While every family has its own spin on customs and activities for the Lunar New Year, underlying all those traditions is a wish for good fortune and luck in the year ahead. “All of these traditions are part of bringing in the new year with my family.” “Wearing the new clothes means ‘I will show a new me and a difference in me,’” she explains. & amp amp amp nbsp Good fortune aheadįor Zhuo and her family, receiving and wearing new clothes holds much symbolic value. This year, she’ll be celebrating with her brother who also currently lives in Halifax. “In my family, we open the envelopes from last year to see the money we received and then we get new envelopes for the current year." One of Mary’s family’s main traditions is hongbao - where people insert money into decorative red envelopes to give as a gift, often to younger generations, friends or employees. “When I found out it was this year, I told her, ‘This is your year.’” “I have always associated the Year of the Tiger with my mother having her been born in this year,” she says. The Year of the Tiger holds an added layer of significance for Mary Kayle Telen, a fifth-year Dal Engineering student from the Philippines, whose mother’s birth year lines up with the symbol.
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While many of the regular festivities planned during Lunar New Year - both here in Halifax and abroad - have been upended due to the pandemic, those celebrating are still finding ways to mark the occasion and ready themselves for renewal in the year ahead. Considered the biggest holiday in the Chinese calendar, it is also celebrated widely in other countries such as Vietnam, the Philippines, and Malaysia, to name a few. “This year it is great, and I can get to celebrate it with my parents and extended family,” she says.įamily lies at the heart of Lunar New Year celebrations for many of the more than 1.5 billion people who celebrate it around the world each year. Zhuo (pictured right) spent last Lunar New Year away from family in Halifax, so she is thrilled to be closer to home for this year’s festivities while still working on her education. “For me, the Year of the Tiger is a symbol of great strength and good fortunes.”
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“I am so excited,” says Zhuo Wang, a second-year Dal commerce student currently in China (her home country) on a co-op term. That’s because the Year of the Tiger officially begins Tuesday, February 1. 2022: 1 Feb: Tiger: Tuesday: 2023: 22 Jan: Rabbit: Sunday 2024: 10 Feb: Dragon: Saturday 2025: 29 Jan: Snake: Wednesday 2026: 17 Feb: Horse: Tuesday 2027: 6.
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As Lunar New Year celebrations get underway around the world this week, some members of the Dal community are sure to be feeling even more Tiger pride than usual.