturday at Container Park. The parade, organized by nonprofit organizati­on CNY in the Desert, was just one of the events during a...
ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @ERIK_VERDUZCO Members of the Sichuan Song and Dance Theater Company wait to perform during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event Saturday at Container Park. The parade, organized by nonprofit organizati­on CNY in the Desert, was just one of the events during a...
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 ?? ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @ERIK_VERDUZCO ?? Guerrilla Kage artists paint during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event at Container Park on Saturday in Las Vegas. Local artist Kim Johnson paints a monkey to symbolize the past during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event at Container Park.
ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @ERIK_VERDUZCO Guerrilla Kage artists paint during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event at Container Park on Saturday in Las Vegas. Local artist Kim Johnson paints a monkey to symbolize the past during the Chinese New Year in the Desert event at Container Park.
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