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Xin nein kuai le!
Linda Pham, a member of the school's Parent Teacher Organization [PTO], along with parentsQiuxia Lai andYuReneeWang organized the event for the students - kindergartners through second-graders - Feb. 7, which translates to the Chinese year 4706. The Chinese calendar goes by the lunisolar- combination of the lunar and solar calendars- which scholars have proclaimed is the oldest surviving calendar system in the world. The large gymwas decoratedwith festive red lanterns and happy wishes written on red paper. "Do you know what animal we are celebrating for theChineseNewYear this year?" Phamasked the students.
The rat, or sometimes called themouse, is the first sign on a 12-year cycle of the Chinese zodiac. The rat is roughly equivalent to the sign Sagittarius. Some of the famous "rats" include Sen. JohnMcCain ofArizona, a candidate for the Republican Party nomination in the 2008 presidential election, who served as a U.S. Navy pilot for 23 years; Mary Tyler Moore, an actress best known for "The Mary Tyler Moore Show"; Al Gore, who was vice president of the United States under President BillClinton;Richard Simmons, a fitness personalitywho promotesweight-loss programs; John F. Kennedy Jr., the son of President John F. Kennedy and a journalist and publisher; and Prince Harry of Wales, son of Prince Charles and Princess Diana. Rats appeared in the 2007 Disney Pixar film"Ratatouille," where a rat named Remy dreams of becoming a great French chef despite his family's wishes and the obvious problem that he is a rat. And the leader of the TeenageMutant Ninja Turtles, Splinter, is amutated rat. Some students and faculty were dressed in festive red clothing, which is traditionally worn onChineseNewYear. It is believed that red will scare away evil spirits and bad fortune. Under the direction of Qiuxia Lai, the nine-member dance troupe,made up of firstand second-graders, performed aChinese fan dance, and Sarah Zhong,who attends James Madison Intermediate School, performed a Tibetan dance. For a month, the students - Zhong, Raisa Baraka, Diana Chen, Diana D'Souza, Lucy Gao, Jewel Hu, Sanjana Nair, Leena Prabhakar,Michelle Ran and Esther Zhang - spent their after-school hours practicing for their performances. When asked howit felt to performthe fan dance in front of their classmates, all the girls, ranging from 6 to 8 years old, said it was fun. Kin San Ng, a parent who owns Person to Person Karate in the Colonia section of Woodbridge, and parent HaichaoWang performed the lion dance, which was a big hit with the students. "Wake up, lion!" yelled the students. The bright red glittery lion slowly opened his eyes, and in the process of the traditional dance, the lion ate a head of cabbage. Then, without warning, the lion suddenly spit out pieces of the cabbage onto the students, which brought laughter and screams. The lion dance,which originated inChina close to a thousand years ago, is a formof traditional dance in Chinese culture, in which performers mimic a lion's movements in a lion costume. Mayor Jun Choi joined the students in the festivities, asking themwhich one of the 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac applies to them. Most of the students were born in 2000, 2001 or 2002, making them a dragon, a snake or a horse, respectively. Adragon is known as being enthusiastic, a perfectionist, charismatic, and demanding. Asnake is known as being a thinker, self-confident, intuitive, but sometimes pessimistic. Ahorse is known as being hardworking, anxious, independent, but sometimesmoody. Choi asked the students if they could guess what animal he was. After several guesses, including a dragon, Choi told the students hewas a pig on the Chinese zodiac, which was the animal the Chinese celebrated last year. This brought laughter fromthe students, and a smile to Choi,who said afterward that it probably would have been better if he had said "year of the boar." The children learned that their fellow students ofAsian descentwent out to eat dinner the night before to celebrate the eve of Chinese NewYear. All the students received red envelopes with gold coins in place of traditionalmoney. "When you go home, ask your parents to put money inside the envelopes," Pham told the students. During Chinese NewYear, red envelopes are given by married couples or the elderly to unmarried juniors, or fromparents to children. During the event, PhamrecognizedMaxine Lee, PTO president, for donating the crafts and advice, parent Fei Tian, for obtaining a donation fromtheChineseCultural Foundation for the event, Beth Greenblatt, curriculum resource teacher, Kevin Milton for taping the event, and the custodians for their support. Gina Foxx, who has been the principal of James Madison Primary School for three years, said the event is really a grassroots effort among the parents.
"The parents have held this yearly even before I came to the school," she said. "They have put this whole program together. We have such a diverse school, and all this is welcome.We want to celebrate everybody." |
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