Global Education

How Lunar New Year Is Celebrated Around Asia

Each year, billions of people around the world mark the Lunar New Year with celebrations, special foods, and time with extended family. The Year of the Snake begins on January 29, 2025. Lunar New Year festivities typically last anywhere from a few days to two weeks, ending on the first full moon of the lunar calendar.

People widely celebrate the holiday throughout China, and many other Asian countries also observe the Lunar New Year with their own cultural traditions. If you plan to study or celebrate this holiday with your students, consider learning about customs from other Asian cultures to enrich the learning experience!

Korea

In Korea, they call the Lunar New Year Seollal and typically celebrate it over three days, paying their respects to ancestors and elders. Families gather together and dress in traditional clothing, or hanbok, and adults usually give children gifts of money. 

Preparing and eating meals together is also a large part of the celebration, where families often have special foods like rice cake soup (ddeokguk), Korean dumplings, and glass noodles. Playing games like Yut Nori, a board game played with wooden sticks, is a common way families spend time together during the holiday.

Taiwan

Lunar New Year in Taiwan is also a big celebration with extended family. In the weeks leading up to the new year, families clean their houses thoroughly, which is thought to clear out bad luck from last year and make room for good luck in the coming year. Like Seollal, elders give children gifts of money, but in red envelopes. Red is considered a lucky color, so red clothing and decorations like lanterns are used to bring prosperity in the new year.

A large meal with special foods is also common in Taiwan. Nian gao, or dumplings, is a popular dish, along with pineapple. Fireworks displays can be seen all over the country on New Year’s Eve, welcoming in the new year.

Vietnam

Lunar New Year, or Tet in Vietnam, is one of the largest celebrations of the year. Similar to other countries, families commonly clean and spruce up their homes before Tet to bring good luck in the new year. Families adorn their homes with red and gold lanterns and other decorations and prepare special foods. 

Like in other cultures, children receive lucky money in red envelopes from adults. Men and women wear traditional clothing, like the áo dài, a silk tunic worn over pants, during the holiday. Flowers are an important part of Tet, as they symbolize good luck and prosperity for the coming year. People place peach blossoms and kumquat trees in offices and homes to symbolize wealth and happiness.

The Philippines

In the Philippines, Lunar New Year is widely celebrated by the Tsinoy, or Chinese Filipino, community. Extended families gather together for big meals and celebrations. Tikoy, or sticky rice, is a staple dish because the stickiness is thought to help bind families together. Young children receive angpao, or red envelopes, with money inside from adults. It is also customary to pay off all debts before the new year.

A tradition unique to the Philippines is wearing polka dots for the Lunar New Year, since the round shape represents good luck. Families also prepare round fruits for the New Year’s Eve meal to bring prosperity and wealth.

The Lunar New Year comes with many rich cultural traditions from all over the world. We hope you explore some of them with your students! For more ideas on celebrating this holiday with students and colleagues, check out this blog post

How will you celebrate the Lunar New Year? Let us know by tagging us on Twitter @participatelrng and using the hashtag #UnitingOurWorld.

Caroline Weeks

Caroline Weeks is a marketing consultant at Participate Learning. She is passionate about using the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals as a framework for global learning.

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