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Religions
and Beliefs
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China's
major traditional festivals
China's
major traditional festivals
include
the Spring Festival, the Lantern Festival, Pure Brightness Day, the Dragon
Boat Festival, the Mid-Autumn Festival and the Double Ninth Festival.
Ethnic minorities have also retained their own traditional festivals,
including the Water Sprinkling Festival of the Dai people, the Nadam Fair
of the Mongolian people, the Torch Festival of the Yi people, the Danu
(Never Forget the Past) Festival of the Yao people, the Third Month Fair
of the Bai people, the Antiphonal Singing Day of the Zhuang people, the
Tibetan New Year and Onghor (Expecting a Good Harvest) Festival of the
Tibetan people, and the Jumping Flower Festival of the Miao people.
Spring
Festival
Each
year, when winter is at its end and spring around the corner, people throughout
China enthusiastically celebrate the first traditional holiday of the
year, the Spring Festival. In the past, when the Chinese people used the
lunar calendar, the Spring Festival was known as the "New Year".
It falls on the first day of the first lunar month, the beginning of a
new year. After the Revolution
of 1911, China adopted the Gregorian calendar. To distinguish the lunar
New Year from the New Year by the Gregorian calendar, the lunar New Year
was called the Spring Festival (which generally falls between the last
10-day period of January and mid-February). The evening before the Spring
Festival, the lunar New Year's Eve, is an important time for family reunions.
The whole family gets together for a sumptuous dinner, followed by an
evening of pleasant talk or games. Some families stay up all night, "seeing
the year out". The next morning, people pay New Year calls on relatives
and friends, wishing each other good luck. During the Spring Festival,
various traditional recreational activities are enjoyed in many parts
of China, notably lion dances, dragon lantern dances, land-boat rowing
and stilt-walking.
Lantern
Festival
The
Lantern Festival falls on the 15th day of the first lunar month, the night
of the first full moon after the Spring Festival. Traditionally, people
eat sweet dumplings during this festival. Sweet dumplings, round balls
of glutinous rice flour with sugar filling, symbolize reunion. During
the festival people display multicolored lanterns on the streets and courtyards,
and stroll around admiring them at night, hence the name "Lantern
Festival". Some places also hold evening parties for people to guess
riddles written on lanterns.
Pure
Brightness Day Pure
Brightness
Day falls
around April 5th every year. Traditionally, this is an occasion for people
to offer sacrifices to their ancestors. In recent years, many people have
also been going to the tombs of the revolutionary martyrs to pay their
respects. At this time of year the weather has begun to turn warm, and
the earth is once again covered with green. People love to go to the outskirts
of cities to walk on the grass, fly kites and appreciate the beauty of
spring. That is why Pure Brightness Day is sometimes also called "Walking
amid Greenery Day".
Dragon Boat Festival
It is generally believed that this festival originated to honor
the memory of the patriotic poet Qu Yuan, who lived in the State of Chu
during the Warring States Period. In despair at not being able to halt
the decline of his country, he drowned himself in the Miluo River in modern
Hunan Province on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month after the capital
of Chu fell to the State of Qin in 278 B.C. Legend has it that after Qu
Yuan's death people living on the banks of the river went out in their
boats to try to find the corpse. Every year thereafter, on this day people
would row their boats out onto their local river, throwing sections of
bamboo filled with rice into the water as an offering to him. Today, the
memory of Qu Yuan lives on, zongzi (pyramid-shaped dumplings made by wrapping
glutinous rice in bamboo leaves) remains the traditional food and dragon-boat
races are held.
Mid-Autumn Festival
The Mid-Autumn Festival falls on
the 15th day of the eighth lunar month, which comes right in the middle
of autumn, hence its name. In ancient times, people would offer elaborate
cakes as sacrifices to the Moon Goddess on this day. After the ceremony,
the family would enjoy sitting together to eat the pastries. The festival
came to symbolize family reunion, and the custom has been passed down
to today. On this mid-autumn night the full moon is especially bright.
The whole family sit together eating moon cakes while admiring the moon
in its perfect splendor.
The
Double Ninth Festival
This
festival falls on the ninth day of the ninth lunar month. According to
Chinese tradition, the ninth day is an auspicious day; and the ninth day
of the ninth lunar month is the most auspicious day. On this day, the
Chinese people customarily ascend a hill, eat cakes, drink wine and admire
chrysanthemums. Since the late 1980s, the Double Ninth Festival has become
a festival for old people. Various kinds of activities to show respect
and concern for the elderly are held throughout the country; old people
are also invited to attend celebration meetings and watch theatrical performances.
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Religious
Belief
China
is a country with great diversity of religions, with over 100 million
followers of the various faiths. The main religions are Buddhism, Islam,
Christianity, China's indigenous Taoism, along with Shamanism, Eastern
Orthodox Christianity and the Naxi people's Dongba religion. The Hui,
Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz, Tatar, Ozbek, Tajik, Dongxiang, Salar and Bonan
peoples adhere to Islam; the Tibetan, Mongolian, Lhoba, Moinba, Tu and
Yugur, to Tibetan Buddhism, and the Dai, Blang and Deang to Theravada
Buddhism. Quite a few Miao, Yao and Yi are Christians. Religious Han Chinese
tend to practice Buddhism, Christianity or Taoism.
