Mid-Autumn Festival
Held on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month, the Mid-Autumn Festival
is the second grandest festival after the Spring Festival in China.
The festival takes its name from the fact that it is always celebrated
in the middle of the autumn season. The Festival is also known
as the Moon Festival, as at that time of the year the moon is
at its roundest. On this day, family members gather to appreciate
the bright full moon, eat moon cakes at night, express strong
yearnings toward their homes and think of family members who live
far away.
Legend about the Festival:
The story of Chang Er is the most widely accepted tale regarding
the origins of the Mid-Autumn Festival. It is said that in ancient
times, ten suns existed and the extreme heat made people's lives
very difficult. It was the hero Hou Yi who, owing to his great
strength, shot down the nine of the ten suns. On hearing of this
amazing feat and the hero who performed it, people came from far
and wide to learn from him. Peng Meng was among these people.
Later, Hou Yi married a beautiful and kind woman named Chang Er
and lived a happy life.
One day, Hou Yi came upon Wangmu (the queen of heaven) on the
way to meet his old friend. Wangmu presented him an elixir which,
if drunk, would cause him to ascend immediately to heaven and
become an immortal. Instead of drinking the potion himself, Hou
Yi took it home and presented it to Chang Er to keep. Unfortunately,
Peng Meng secretly saw Hou Yi give the potion to his wife and
three days later, while Hou Yi was out hunting, Peng Meng rushed
into the backyard and demanded that Chang Er hand over the elixir.
Knowing that she could not win, she took out the elixir and swallowed
it immediately. The moment she drank it, she flew out of the window
and up into the sky. Chang Er's great love for her husband drew
her towards the Moon, which is the nearest heavenly body to the
earth.
On realising what happened to his wife, Hou Yi was so grief stricken
that he shouted Chang Er' s name to the sky. He was amazed to
see a figure which looked just like his wife appeared in the Moon.
He took the food liked by Chang Er to an altar and offered it
as a sacrifice for her. Hou Yi's neighbours also burned incense
and prepared food to express their good wishes to the kind Chang
Er. This became a custom later every year.
Customs:
Different customs have evolved in different areas regarding the
Mid-Autumn Festival. The most significant customs are to appreciate
and offer sacrifice to the round bright moon and eat moon cakes.
Other activities like dragon dancing and doing obeisance to the
moon are also considered highly important.
Appreciating and Offering Sacrifice to the Moonlight:
Since ancient times, Chinese emperors offered sacrifices to the
sun in the spring and the moon in autumn. Especially in the Zhou
Dynasty (11th century BC - 221 BC), the big incense burn table
was arranged and all kinds of food were offered in sacrifice that
day. However, appreciating the moon became more popular in the
Tang (618 - 907) and Song Dynasties (960 - 1279). Many famous
poems for praising the moon on the night of the festival were
created during those periods. In the Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644),
the Moon Altar was built for the purpose of sacrifice to the moon
on the Mid-Autumn Festival.
Today, sacrifice has been replaced by a simple appreciation of
the moon. Members of a family usually sit around a table eating
and talking to their heart content and at the same time admiring
the bright moon. While looking up the moon, people will think
of their relatives afar and good wishes are expressed in their
mind.
Eating Moon Cakes
As
with every Chinese holiday, the Mid-Autumn Festival has its own
special food. People eat moon cakes at Mid-Autumn Festival. The
moon cake is a kind of cookie with various fillings and on the
surface are printed different artistic patterns depicting the
story of Chang Er flying to the moon. People treated this kind
of food as one of the sacrificial offerings to the moon in the
old days. Today, it has become an indispensable food while appreciating
the bright moon for every family. Moon cakes come in various flavors
which change according to the region but common fillings are nuts,
sugar, sesame, ham and egg yolk.
As the moon cake is round in shape, it symbolizes the reunion
of a family, so it is easy to understand how the eating of moon
cakes under the round moon can inspire the missing of distant
relatives. Nowadays, people present the moon cakes to relatives
and friends to demonstrate that they wish them a long and happy
life.
Click to get Timetable
of Chinese Traditional Festivals from 2007 to 2015