What is Lunar New Year? Year of the Snake questions answered

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Tuesday, January 28, 2025 9:38PM
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The Year of the Snake kicks off in a week in San Francisco. The animal symbolizes transformation and renewal. Here's how the city is preparing.

SAN FRANCISCO -- The Lunar New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, is based on cycles of the moon and falls on a different day every year. In 2025, the Year of the Snake begins on Jan. 29. It marks the start of a new lunar calendar and is a celebration of the arrival of spring.

It is known to Asian communities around the world by different names, the most commonly used being Chinese New Year or Chinese "Chunjie," largely by the Chinese diaspora around the world. Other names include Vietnamese Tet, Korean Solnal and Tibetan Losar.

Lunar New Year celebrations in Chinese culture typically go for 15 days, culminating in a lantern festival on the final day.

KGO-TV in San Francisco is the official home of the 2025 Chinese New Year Parade. Watch it on Saturday, February 15 wherever you stream ABC7.

What is the Lunar New Year?

The Lunar New Year - known as the Spring Festival in China, Tet in Vietnam and Seollal in Korea - is a major festival celebrated in several Asian countries. In Taiwan, this year, people have been drawn to the White Snake Temple to pay their respects. In Indonesia, it is celebrated with dragon puppets and drum displays. It is also widely observed by diaspora communities around the world.

It begins with the first new moon of the lunar calendar and ends 15 days later on the first full moon. Because the lunar calendar is based on the cycles of the moon, the dates of the holiday vary slightly each year, falling between late January and mid-February.

What does the Year of the Snake mean?

Snakes are viewed with both fear and reverence in Chinese culture. On the one hand, venomous snakes are associated with darkness. But in Chinese mythology, snakes are also known as "little dragons," and the skin they shed is known as "the dragon's coat," symbolizing good luck, rebirth and regeneration. The snake also symbolizes the pursuit of love and happiness. In Chinese culture, they are grouped with the turtle and crane as a symbol of longevity.

This year, merchants in China and elsewhere are producing lanterns, soft toys and other products where the snakes have googly eyes and goofy smiles so they appear cute and cuddly, and don't scare away young celebrants.

How Lunar New Year is celebrated

Spring cleaning is a common practice of those celebrating the season. Gearing up to usher in good luck and welcome good fortune for the year is seen as an important practice before the new year arrives.

Staying up late to ring in the new year, much like it is done in American culture is also common. However, fireworks and firecrackers, along with lion and dragon dances, are all thought to be additional elements to ward off evil spirits and frighten bad luck away.

Gifting red packets filled with crisp dollar bills to children and the elderly is another important hallmark of the season. The red packets symbolize good luck, the dollar bills have to make up a round, even number and the act of giving and receiving one signals an exchange of a blessing.

"Lucky food"

Dottie Li, cross-cultural expert and Voice and Voice Coach of Rosetta Stone's Mandarin products, explains, "There are some items that are must-haves such as fish, tofu, bok choy and of course, noodle soup - a traditional meal of choice. The noodles are believed to bring good luck, the fish rhymes with having leftovers, the bok choy and tofu symbolize peace and protection."

Depending on the region and country, other food are staples such as sweet glutinous rice cakes (nian gao), sticky rice balls (tang yuan) and tik ko ladoo, a crispy ball of sesame seeds and toffee.

Greetings

Family visits and meet ups with friends, much like the American Thanksgiving, are central to the Lunar New Year.

Chinese people greet one another with auspicious sayings and phrases to wish each other health, wealth, and good fortune when they meet during this period.

Traditional greetings include:


  • Gong Xi Fa Cai: may great wealth and affluence be with you.

  • Chu Ru Ping An: travel safe in and out of your house.

  • Bu Bu Gao Sheng: may you be promoted every step of the way. May you continually grow and elevate.

Lunar New Year in California

The Year of the Snake for 2025 will be the third Lunar New Year celebrated in California as an official state holiday. California is the first state in the U.S. to recognize the holiday in an official capacity, an act by the state to show its solidarity with the Asian American community through the wave of anti-Asian hate and violence that grew after the COVID-19 pandemic.

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In 2022, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill declaring Lunar New Year as a state holiday. In his signing message, he wrote that this act, "... acknowledges the diversity and cultural significance Asian Americans bring to California and provides an opportunity for all Californians to participate in the significance of the Lunar New Year."

May you have a prosperous and healthy Lunar New Year!

The Associated Press contributed to this article.

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