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Celebrating Lunar New Year With Kids: Year of the Dragon 2024!

Fun ways to Celebrate Lunar New Year Locally, virtually or at home with recipes, crafts, and more!

By Macaroni KID February 10, 2024

Happy Lunar New Year! This is a holiday with long held traditions, customs special foods and celebrations with family . . . it's a time to say goodbye to the past year and usher in the new one! People around the globe celebrate Lunar New Year, especially in Asian countries. 

What is Lunar New Year? What about Chinese New Year? Most of us here in the United States are likely familiar with the celebration of Chinese New Year and many have heard of Lunar New Year - you might think they are the same, but in fact they are not. While Chinese New Year is also a Lunar New Year, countries all over Asia have their own individual Lunar New Year holiday celebrations. Although all of the Lunar New Year celebrations have many things in common, they also have their own unique names, foods, traditions not to mention the number of days celebrated - sometimes they fall on the same days, but not always.

Lunar New Year follows a lunisolar calendar and is celebrated sometime in the second half of January through the second half of February for varying lengths of time. This year Lunar New Year begins February 10, 2024. If you want to save the date for next year it will be January 29, 2025 and the year after it will be February 17, 2026. 

Learn more about Lunar New Year!



The Year of the Dragon 2024

Most Asian countries will be celebrating the year of the Dragon in 2024. The Dragon is a mythical creature, both majestic and powerful. During ancient times they were thought to possess special powers over wind, rain, rivers and seas with the hopes of bringing good weather and prosperity to the world. This year could bring opportunities changes and challenges, but don't they all?

Whether you're expecting a child to be born in 2024 or you or someone you know was born in a year of the dragon — 2012, 2000, 1988, 1976 and 1964 for instance — you might notice dragon-like characteristics such as courage, confidence, intelligence and enthusiasm. The dragon symbolized power, nobility, honor, luck and success, it's one of the most desired sign - Chinese births tend to peak in dragon years!

2024 is the year of the Wood Dragon: The Wood dragon tends to be more introverted than the rest. 2025 will be the year of the Wood Snake and 2026 will be year of the Fire Horse.

The Chinese Zodiac 

Traditionally each year is represented by one of twelve animals based on the Chinese Zodiac:  rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat / sheep / ram, monkey, rooster, dog, and pig. Each of these animals comes with unique traits that are indicative of what to expect in the new year. It's also believed to represent personality traits in people born that year. Additionally each animal has an element - they also rotate, there are 4 elements: wood, fire, earth and metal. Each sign reigning once every 12 years starting at the beginning of the Lunisolar year. 

Interesting fact:  Not all countries use the Chinese Zodiac animals some differences are:

  • Thailand:  Instead of a dragon they have Naga, a mythical snake-like creature believed to bring wealth and fertility, it's a common image found throughout Thai temples.
  • Vietnam:  Instead of the rabbit they have a cat and instead of the ox they have the buffalo. 
  • Burmese Zodiac: They use eight animal signs base on the eight directions:  north, south, east, west, northeast, northwest, southeast and southwest. Instead of years they are rooted in the days of the week, eight animals in total with Wednesday split into morning and afternoon. The animals include:  Garuda - mythical bird, tiger, lion, elephant with tusks, elephant without tusks, rat, guinea pig and dragon.
  • Japan Instead of the pig they have a boar - their zodiac is now based on the solar instead of lunar calendar.

Ask your kids:  Which Lunar New Year animal are you like?


Celebrating Lunar New Year with your Family

Nearby / Local Celebrations:

🧧 Chinese New Year Celebration - Thousand Oaks

🏮 125th Golden Dragon Parade 🐉 Chinatown LA

🏮🐉 125th Golden Dragon Parade 📺💻 Virtual


More Southern California Celebrations:

Celebrate Lunar New Year at Disney California Adventure Park - Anaheim, CA


For family-fun Lunar New Year celebrations in Oak Park, Agoura Hills, Malibu, Calabasas, Thousand Oaks, Newbury Park, Westlake Village and nearby in Ventura and Los Angeles counties be sure to look at the Macaroni KID Conejo Valley - Malibu - Calabasas event and activity calendar


Learn about different Lunar New Year traditions around the world

Many of the East Asian and Southeast Asian countries outside Mainland China also celebrate Lunar New Year, including Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Tibet, Bhutan, Mongolia, and the Philippines. Each country has its own unique traditions and customs to usher in the New Year, but common to all celebrations are coming together with family and friends, gift-giving, and preparing and eating special traditional foods. 

