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Encyclopedia > Tet Nguyen Dan
For the river in Roussillon, France, see Têt River.
The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is Tết.
Vietnamese name
Quốc Ngữ Tết Nguyên Đán
Chữ Nôm 節元旦

Tết Nguyên Đán, more commonly known as "Tết", is the most important holiday in Vietnam. It is the Vietnamese New Year which is based on the Chinese calendar, a lunisolar calendar.


Tết is celebrated on the same day as Chinese New Year (or the Spring Festival) and shares many of the same customs. It is celebrated from the first day of the first month of the Chinese calendar (around late January or early February) until at least the third day. Many Vietnamese prepare for Tết by cooking special holiday foods and cleaning the house. On Tết, Vietnamese visit their families and temples. Children are treated special on Tết; they are given money in red envelopes, called ĺ x́, from their elders. Other common practices on Tết include firecrackers, dragon dances and lion dances which ward off evil spirits and bring in good luck for the new year.

Contents

Preparations

Preparations for Tết start months before the actual celebrations. People would try to pay off their debts in advance so that they can be debt-free on Tết. Parents would buy new clothes for their children so that they can don them.


Traditionally, the three kitchen guardians for each house (Ông Táo), depart to heaven on the 23rd day of the last month of the Chinese calendar. They were to report to the Jade Emperor about the events in that house over the past year. Their departure is marked by a modest ceremony where the family offers sacrifices for them to use on their journey.


In the days before Tết, each family would traditionally cook special holiday food known as bánh chưng and bánh tét. Preparations for these foods are quite extensive, and cooking them can take several days. Family members would often take turns to keep watch on the fire overnight, telling each other stories about past Tếts.


Each home is thoroughly swept and decorated with flowers and offerrings for ancestors by the night before Tết. At midnight, many families would light firecrackers to welcome the new year (this practice is recently banned in Vietnam). In the morning, actual Tết celebrations begin.


Customs

On the first day of Tết, children would receive ĺ x́ from their elders. Usually, children would don their new clothes and give their elders the traditional Tết greetings before receiving the money. Since the Vietnamese believe that the first visitor a family receives in the year would set their fortunes for the entire year, people would never enter any house on the first day without being invited first. With their new money, children are free to spend it on toys or on gambling, which can be found in the streets. Prosperous families can pay for dragon dancers to perform at their house. There are also public performances for everyone to watch.


Sweeping during Tết is taboo, since it symbolizes sweeping the luck away. In southern Vietnam, popular fruits used for offering at the family altar are the custard-apple/sugar-apple (măng cầu), coconut (dừa), papaya (đu đủ), and mango (xoài), since they sound like "cầu vừa đủ xài" ([we] pray for enough [money] to spend) in the southern dialect of Vietnamese.


During the subsequent days, people would visit relatives and visit the local Buddist temples to give donations and to get their fortunes told. Fortune-telling based on Truyện Kiều is also popular.


Greetings

The traditional greeting is "Chúc mừng năm mới" (Happy New Year). "Cung hỉ phát tài" (from Cantonese) is sometimes also used.


Food

An important part of Tết is the food eaten during the celebration. Some food are eaten year-round, while others are only eaten during Tết. These food include:

  • bánh chưng and bánh tét: essentially tightly packed sticky rice with meat or bean fillings wrapped in banana leaves, bánh chưng (square-shaped) and bánh tét (cylindrical-shaped) are symbolically connected with Tết. Preparation is time-consuming, and can take days to cook. The story of their origins and their connection with Tết is often recounted to children while cooking them overnight.
  • hột dưa: roasted watermelon seeds, only eaten during Tết
  • kiệu: pickled vegetables
  • mứt: these sweetened dried fruits are rarely eaten at any time besides Tết.

Trivia

See also

External links

  • Lunar New Year (http://www.vnstyle.vdc.com.vn/lunar_newyear/)
  • Tet Nguyen Dan from Vietnam Tourism (http://www.vietnamtourism.com/e_pages/vietnam/introduction/people_customer/c_h_tet_nguyen_dan.htm)
  • Tết definition on VDict (http://vdict.com/i/2/t%E1%BA%BFt.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
www.loveofasiavietnam.com (537 words)
tet nguyen dan, is the lunar new year festival and it is the most important vietnamese holiday.
tet is the celebration of the beginning of spring as well as a new year.
literally, tet nguyen dan means the first morning of the first day of the new period.
Welcome to TET IN SEATTLE (683 words)
Tet In Seattle is made possible only by the generous donations and grants from the community.
Tet In Seattle is delighted to be a part of the Festal, a series of community cultural festivals celebrating the richness and diversity of this region.
Tet In Seattle is proud to collaborate with Seattle Center to help strengthen the region's cultural diversity through the celebration of Tet Nguyen Dan.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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