Where people abstain from giving lucky money on the first day of Tet
(Baonghean.vn) - While the Mong people believe that giving lucky money is the children's duty to their parents and lucky money gifts are simply chickens and sticky rice dishes, the Khmu people abstain from giving lucky money on the first day of Tet.
It can be said that the Mong ethnic group still preserves many unique cultural identities, especially customs during Tet and Spring.
On the afternoon of the 30th of Tet, people cut out their own paper and stick it all over the house, on tables, chairs, and pillars to pray for good luck and a peaceful new year. At around 4 pm, everyone in the family gathers at the village stadium to hold a village worship ceremony.
The head of the family holds a chicken and leads the group around a large pile of cogon grass, in the middle of which is a tung xong (softwood) tree, to offer to send off the old year and invite the New Year gods to celebrate Tet. Then everyone returns home to prepare the altar and kill a chicken to call in the New Year.
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Mong people prepare the altar to celebrate Tet. Photo: Dao Tho |
According to Mr. Lau Xai Phia residing in Nam Khien 2 village (Nam Can commune - Ky Son), in the past, most Mong people had a flintlock gun in their house, so they all fired it into the sky to signal the sacred moment of the year had arrived. When the gun was fired, it was also the time for children to gather to give lucky money to their parents.
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Mong men and women happily throw pao during Tet. Photo courtesy |
The Mong people's New Year's gift does not require money, just a bottle of wine, a chicken, or a plate of sticky rice to offer to their parents, wishing them good health and blessing their children and grandchildren.
“In the past, there were guns, so every year the lucky money ceremony took place at the exact moment the gun went off. Now, without the gun signal, this custom no longer takes place at the right time. Children sometimes go out until the 3rd or 4th day of the New Year before returning to congratulate their parents,” said Mr. Xai Phia.
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Panpipe dance to express love in Spring. Photo: Dao Tho |
On the first morning of Tet, everyone in the village visits each other's houses and brings their best wishes. The elderly sit around the fire, eat sticky rice cakes, drink corn wine, and chat about the past year and advise each other on how to do business in the new year; men and women dress up in their best traditional costumes and go out to the yard to play the flute and throw pao to look for a wife or husband.
The sounds of leaf pipes and lip pipes echoed throughout the mountains and forests. And so the Tet holiday continued day after day.
For the Khmu ethnic community, their own New Year (ie Go Ro) is celebrated at the end of November (lunar calendar), but during the common traditional New Year of the ethnic group, the Khmu people still retain their own unique features in the identity of their community.
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The Khmu people celebrate Tet with rice wine. Photo: Dao Tho |
Mr. Moong Pho Hoan in Cha Ca village (Bao Thang commune - Ky Son) said that on the evening of the 30th of Tet, the Khmu people prepare a jar of rice wine to welcome the New Year. In the past, the Khmu people did not have clocks, so everyone took turns staying awake to hear the rooster crow to welcome the New Year.
When the rooster crows to signal the arrival of the new year, family members gather around the jar of rice wine to drink together, wishing each other good health and a good harvest. And what is more special, from the moment of entering the first day until the end of the day, the Khmu people are not allowed to leave their houses.
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The sacred kitchen on Tet holiday. Photo: Dao Tho |
“That’s why, on the first day of the new year, we don’t give lucky money to anyone and we can’t go to other people’s houses. Because if we give lucky money on that day, we will lose our luck for the whole year and if we go to other people’s houses, we are afraid that it will bring bad luck to them,” Mr. Pho Hoan added.
According to Mr. Hoan, after the first day of the new year, the Khmu people give lucky money to the elderly and children. Whoever has money or gifts does not care about how much they give, what matters is the heart.
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Ancestor worshiping tray on Tet holiday of Khmu people. Photo: Dao Tho |
Thus, it can be seen that the ethnic communities in Western Nghe An have their own characteristics during Tet. This is also what creates the richness in the cultural identity of the ethnic groups in the highlands.