New Year Traditions

mid-afternoon on Tuesday, the 30th of December 2008 by Gypsy

I’ve always been fascinated by traditions. It always amazes me how people will blindly follow “traditions” with out knowing the meaning behind them.

Of course there are many traditions that are forgotten, and yet shouldn’t be.

So..

Do you celebrate the New Year? if yes, How? Who with?

What is your favorite New Year memory? What is your favorite New Year tradition? (and what does it mean, where did it come from?)

Do you make New Year’s resolutions? if yes, do you keep them? What will your resolution be this year?

How/Where/With whom, will you celebrate this New Year?

Ok.. now for some traditions..

NEW YEAR TRADITIONS

This is a cool tradition (of course I know some people I would be tempted to substitute for the “dummy”.. yes be afraid!)… so is it dummy per/something that happened that year? I would have a gathering of “dummies” to blow up then..

ECUADOR - In South America "Ano Viejo" is celebrated by creating a fake person or dummy. The scarecrow-looking person will be completely dressed and stuffed with old newspapers and firecrackers. The dummy is usually placed outside the home. He represents something that happened during the last year. At midnight each family lights the dummy on fire. As the dummy goes up in smoke, the firecrackers also go off to add to the festivities. The old year is forgotten and the new year begins.

Um.. sounds too much like Christmas! (referring to the next one, but,… well yes the one above too.. BOOM!)

 

GREECE - In Greece, St. Basil fills the children’s shoes with presents at midnight.

This is just a waste.. and of course in the USA, someone would end up calling the police… filing a lawsuit (because sure they would slip on the shards).. not to mention the damage to the door, littering.. ahh the USA! (sigh).

DENMARK - It is a good sign to find your door littered with a pile of broken dishes at New Years. Old dishes are saved all year to throw them at the homes where their friends live on New Year’s Eve. Many broken dishes were a symbol that you have many friends!

I really like the Japanese traditions.. filled with meaning & actually a healthy way of bringing in the new year!

JAPAN - People in Japan spend weeks planning for their New Year celebrations. They buy special food and make decorations for their front doors out of pine branches, bamboo, and ropes that are believed to bring health and long life. Fan ropes are also hung over the doors and roofs with seaweed or ferns to bring them happiness and good luck. Children receive "otoshidamas" which are small gifts with money inside. They also send New Year cards to their friends and hold forgetting-year parties to say goodbye to the old year. The Japanese also forgive friends and family for any misunderstandings and disagreements they may have had that year so they can make a clean start of the new year. On December 31st, bells are rung 108 times to chase away 108 troubles. The people all laugh after the gongs because laughter will drive away the bad spirits. With all the bad spirits gone and troubles and enemies forgiven, they enjoy a day of celebration.

NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS: One new year tradition is the making of New Year’s resolutions. That tradition dates back to the early Babylonians. The early Babylonian’s most popular resolution was to return borrowed farm equipment. Popular modern resolutions include promises to lose weight or quit smoking.

Never could get into watching a parade.. still trying to figure out the point and purpose of them (I know, what a nerd).

NEW YEAR’S PARADES: In the United States, one of the most famous parades is the Tournament of Roses where the floats are all decorated with flowers. The parade dates back to 1886 when members of the Valley Hunt Club decorated their carriages with flowers. It celebrated the ripening of the orange crop in California.

New years is celebrated in many countries with a parade. After spending many months creating colorful costumes, the Junkanoo parade is held in the Bahamas where thousands of people celebrate in the New Year’s Festival. Prizes are given to the best, the strangest, or the most beautiful costumes.

In Nepal there is a four day parade during the New Year celebration and in Greece people carry figures of apples, ships and stars.

In Syria and Lebanon children parade door to door as well.

Door to door kids.. ok either prep for future sales job, or halloween training?

Thailand’s parade is led by an honored woman and people march to the beat of drums and gongs. Dragons, elephants, buffalos and giants are popular parade costumes there.

In Oberammergau, West Germany, the parade is very long and the parade leader carries a tall pole with a star on the top. He sings songs about the past year and dance to a band.

Wow that (Germany) parade leader would have a heck of a song to sing about this year.. what happened again?

FOOTBALL: Although the Rose Bowl football game was first played as a part of the Tournament of Roses in 1902, it was replaced by Roman chariot races the following year. In 1916, the football game returned as the sports centerpiece of the festival. Today you can find a majority of American men watching the football game on TV on New Year’s Day. There are even "Rose Bowl" parties.

I am for brining back the chariot races!

THE NEW YEAR BABY: The tradition of using a baby to signify the new year has roots in ancient Greece. Early Egyptians also used a baby as a symbol of rebirth. Early Christians tried to stop the tradition of using a baby to symbolize the new year, but its popularity as a symbol of rebirth outlasted the church’s attempts to change the tradition. Using an image of a baby with a New Years banner was brought to early America by the Germans.

Visit also… (too many to simply repost, and too many to comment on!) New Year Traditions Around the World at FatherTime’s Net.

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2 Responses to “New Year Traditions”

  1. Jeremy Says:

    Do you celebrate the New Year? if yes, How? Who with?
    Usually with friends, I reserve Christmas for family and New Years Eve for friends.

    What is your favorite New Year memory?
    New Years Eve 1992. I was spending it with my girlfriend’s family to ring in 1993. I never observed anyone firing their shotgun into the sky as the clock rang 12. But her father did. Fortunately it wasn’t pointed at me when he got it out of his closet.

    What is your favorite New Year tradition? (and what does it mean, where did it come from?)
    My mother loved Auld Lang Syne, and made me and my sister learn it. I still sing it to this day, even if my friends make fun of me for knowing all the words to the first verse and the refrain by memory.

    Do you make New Year’s resolutions? if yes, do you keep them? What will your resolution be this year?
    Nope, I’m not the resoltion type. But when the really uptight types ask me, I claim to be giving up abstenance, or something . (I do the same with Lent)

    How/Where/With whom, will you celebrate this New Year?
    Going to a party with 12 of my closest friends. Probably going to be liquor, cigars (the guys like the flavor, the girls like the aroma), wine, and witty banter, and Champagne for the ball drop.
    (I’d make my margaritas, but it sounds like there will be a pool of liquor already)

  2. tina Says:

    Jeremy.. great response.. what a hoot to celebrate by shooting in the new year!

    love your thoughts on resolutions (I can’t not stand them or those who push the idea too).

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