People around the world, including Americans, have celebrated the Lunar New Year with festivals, parades and temple visits during which they will ask for blessings. While most will be welcoming the Year of the Rabbit (a symbol of longevity, peace and prosperity), Vietnam is moving into the Year of the Cat (strength, resilience and determination).

 

The traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar’s new year celebration begins January 22 and ends February 5. Here are ways Americans typically mark the holiday, which in 2023 is expected to bring a year of hope:

Seek answers - A worshipper prays while holding the moon blocks, or jiaobei, used in pairs and thrown to seek divine guidance in the form of a yes or no question, during the Lunar New Year celebrations at the Thien Hau Temple in the Chinatown neighbourhood of Los Angeles.

Honour elders - Lissa Kim teaches students the proper way to bow in front of elders at a celebration of Seollal, the Korean Lunar New Year, at the Claire Lilienthal school in San Francisco. Students in the Korean immersion program wear hanbok, or traditional Korean clothing, and participate in a variety of activities to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

Cook dumplings - Students make dumplings in New York. About 200 Chinese, U.S. and other international college students gathered for a Lunar New Year gala. Dumplings represent prosperity because their shape resembles ancient Chinese currency. They are also seen as a way to welcome the new while sending away the old.

Share food - Yoon Kim, centre, along with other volunteers from the Korean American Association of New Jersey, pack bags to give away at an event celebrating the Lunar New Year in Palisades Park, New Jersey. The bags contain the ingredients for dduk guk, a rice cake soup that is traditionally eaten by Koreans to celebrate the new year.

Make noise - People attend a firecracker ceremony and cultural festival to mark the first day of the Lunar New Year in the Chinatown neighbourhood in New York City. Firecrackers are thought to drive away evil spirits and to signal the start of a new year. Red, considered the colour of good luck, is worn in abundance.

Love a parade - A child reacts to dancers dressed in a lion costume during the Chinese New Year parade in San Francisco. Lion dances are performed to bring good fortune and scare away evil spirits.