Tourists view lanterns at Laomendong scenic area in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province in Spring Festival. (PHOTO: XINHUA) |
On December 22, the Lunar New Year, or Spring Festival, has been officially listed as a UN floating holiday in its calendar of conferences and meetings as from 2024.
The UN General Assembly, in a resolution, acknowledges the significance of the Lunar New Year, which is observed in many UN member states, and invites the UN bodies at headquarters and other duty stations, where observed, to avoid holding meetings on the Lunar New Year.
Dai Bing, China's deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, said after the adoption of the resolution that the Spring Festival, as a traditional Chinese holiday featuring family reunion and good wishes for the coming year, not only bears the ideas of the Chinese civilization of peace and harmony but also carries the common values of humanity such as harmonious family, social inclusion and sound relationship between man and nature.
The Lunar New Year is not only the most important festival in China, but also a major event in some other Asian countries and regions. Many countries list the Lunar New Year as a national holiday, and about one-fifth of humanity celebrates this festival in various ways.
The Lunar New Year in 2024 will fall on February 10th in the Gregorian Calendar. The actual date changes every year but is always somewhere in the period from January 21 to February 20.
Regional customs and traditions vary widely but the theme of the event is the same: seeing out the old year and embracing the luck and prosperity of a new year.
The main Lunar New Year activities include putting up decorations and spring couplets, making offerings to ancestors, having reunion dinner with families on New Year's Eve and giving red envelopes to the beloved ones.