Monday June 18 marks the fifth day of the fifth month of the traditional Chinese calendar — an annual celebration known as 端午节 Duānwǔjié – Dragon Boat Festival. The Chinese calendar is lunisolar, so the date of the festival varies from year to year on the Gregorian calendar. In 2016, it occurred on June 9 and in 2017, on May 30. It’s famous for the races held on that day in traditional paddled long boats, each ornamented with a dragon’s head at the prow.
Here are 5 things about the Dragon Boat Festival you may not know!
1.It is also known as Zhongxiao Festival 忠孝节 Zhōngxiàojié - commemorating loyalty (忠zhōng) and filial piety (孝xiào) - Confucian virtues.
2.It's not about dragons. It's about an exiled poet who killed himself over 2000 years ago.
3.It's as much about the bites as the boats.
Wu (午) in the name Duanwu in Chinese has similar pronunciation as the number 5, and therefore many regions have traditions of eating food that is related to the number 5. For example, the Guangdong and Hong Kong regions have the tradition of having congee Made from 5 different beans.
4.In 2005 it sparked a minor international incident.
5.It only became an official holiday in China in 2008.
Although it has been a part of Chinese culture for centuries, Dragon Boat Festival has changed names more than a few times, and has fallen in and out of favor with the authorities.
In Chiang Kai-shek's Republic of China, two of modern China's leading writers had it rechristened Poets' Day. As the country fought off Japanese invasion, it became a time to celebrate both China's literary tradition and Qu's patriotic credentials.
Communist China embraced this patriotic interpretation of the holiday at first, but it later became the victim of changing ideological tides.
During the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), Chairman Mao called on his followers to smash the “Four Olds”: Old Customs, Old Culture, Old Habits, and Old Ideas. As mobs of Red Guards ransacked temples and destroyed paintings, sculptures and books that predated his New China, traditional celebrations such as Dragon Boat Festival became more subdued.
In more recent years, however, Dragon Boat Festival has made a big comeback in the People's Republic, propelled by a government that has sought to reposition itself as the defender of Chinese tradition rather than destroyer.