Showing posts with label Mid-Autumn Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mid-Autumn Festival. Show all posts

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Chinese Culture & Tradition: Mid-Autumn Festival is Coming Soon

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Mid-Autumn Festival, the second biggest traditional festivals in China ( the first one is Chun Jie - Spring festival), will be coming on 12th Sept., 2011. This is a date that parallels the autumnal equinox of the Chinese solar calendar, when the moon is supposedly at its fullest and roundest. For thousands of years, the Chinese people have related the vicissitudes of life to changes of the moon as it waxes and wanes - joy and sorrow, parting and reunion. Because the full moon is round and symbolizes reunion, the Mid-Autumn Festival is also known as the festival of reunion.

All family members try to get together on this special day. At the night, the family will enjoy the beauty of the full silver moon, eat moon cakes, drink wine together to celebrate their happy life. Those who can not return home watch the bright moonlight and feel deep longing for their loved ones. So for lovers who have to be apart at the moment, the moonlight of Mid-Autumn's Day brings particular warmth to their hearts. When sharing the beautiful moonlight in this peaceful evening and sending out your best wishes over the distance, two hearts are beating closer towards each other...

Give her a most romantic Mid-Autumn festival with a gift from your heart Now!


Mid-Autumn Festival – Another Bitter-Sweet Love Story in China

Like a fair amount of Chinese holidays, the Mid-Autumn Festival is also a posthumous celebration of bitter-sweet romance. There’s a lot of beautiful legends about the moon in China, but the most popular one tells an archer named Hou Yi who, in typical awesome-hero fashion, had a beautiful Chinese wife named Chang’e.

A long, long time ago, a terrible drought plagued the earth. Ten suns burned fiercely in the sky like smoldering volcanoes. The trees and grass were scorched. The land was cracked and parched, and rivers ran dry. Many people died of hunger and thirst. The King of Heaven sent Hou Yi down to the earth to help. When Hou Yi arrived, he took out his red bow and white arrows and shot down nine suns one after another. The weather immediately turned cooler. Heavy rains filled the rivers with fresh water and the grass and trees turned green. Life had been restored and humanity was saved.

Dating traditional Chinese women in this Mid-Autumn Festival
One day, a charming young Chinese woman, Chang'e makes her way home from a stream, holding a bamboo contaiver, A young man comes forward, asking for a drink. When she sees the red bow and white arrows hanging from his belt, Chang'e tealizes that he is their savior, Hou Yi. Inviting him to drink, Chang'e plucks a beautiful flower and gives it to him as a token of respect. Hou Yi, in turn, selects a beautiful silver fox fur as his gift for her. This meeting kindles the spark of their love. And soon after that, they get married.

A mortal's life is limited, of course. So in order to enjoy his happy life with Chang'e forever, Hou Yi decides to look for an elixir of life. He goes to the Kunlun Mountains where the Western Queen Mother lives. Out of respect for the good deeds the has done, the Western Queen Mother rewards Hou Yi with elixir, a fine powder made from kerndls of fruit which grows on the tree of eternity. At the same time, she tells him: If you and your wife share the elixir, you will both enjoy eternal life. But if only one of you takes it,that one will ascend to Heaven and become immortal. Hou Yi returns home and tells his Chinese wife all that has happened and they decide to drink the elixir together on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month when the moon is full and bright.

A wicked and merciless man named Feng Meng secretly hears about their plan. He wishes Hou Yi an early death so that he can drink the elixir himeslf and become immortal. His opportunity finally arrives. One day, when the full moon is rising, Hou Yi is on his way home from hunting. Feng Meng kills him. The murderer then runs to Hou Yi's home and forces Chang'e to give him the elixir. Without hesitating, Chang'e picks up the elixir and drinks it all.

Overcome with grief, Chang'e rushes to her dead husband's sied, weeping bitterly. Soon the elixir begins to have its effect and Chang'e feels herself being lifted towards Heaven.

Chang'e decides to live on the moon because it is nearest to the earth. There she lives a simple and contented life. Even though she is in Heaven, her heart remains in the world of mortals. Never does she forget the deep love she has for Hou Yi and the love she feels for the people who have shared their sadness and happiness.

Another legend explained the role of the Old Man on the Moon, the Divine Match-maker. The Chinese believed that marriages were made in Heaven but prepared on the moon. The Old Man on the Moon tied the feet of young men and women with red cords for marriage. Thus a maiden made offerings and prayed to him during the Mid-Autumn Festival, hoping that some day she would ride in the red bridal sedan chair.