日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区




Dumplings, Lanterns End Spring Fest

As elbow-to-elbow crowds paid homage to the lantern, and cloudy skies hid a hoped-for appearance of the first full moon of the Lunar New Year, Spring Festival 2001 drew to a close last night after two weeks of fireworks and family reunions.

While sanitation workers cleared away the gun-powder-scented debris from last night's final barrage, transportation officials today were bracing for the holiday's last travel peak as hundreds of thousands of workers and students were due to return to the city from their home-towns.

The culmination of Spring Festival, which began with the start of the Lunar New Year on January 24, is called the Lantern Festival, or "yuanxiaojie."

"Yuan" refers to the first lunar month, "xiao" is pinyin for "night," and "jie" means festival.

Though fireworks cascaded in the skies throughout the city, the focal point for last night's activities was in Yuyuan Garden, where lanterns in all shapes and sizes have been on display for more than a week.

At the garden's God Temple area and in the streets outside, children were pulling rabbit-shaped lanterns on wheels to mark the full moon.

Chinese tradition has it that one of these long-eared creatures lives on the moon.

The festival originated in the Han Dynasty (BC206-AD220). According to legend, Emperor Wen Di conquered a rebellion by Empress Lu, queen of a previous emperor, and to celebrate his victory, Wen declared the night a festival.

In the past, parents made the lanterns themselves out of paper, but today most are store-bought and lit by battery power.

Another big part of festival tradition is the eating of dumplings made from glutinous rice flour, some with red bean paste, rose petals, sesame and other flavored stuffings, and some plain.

The dumplings are called "tangyuan" which is similar in pronunciation to the pinyin for "family reunion." The round shape signifies perfection and reunion.

Again, in the past people made the dumpling in their own kitchens.

Today, most celebrants either buy prepared "tangyuan" at a supermarket or eat them at restaurants for 2 yuan (24 U.S. cents) to 5 yuan a bowl.

Business was booming yesterday at the Ningbo Tangtuan Food Shop in the Yuyuan area.

"It's really exciting," said shop owner Pang Shouzheng, pleased that she sold out her supply of 300 boxes yesterday, each containing 80 "tangyuan."

While her business is winding down, railway workers are facing a rush.

More than 220,000 people were expected to pour into the city today.

"It is the third transportation wave of the holiday," said Ying Rongwu of the Shanghai Railway Police Station.

The other crests, each amounting to more than 200,000 passengers, occurred on January 28 and February 1, as some workers returned to their jobs and other people came to the city hoping to find employment.

Today the influx will be swelled by college students coming back for the start of classes.

Yesterday, more than 176,000 people arrived in Shanghai by rail.

"The station was orderly, and we are well-prepared to receive the flow," said Ying.

More than 270 officers were assigned for crowd control, including 60 undercover agents targeting ticket scalpers.

Local police have arrested 63 scalpers since January 9, the first day of the Spring Festival transportation season, and confiscated tickets valued more than 57,000 yuan, Ying said.

(Eastday.com 02/08/2001)


In This Series

References

Archive

Web Link

主站蜘蛛池模板: 瑞安市| 黄冈市| 武义县| 丰都县| 丹凤县| 彭泽县| 买车| 福泉市| 宁晋县| 友谊县| 民勤县| 南皮县| 怀仁县| 武冈市| 分宜县| 枝江市| 睢宁县| 松江区| 望奎县| 宁安市| 新疆| 南开区| 越西县| 连云港市| 沙田区| 龙陵县| 安泽县| 富阳市| 石楼县| 卢湾区| 鄂托克前旗| 东方市| 垦利县| 和顺县| 禄劝| 景德镇市| 葫芦岛市| 安康市| 汝阳县| 临猗县| 永福县|