Tuesday, 15/10/2024
Bắc giang 25 °C / 24 - 26 °C
Hotline: +84.0204.3 856 624

Culture >> Traditional art
Hot news:
Culture >> Traditional art
icon
0.5 1.0 1.5
Shares:
icon-zalo

Mong ethnic people celebrate New Year

Updated: 16:33, 28/12/2019
The annual traditional holiday of the Mong ethnic minority group, known as Nao Pe Chau, takes place at the end of the 11th lunar month. The event is held to celebrate the end of the harvest and spend time relaxing together.

The custom has been handed down through many generations of the Mong ethnic group in the northern mountainous province of Dien Bien and takes place one month before the nation's Lunar New Year (Tet).

{keywords}

Illustrative image.

On the last day of 11th lunar month, people clean up and decorate their houses, and families get together to make glutinous rice dumpling. After men pound the rice into a flexible soft substance, women form the soft powder into small, round dumplings and cover them in banana leaves.

Families make as many dumplings as they can to eat and to give as gifts to relatives and friends, whilst the biggest dumplings are set aside as offerings for the ancestors.

Mong people believe the dumplings represent the sun, the moon and the universe, which are the origins of all lifeforms.

The ceremony always takes place in the last afternoon of the 11th lunar month early morning of the first day of the 12th lunar month. Their customs include sweeping kitchen smoke and collecting lucky water.

Folk singing and music played on flutes and the two-string fiddle add a festive vibe to the festive atmosphere.

After the folk art performances, young people take part in folk games to find their future partners.

Ho Song Lu, head of Pu Sua village, Ang Cang commune, Muong Ang district, said the event was an indispensable cultural activity for local people.

“It plays an important part in encouraging local solidarity, giving people a chance to look back at the past year and make plans for the new one. It also provides a chance for young people to find partners,” he said.

According to the statistics from 2009, there were over 1 million Mong people in the country, making them the sixth largest ethnic minority group in Vietnam.

Mong people reside mostly in Ha Giang, Dien Bien, Son La, Lao Cai, Lai Chau, Yen Bai and Cao Bang.

Vietnamese people in RoK celebrate Tet
Nearly 500 Vietnamese living, studying, and working in the Republic of Korea (RoK) and Korean friends gathered in Seoul on December 22 to celebrate the traditional Lunar New Year (Tet) – the biggest holiday in Vietnam.
Five-fruit trees, plants shaped like rats popular for Tet
Farmers in the Mekong Delta are growing new flower and plant varieties such as five-fruit trees and rat-shaped plants for the upcoming Tet (Lunar New Year) festival, which falls on January 25 (Year of the Rat).
Tet gifts presented to soldiers on Truong Sa, DK1 platform
Gifts have been presented to soldiers on the Truong Sa (Spratly) archipelago and the DK1 offshore platform ahead of the traditional Lunar New Year (Tet) festival.
Vietnam JMC Co.,Ltd to spend over 4 billion VND as laborers’ Tet bonus
(BGO) – To welcome the upcoming 2020 Lunar New Year (the Year of the Mouse), the leader board of Vietnam JCM Company Limited in Hong Thai commune, Viet Yen district (Bac Giang province) decided to spend over 4 billion VND (over 172,500 USD) to give Tet bonus to the laborers.
First Vietnamese Tet festival to be held in southern Japan
A Vietnamese Tet (Lunar New Year) Festival will be held for the first time in Fukuoka, the largest city in Japan’s Kyushu island, on January 12, 2020.

Source: VNA

Shares:
icon-zalo
mong-ethnic-people-celebrate-new-year.bbg

Reader's comments (0)

Your comment...