无码中文字幕一Av王,91亚洲精品无码,日韩人妻有码精品专区,911亚洲精选国产青草衣衣衣

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Thought Leaders

A festival worth celebrating

(China Daily) Updated: 2014-08-05 09:02

Qixi Festival is not and has never been the Chinese Valentine's Day.

When I arrived in China in 1991, on that day precisely, I was told the wonderful legend of the Cowherd and the Weaver maid, and that in the old days, Chinese girls spent the day sitting under vine plants sewing and praying they might become as skillful as the Weaver maid.

It was also said that on that night, the seventh day of the seventh lunar month, people would stay outside admiring the stars, a fan in hand, and only a few would have a chance to see the Weaver girl in a diaphanous white dress crossing the Celestial river on a bridge made by a flock of magpies. If those lucky ones kneeled down their wish would come true within three years.

I found this legend, which goes 2,000 years back, very moving, and started to spend the night under the stars on that day every year.

Some years later, the Western Valentine's Day entered China, and the Chinese asked me what the meaning was. Timidly, young men started to offer a rose to their girlfriends on Feb 14, and later, it became the day for proposal.

It's only at the beginning of this century that Qixi was transformed into the Chinese Valentine's Day.

Chinese children now have never heard about Qixi, but they know what Valentine's Day is. It's a good idea to revive Chinese culture before it disappears completely, but that should not mean falsifying it. The Qixi festival has been celebrated for centuries. Aren't Chinese proud enough of their own culture to propagate it instead of burying it under imported elements, in the name of business opportunities?

LISA CARDUCCI, via e-mail

Readers' comments are welcome. Please send your e-mail to opinion@chinadaily.com.cn or letters@chinadaily.com.cn or to the individual columnists. China Daily reserves the right to edit all letters. Thank you.

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...