April 17, 2026 A Bilingual Newspaper

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Welcome to the Year of the Dragon – The Brasilians

Welcome to the Year of the Dragon

This year, Saturday, February 10, 2024, marks the beginning of the Lunar New Year. Each year, the date of the Lunar New Year is determined by the phase of the moon, and the lunar calendar is named after one of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac (derived from ancient Chinese folklore). Repeating on a rotating basis, these 12 animals are: the rat, the ox, the tiger, the rabbit, the dragon, the snake, the horse, the goat, the monkey, the rooster, the dog, and the pig.

To this day, Chinese holidays are governed by their traditional lunisolar calendar. The Lunar New Year was renamed by the leaders of the Republic of China as the “Spring Festival” when they officially adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1912. Today, the Spring Festival is celebrated in China and Hong Kong; the Lunar New Year is also celebrated in South Korea, Tibet, Vietnam, Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, and places with large Chinese populations. Its themes are reunion and hope, and it is a time for families to gather with plenty of food and often noisy celebrations.

For the Chinese people, the Spring Festival lasts 40 days and has multiple sub-festivals and rituals. The New Year itself is a seven-day state holiday, and on New Year’s Eve, Chinese families traditionally celebrate with the most important meal of the year, a reunion dinner traditionally held at the home of the eldest family member.

In China, people customarily light fireworks, which are believed to scare away the fearsome monster “Nian.” The color red is used in clothing and decorations to ensure prosperity, and people exchange “hongbao,” red envelopes filled with lucky money (mainly for children and single adults). In Korea, people make rice cake soup and honor their ancestors during the Korean Lunar New Year, “Seollal.” During the Vietnamese Lunar New Year, “Tet,” flowers play an important role in the celebrations.

See the link below to find out which animal is associated with your birth year. Does your personality match the description?
https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/celebrations/article/which-chinese-new-year-animal-are-you-like?


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