Buddhism
was introduced to China from India approximately in the first century
A.D., becoming increasingly popular after the fourth century. Tibetan
Buddhism, or Lamaism as it is sometimes called, is found primarily in
Tibet and Inner Mongolia. Now China has more than 13,000 Buddhist temples,
with about 200,000 monks and nuns.
Islam probably
first reached China in the mid-seventh century. During the Tang (618-907)
and Song (960-1279) dynasties, Arab and Persian merchants of the Islamic
faith came overland through Central Asia to northwest China and by sea
to the coastal cities in southeastern China, bringing with them the Islamic
faith. The Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368) witnessed the zenith of prosperity
of Islam. Now China has more than 30,000 mosques and more than 40,000
imams and ahungs.
Christianity
reached China several times after the seventh century, and was introduced
to the country on a large scale after the Opium War of 1840. Now there
are about four million Catholic believers, 4,000 clergy and more than
4,600 churches and meeting places in China.
Protestantism
was introduced to China in the early 19th century, and spread widely after
the Opium War. Now China has about 10 million Protestant believers, 18,000
clergy, and more than 12,000 churches and 25,000 other centers of worship.
Taoism
probably took form as a religion during the second century, originating
from sorcery, pursuit of immortality and other supernatural beliefs in
ancient China. Taoists take the philosopher Lao Zi (traditionally said
to be born in 604 B.C.) as their teacher, and his work, the Dao De Jing
(The Classic of the Way and Its Power), as their canon. Sublimating the
philosophical concept of "Dao" or "Tao" (the Way)
as described in the Dao De Jing, they posit that man can become one with
the "Tao" through self-cultivation, and achieve immortality.
China now has more than 1,500 Taoist temples, and over 25,000 Taoist monks
and nuns.
Buddhists,
Moslems, Catholics, Protestants and Taoists have all established their own
national and local organizations. The national religious organizations include
the Buddhist Association of China, the China Taoist Association, the Islamic
Association of China, the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association, the Chinese
Catholic Bishops College, the Three-Self Patriotic Movement Committee of
the Protestant Churches of China and the China Christian Council. They elect
leading organs and leaders in accordance with their own rules, run their
own religious affairs independently, set up religious schools, publish religious
books and periodicals, print and distribute religious classics and found
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Social
Customs
During the long
course of historical development, China's different peoples have developed
individual customs regarding food, clothing and housing, in response to
their own particular environments, social conditions and level of economic
development. Generally, the Han people take rice and noodles as their
staple diet (people in the south prefer rice while those in the north
prefer noodles), love to eat vegetables, beans, meat, fish and eggs, and
pay particular attention to cooking techniques. Mongolians often eat beef
and mutton, and drink tea with milk. Tibetans take tsampa (roasted highland
barley flour) as their staple food, and drink buttered tea, and highland
barley wine, but Tibetan herdsmen mainly eat beef and mutton. The Uygurs,
Kazaks, and Ozbeks enjoy roast mutton kebabs, unleavened bread and rice.
Koreans like sticky rice cakes, cold noodles and kimchi (hot pickled vegetables).
The Li, Jing, Dai, Blang and Hani all chew betel nuts.
The typical costume
of Manchu women used to be the qipao (a close-fitting dress with high
neck and slit skirt). Mongolians wear their traditional robes and riding
boots. Tibetans love to wear Tibetan robes, waistbands and boots. Koreans
are known for their boat-shaped shoes. Uygurs wear diamond-shaped embroidered
skullcaps. Yi, Miao and Yao women wear pleated skirts, and are often bedecked
with gold or silver ornaments.
Courtyard-type
dwellings were traditionally the rule in Han areas. Most minority herdsmen
living in Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Qinghai and Gansu live in yurts. The
Dais, Zhuangs and Bouyeis in southern China often live in ganlan (multiple-storied
houses raised on stilts).
In China, birthdays
are not commonly celebrated, although city dwellers do so more frequently
than their country cousins, and children and old people more than young
and middle-aged people. No special ceremony is occasioned by a birthday.
Many people like to eat "longevity noodles", symbols of long
life inspired by the noodle's shape. Nowadays, many city dwellers choose
to eat Western-style birthday cakes instead of noodles. According to the
Marriage Law, a man may legally marry at age 22 and a woman at 20, by
acquiring a marriage license issued by a marriage registration office.
Thus, a wedding ceremony is not a necessary legal procedure for marriage
registration, but only a way for relatives and friends to congratulate
the bride and groom. The newlyweds will offer "wedding candies"
to their colleagues and friends. In return, their colleagues and friends
will present the newlyweds with gifts.
Funeral
ceremonies in China are very simple. Usually, a memorial meeting is held
to pay last respects to the deceased and allow the living to express their
grief. Cremation is the rule
in cities, and interment in rural areas. White is the traditional color
of mourning, but city people nowadays usually wear black gauze armbands
to show their bereavement. |