Welcome to the David Victor Vector Blog

Welcome to the David Victor Vector blog. This is blog that covers religious observances around the world international affairs and global business. This blog describes religious holidays for most major religions as well as raising issues dealing with globalization, international business ethics, cross-cultural business communication and political events affecting business in an integrated world economy. I look forward your discussion and commentary on these articles and subjects. Enjoy!
Showing posts with label Asian holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asian holiday. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Year of the Black Water Tiger

Tuesday, February 1, 2022 begins the Year of the Tiger. It is the beginning of the year 4719 (in some traditions, 4720) in the Asian lunar system, which is the Year of the Black Water Tiger. 

In today’s posting, I would like to share with you some specifics about the Year of the Tiger as well as some background to the Asian Zodiac system as a whole. Please note that the East Asian Lunar New Year is more than the Chinese New Year (CNY). It is appropriate to refer Chinese New Year (or Spring Festival) only when referring to the Lunar New Year as celebrated in China. Using CNY to refer to the whole range of cultures observing the Lunar New Year, though, discounts the millions of non-Chinese celebrations of the occasion. These include the Mongolian Tsagaan Sar, Korean Seollal, Japanese Oshogatsu, and Bhutanese and Tibetan Losar and so on.  For more on the general holiday of the East Asian Lunar New Year, please see my post 

For more on the special impact, beliefs and predictions for the Zodiac animals since 2012, please seem my posts from each year at
2)  Business Impact In years past, I have posted separately in the  the business effects from travel to special editions of coins, stamps and gifts for the Lunar New Year around the world. I have not had the chance to do so this year. You may find the post from last year of value in giving an idea of this. Here is the post from the   

3) Celebrations around the world. Likewise in years past I have listed roughly 250 celebrations, parades and festivals held around the world outside of countries where the majority of the population celebrates the Lunar New Year. Unfortunately, with the COVID-19 pandemic, these were mostly cancelled both in 2020 and 2021.  Before the the pandemic, in the PRC alone, travelers for the Chunyun travel period made roughly 3 billion individual trips, with a dailky high in  In 2020, that number had collapsed to roughly 1.5 billion trips -- to be sure still the largest movement of people for a single event that year, but a fraction of what it had been. The  chart below from Hu Xuechen (Feb. 18 2021) on CGTN visually brings home the point.




To learn more of how this took shape in earlier years as well as a list of celebrations outside East Asia, here is the 2017 link as an example. for the 2017 list.
 

The Asian Zodiac Briefly Explained 

The Asian Zodiac (or horoscope) associated with the Asian or Chinese Lunar New Year is taken very seriously by those who follow it in their tradition. The significance attributed to the combinations associated with the Asian horoscope affects business decisions, dates selected for important events such as weddings, and many other aspects of daily life. These views are widely shared, with a larger following than any single religion -- Western or Eastern. As a result, these beliefs should be treated with the respect accorded a religious belief (rather than with that of superstition as Western astrology is sometimes treated).

The Lunar Calendar

Because the Asian lunar calendar follows the moon, it seems to move within our solar-based Gregorian calendar. Moreover, the Gregorian calendar does not correspond fully with the Asian lunar calendar. Thus, February 1 marks the beginning of the Asian lunar calendar only this year. Last year in 2021 the Year of the Ox began on February 12.  In 2020, the Year of the Rat began on January 25. Similarly, the Lunar New year began  February 5  for the Year of the Pig in 2019; on February 16 for the Year of the Dog in 2018, January 28 for the Year of the Rooster in 2017; February 8, 2016 for the Year of the Monkey, and so forth.

The Twelve Animals of the Zodiac

The lunar calendar runs on a cycle of 12 years each represented by an animal.  The animals all have a balance of compatibility or incompatibility as represented in their place in the circle of the 12-year cycle. This year is the Year of the Ox, the last and 2nd animal in the cycle. 


The 12 Animals of the Zodiac

The 12 animals in their order are

  1. Rat
  2. Ox
  3. Tiger
  4. Rabbit
  5. Dragon
  6. Snake
  7. Horse
  8. Ram/Sheep/Goat
  9. Monkey
  10. Rooster
  11. Dog
  12. Pig

Each animal corresponds to a month of the lunar year. The ox, this year's governing animal, corresponds to the 2nd animal in the cycle.

The Five Elements of the Wu Xing Cycle

Additionally, each 12-year cycle of animals runs on an additional cycle corresponding to the Wu Xing cycle of the five traditional Chinese elements. These are
  1. metal
  2. fire
  3. wood
  4. water
  5. earth
  6. Wu Xing Cycle


The five elements are in balance with each other, the basis of much of feng shui. For this Lunar New Year, the governing element is Metal.