Find out how each country celebrates, and how you can bring the Lunar New Year celebration to your home:

China | Korea| Vietnam | Tibet | Mongolia



China

Chinese New Year or Spring festival brings dragon dances, lion dances, mooncakes, lucky foods, parades, red lanterns, fireworks, red envelopes and family . . . most of us are familiar with many of the traditions associated with Chinese New Year celebrations. Chinese New Year is a very big deal in China. Schools and businesses are closed for a whole week and millions of people travel to their hometowns to spend the holiday with family in what is often referred to as "the world's largest human migration." Red is considered a lucky color in Chinese culture, so you will see it in abundance during Lunar New Year festivities.

Speaking of red, those red envelopes are called hong bao and contain money that is given by elders to children. While the traditional foods prepared and eaten during New Year celebration vary somewhat by region - jiaozi "dumplings," nian goa "rice cakes," whole fish, long noodles and mandarin oranges are considered lucky foods. 

How to celebrate Chinese New Year at home:



1035352 by pixabay via Canva

Korea

Korean Lunar New Year, called Seollal, is one of the most important national holidays in Korea, where families gather over three days — spanning from the day before Seollal to the day after — to pay respect to their ancestors, prepare and eat traditional foods, play folk games, and exchange gifts. 

Eating rice cake soup "tteokguk" is an important part of the tradition, as Koreans believe everyone gets a year older on Seollal — but only if they eat their tteokguk! Kids look forward to performing a deep traditional bow "sebae" for their elder family members in exchange for blessings — and New Year's money!

How to celebrate Seollal at home:



NgKhanhVuKhoa from Getty Images via Canva

Vietnam

Vietnamese New Year know as "Tết" is the most important national holiday in Vietnam. Similar to Korean Seollal, Vietnamese people celebrate by returning to their home villages for big family reunions involving special holiday foods, decorations, games, ancestral worship, exchanging traditional New Year's greetings, bestowing lucky money on kids and elders, and purification rituals aimed at washing away the bad luck of the old year and welcoming the new year afresh. 

Lunar New Year's Eve kicks off the celebrations with fireworks, dragon dances, and boisterous parades filled with rattles, gongs, drums, and bells meant to scare off evil spirits. The first day of Tết is the most sacred, celebrated with just close family. Family members dress up in new clothes, symbolizing a fresh start to the new year, and children receive a red envelope containing money from their elders. The following days are filled with visits with friends and extended family. 

How to celebrate Tết at home:



Getty Images via Canva

Tibet

Tibet's Losar festival is steeped in their common Buddhist faith with an emphasis on continuous chanting of scripture to expel the evil demons that the Tibetan people believe exist everywhere, and praying for good luck and blessing for the coming year. 

Families prepare for Losar by buying new clothes, thoroughly cleaning their homes to clear away the bad luck of the old year, and decorating with fragrant flowers and auspicious signs. The centerpiece of the home is the Losar altar, which is a basic Tibetan Buddhist shrine, but with additional items meant to invoke blessings and abundance for the New Year. 

Fun fact: Because the Tibetan words for "sheep's head" and "beginning of the year" are similar, it is customary for families to make a sheep's head out of colored butter as a decoration! Losar festivities last several days and include gathering with family and friends, prayer ceremonies, exchanging gifts, eating traditional foods, and visiting local monasteries.

How to celebrate Losar at home:


Mongolia

Tsagaan Sar literally translates to "White Moon," and is Mongolia's most important national holiday. While Tsagaan Sar celebrations and customs have changed several times since the holiday was first established in the 12th century, modern festivities focus on family togetherness and unity, paying respect to elders, passing on Mongolian culture and traditions to the younger generation, and welcoming spring with an optimistic spirit and kind heart. 

Similar to other cultures, Mongol New Year's preparations focus on cleaning their homes and bodies, with the belief that cleanliness ushers in good luck, and preparing traditional foods. Tsagaan Sar festivities officially last three days and involve visiting with family, friends, and neighbors; many special rituals; and lots of eating with an emphasis on white food, which symbolizes purification. 

How to celebrate Tsagaan Sar at home:


You might be left wondering - what about Japan?

Japan is one of the few East Asian countries that no longer celebrates Lunar New Year. Once they adopted the more western Gregorian calendar they moved their New Year celebration - Oshōgatsu, to January 1st, it's one of their most celebrated holidays.


Happy Lunar New Year! I hope you enjoyed this tour of Lunar New Year traditions around the globe and have fun incorporating some in your own celebrations with your family this year.


georgeclerk from Getty Images Signature via Canva

This previously shared article has been updated by Macaroni KID Conejo Valley - Malibu - Calabasas