March 28, 2024 14:43 (IST)
Follow us:
facebook-white sharing button
twitter-white sharing button
instagram-white sharing button
youtube-white sharing button
India and China discuss border disengagement: EAM | Indian External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar discusses defence, trade while interacting with Malaysian leaders | Want to return money 'looted' from poor and attached by ED in Bengal: PM Modi tells Krishnagar BJP candidate | Congress drops Supriya Shrinate as candidate for LS polls over her remarks on Kangana Ranaut | Delhi HC refuses interim relief to Arvind Kejriwal, issues notice to ED
Taiwan: Folkloric Lantern Festival brings people together

Taiwan: Folkloric Lantern Festival brings people together

India Blooms News Service | | 29 Feb 2016, 11:17 pm
Taipei, Feb 29 (IBNS): Amid grandeur, Lantern Festival, one of the most celebrated festivals of Taiwan, is being held in Taiwan like every year.
This year, the Taiwan Lantern Festival is running from February 22 to March 6 in Taoyuan and is celebrating the Year of the Monkey under the theme "Golden Monkey Offering Peaches". 
 
The festival has began with a lantern lighting event at the square in front of Taiwan High Speed Rail’s Taoyuan Station with a 26-meter-high main lantern modelled after the Monkey King from the classic Chinese novel “Journey to the West.” 
 
The decorative display is marking the 24th year of Lantern Festival this year.
 
The Lantern Festival is an ancient Chinese tradition that dates back more than 2,000-years that closes out the Lunar New Year season. 
 
Initially it started as a religious observance, but later fireworks and riddle-guessing contests were incorporated into these celebrations over time to make the occasion a gala affair. 
 
The lantern, a source of light, is a traditional symbol of the lengthening days of spring. The traditional festival food are glutinous rice dumplings with sweet or savory stuffings called Tangyuan that comes in many different choices of flavors.
 
The origin of the festival lies in the festive activities of an agricultural people celebrating the lengthening of daylight hours and the coming of spring after the New Year. 
 
Other legends have it that the festival was actually started by an emperor of the Han dynasty (206 B.C. – 220 A.D.), who was a devout Buddhist and who ordered his people to display lights on the fifteenth night of the first month of the lunar year to pay respects to Buddha. 
 
According to the same legend, holding torches or lanterns on this night makes it easier to see deities descending from heaven to give blessings to the earth. Yet another legend has it that in the Tang dynasty, the emperors would celebrate the festival by ordering hundreds of beautiful women to sing and dance with lanterns in the brightly lit plaza. 
 
These festive activities gradually spread to the common people and developed into the most popular festival in the year after Chinese New Year. The festival is also called the Little New Year. In the old days, these festivities, together with the celebrations for the Chinese New Year, would last for as long as forty-five days. Nowadays the festivities last for about a week. 
 
There are numerous Lantern Festival celebrations around Taiwan which are regarded as must-go’s. In 1990, the Taiwan Tourism Bureau held the first Taipei Lantern Festival, which injected a whole new life into the event. It has become a major tourist event in Taiwan over the years. Thanks to the advancements of modern technology, every year a gigantic lantern installation is erected in the middle of the plaza of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, usually carrying the theme in line with the Chinese horoscope sign of that year. 
 
The lantern installation includes performances combining laser lights, music and sculptural arts. On the four sides of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, smaller lantern installations depict folklore and historical events, and large multi-colored lanterns, many in the likeness of different plants and animals such as butterflies, dragons, dinosaurs and birds, are hung up along the road. 
 
One can also find interesting live folk performances such as lion and dragon dances, acrobatic acts, folk art skits, mock battles, and booths that demonstrate and sell traditional handicrafts such as fan painting, lantern making, dough sculpture, candy-figure blowing, paper cutting, Chinese knot work, and many delicious snacks and sweets. 
 
During the festival period, a tunnel of lights is put up on the roads of Taipei, dressing up the whole city with glittering lights. 
 
In 2007 the Discovery Channel recommended the Taiwan Lantern Festival as one of the best holiday celebration events. It has emerged as an international event, attracting tens and thousands of visitors from at home and abroad. If you have never considered visiting Taiwan, think again! It is one of the best destinations for the travellers from every corner of the world. 
 

Support Our Journalism

We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism

IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.

Support objective journalism for a small contribution.