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Chúc mừng năm mới

That, of course, is “Happy New Year” in Vietnamese. (I was in Little Saigon – Westminster, CA)

This is Happy New Year in Chinese:  新年快乐

In Japanese: 新年あけましておめでとうございます

In Korean: 새해 복 많이 받으세요

Asians all over the world celebrated the first day of the lunar new year on Sunday, February 14th.  The Year of the Tiger was welcomed with great joy and hope for prosperity and happiness.  The tiger symbolizes such character traits as bravery, competitiveness and unpredictability; if you’re curious, you can find out what sign you were born under here and what 2010 may hold for you here.

Last week my friend Monique and I met at the ABC Supermarket shopping center at Bolsa and Brookhurst in what’s known as Little Saigon in Westminster. I wanted to photograph and learn about the many symbols and customs associated with Chinese New Year and Monique acted as my translator and tour guide.

New years banner greets shoppers at the fruit market.

New years banner greets shoppers at the fruit market.

Only 10:30 a.m. and traffic was backed up on Brookhurst and the parking lot was swarming with erratic drivers looking for a spot. I parked way in the back.

The marketplace is humming with activity.

The marketplace is humming with activity.

Flowers are an important part of decorating a home for Chinese New Year.  Plum blossom and water narcissus are the two flowers most associated with the New Year.

A vendor shows us her plum blossoms.

A vendor shows us her plum blossoms.

Water narcissus

Water narcissus

In the midst of the crush of shoppers and staccato sounds of a foreign language, were two monks walking, eyes cast downward, moving silently amongst the crowd carrying a bamboo container tucked under their robes, discreetly revealed only when a passer-by offers a few dollars.

show deep respect

show deep respect

Tangerines, oranges and pomelos are frequently displayed in homes and stores. Tangerines are symbolic of good luck and oranges are symbolic of wealth. The first store we entered had a tangerine tree decorated with lai-see envelopes (also called hong-bao). Money is placed inside the red envelopes and given to children and young adults as gifts.

tangerine tree decorated with red envelopes

tangerine tree decorated with red envelopes

Traditional gifts given to families are rice cakes called banh chung made from white rice, marinated strips of pork and yellow mung beans. I had wanted to photograph Monique making a traditional New Years food but she said that everyone buys these in stores now because they are too labor intensive to make at home. I read a very touching article by Ky-Phong Tran in the Orange County Register recalling memories of his grandfather making the rice cakes every New Year – the only thing he ever made and how this tradition was his father’s way of reaching back 35 years and 8,000 miles to his childhood in the homeland.

Banh chung is a traditional gift

Banh chung is a traditional gift

Piled high were colorful containers of candies and nuts that are given as gifts also.

Colorful candies and sweets for gifts

Colorful candies and sweets for gifts

From here we went to the fruit market where Monique identified the exotic fruits for me and described their taste and how they’re eaten.  There was dragon fruit, an exotic lemon that looks like it has “fingers”,  gigantic jack fruit whose seeds are boiled and taste like chestnuts, prickly durian that’s called “stinky fruit” and has a custardy filling.  I bought a package of  mangostine which are cracked open and has white fruit segments similar to an orange.

exotic fruit and traditional Vietnamese desserts

exotic fruit and traditional Vietnamese desserts

Monique purchased some traditional Vietnamese desserts, made from rice and similar to what we know as tapioca or rice pudding, and bought plum blossoms for her home from a familiar vendor with a better price than the ones we priced earlier.

Monique with her plum blossoms

Monique with her plum blossoms

More commotion erupted when the police and zoning people arrived and  vendors were told that they couldn’t be spilling over into the fire lane and some were sent packing because they had no sellers license.

Eastern spirituality meets Western reality

Eastern spirituality meets Western reality

The weekend brought the parades and pageantry of Tet Festival followed by 10 days of celebrating the Year of the Tiger with family and friends.

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2 Responses to “Chúc mừng năm mới”

  1. Mae Sutcliffe
    February 15, 2010 at 11:38 am #

    what an interesting article. my favorite is the plum blossmos!! loved this.

    • admin
      February 15, 2010 at 12:13 pm #

      Thanks, Mae. I really enjoyed it – learning about the foods and traditions of other cultures has always interested me.

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