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To
the Chinese community, the most important festival celebrated
is the Spring Festival, more commonly known as Chinese New
Year. Chinese New Year marks the beginning of a new lunar
year and falls on the first day of the first moon
in the lunar calendar. It is also the most important event
of the entire Chinese calendar.
Chinese New Year symbolises renewal; a turning point in fortunes
and lives on the whole. As such, families hold the traditional
reunion dinner to celebrate the coming of the first
moon. As midnight strikes, a cacophony of fireworks
is heard throughout cities and towns marking the beginning
of the new year. Fire crackers are believed to drive out evil
spirits.
A Chinese
home is incomplete without the traditional specialties of
wax ducks and sausages, glutinous cakes and mandarin oranges.
As red is the predominant colour symbolising luck for the
Chinese, strips of red paper with lucky characters
inscribed on them are hung on walls or doors in most homes.
Ang pows or 'lucky money are given in special red packets
to the younger members of the community by their elders.
The Chinese moon calendar is divided into cycles of twelve
years and is named after various animals. In order of sequence,
the twelve animals are the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon,
snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig. Chinese
New Year is ushered by the sign of these animals yearly. According
to popular belief, individuals are born under the influence
of the animal that controls the year of their birth.
| Hari
Raya Puasa | Hari
Raya Haji | Prophet
Muhammad's Birthday |
| Chinese
New Year | Chap
Goh Mei | Nine
Emperor Gods | Vesak
Day |
| Deepavali
| Christmas
| Easter | Thaiponggal
| Thaipusam
|
| New
Year's Day | Kadazan
Harvest | Gawai
Dayak |
|