Sunday, September 18, 2005

Happy Mid-Autumn Festival

Mid-autumn festival is celebrated on the fifteenth day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar, around the time of the autumn equinox. Usually, for us here we usually have a gathering with family members, have dinner and enjoy the night with drinks(usually chinese tea but some have wine) and mooncakes while appreciating the beautiful moon that night.

I ripped this off from a website on chinese festivals regarding this festival. "This day was also considered a harvest festival since fruits, vegetables and grain had been harvested by this time and food was abundant. With delinquent accounts settled prior to the festival , it was a time for relaxation and celebration. Food offerings were placed on an altar set up in the courtyard. Apples, pears, peaches, grapes, pomegranates , melons, oranges and pomelos might be seen. Special foods for the festival included moon cakes, cooked taro, edible snails from the taro patches or rice paddies cooked with sweet basil, and water caltrope, a type of water chestnut resembling black buffalo horns. Some people insisted that cooked taro be included because at the time of creation, taro was the first food discovered at night in the moonlight. Of all these foods, it could not be omitted from the Mid-Autumn Festival."

A little history on the mid-autumn festival goes like this. In the Zhou Dynasty(1066 B.C.-221 B.C.), people hold ceremonies to greet winter and worship the moon whenever the Mid-Autumn Festival sets in. It becomes very prevalent in the Tang Dynasty(618-907 A.D.) that people enjoy and worship the full moon. In the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279 A.D.), however, people send round moon cakes to their relatives as gifts in expression of their best wishes of family reunion. When it becomes dark, they look up at the full silver moon or go sightseeing on lakes to celebrate the festival. Since the Ming (1368-1644 A.D. ) and Qing Dynasties (1644-1911A.D.), the custom of Mid-Autumn Festival celebration becomes unprecedented popular.

Together with the celebration there appear some special customs in different parts of the country, such as burning incense, planting Mid-Autumn trees, lighting lanterns on towers and fire dragon dances. However, the custom of playing under the moon is not so popular as it used to be nowadays, but it is not less popular to enjoy the bright silver moon. Whenever the festival sets in, people will look up at the full silver moon, drinking wine to celebrate their happy life or thinking of their relatives and friends far from home, and extending all of their best wishes to them.

I'm pretty excited for tonight's celebration at my friend's house. There would be a small number of us but it will be exciting with all the lanterns lighted, the food being served, the laughters in the air filled with the joyous mood of the mid-autumn festival. I hope that you will too enjoy this festival if you ever have the chance to celebrate it.

1 comment:

bran and shing said...

pretty cool site you have there too tim :) well, i still have a lot to learn about html on how to bookmark a site and play around with the layouts ^^ thank you for complimenting this blog :)