Combined, each of the five elements combines with each of the 12 animals that forms a 60-year cycle.  The current 12-year cycle combines the Tiger with the element of Water.  

Each combination in the 60-year cycle has its own attribute, combining the animal of the "earthly branch" with the element of the "heavenly stem." This year the Heavenly stem is "jen" and the Earthly branch is "yin"-- with the "jen yin" year known as the "Tiger Passing Through the Forest." Each 60-year combination is considered highly unique, since -- at 60 years apart, the combination of a person's birth year is at once-in-a-lifetime occurrence. Thus the last time we had a "jen yin" was 1962.

Finally, each element is also associated with a color. In the case of water, that color is black.

Thus, this year is the Year of the Black Water Tiger.


Spiritual Importance of the Asian Horoscope

Many followers of the Asian zodiac have a formal religious belief in the importance of the animal element combinations associated with each year in the 60-year cycle. This is clearly the case for those practicing Taoism.

Taoist Tradition

For Taoists, the New Year is always of religious significance. This because in Taoism, the Lunar New Year's first day is a time when lesser deities or spirits are believed to ascend to the throne of the Jade Emperor (King of Heaven).  In Taoist tradition, the 12 animals were in a contest to greet the Jade Emperor; a 13th animal – the cat – was tricked by the rat (about five variations of how exist), which explains why cats have hated rats ever since.  A children's version of this story is told in an very pleasant rendition at the Topmarks education site. I encourage you to take a look at this version at 

The 12 Zodiac animals
in their race
Buddhist Tradition

The New Year is a religious event as well for a great number of the sects of Buddhism, and most famously for Tibetan and Burmese Buddhists. In Buddhist tradition, the 12 animals were in a race to do honor to Lord Buddha on the eve of his death.   

East Asian Folk Beliefs

East Asian folk beliefs are a broad grouping of folk practices that range from deeply-held religious traditions )to popular practices rooted in the local cultures. These practices are widespread, and have a far greater reach than those who claim a specific faith (Taoism or Buddhism) to those who claim a different belief or no belief at all. In Chinese, these have perhaps a dozen  names such as "Chinese ethnic religion" or mínjiān zōngjiào (族宗教) or Shenxianism or shénxiān jiào (神仙教). In Mongolian, these practices are known as Tengrism or reverence of Tengri (the Mongolian name for the Jade Emperor). In Korean, the Great Race is included in the Han'guk sinwha or Korean mythological narratives associated with Shindo (신도) ith, followed as folk practices not only by Buddhists and those claiming no religion but even among some Christian groups as a local custom.  

The strength of these folk beliefs is often difficult for those in Europe and the Americas to understand. A counterpart to the range of adherence to these folk religions put in the context of Europe and the Americas would be the broad grouping of deeply-held religious beliefs  as "Protestant" despite being separate faiths (e.g., Baptist, Unitarian, Methodist) to popular non-Christian but deeply-held semi-religious traditions (e.g., folk religion) practices rooted in the local culture such as Santa Claus, the Christmas Tree, the Easter Bunny, etc. 

Additionally, though Confucianism is not technically a religion (but rather a philosophical system), its followers also traditional observe the Lunar New Year to show reverence to their ancestors.  Because of this, even Christians and practitioners of other faiths in such countries as  as Korea, Bhutan, Mongolia or Vietnam generally celebrate the holiday. The same holds true for those people in cultures with strong Confucian customs who have no religion at all or for those with mixed traditions.

The Role of the Tiger in the Great Race

In all of the traditions, the arrival of the animals was the same in order. In other words, in all traditions, the ox arrived second even though seeming at first to have won the race. Unable to swim across the great river at the end of the race, the rat had promised to guide the near-sighted ox in return for clinging to the ox's back across the torrent. Once safely across, though, the rat never dismounted and instead scampered onto the ox's nose to claim first place. The place order of each zodiac animal in the Great Race is significant. All 13 animals (including the cat who arrived after the race ended) had to pass over land and water to reach the Jade Emperor/Lord Buddha. 

The tiger took third place in the Great Race. The tiger actually had been in the lead for most of the race, as might be expected from the bravest and fiercest of the animals. The tiger entered the river nearly at the same time as the ox. Yet, while the tiger shared the ox's great strength, unlike the ox, the tiger soon found that its thick fur coat became water-logged. It was only with great effort that the tiger made it to the far shore, and the current had carried the tiger far downstream from the finishing point.  
 
Exhausted, the tiger persevered, arriving just after the ox (and the rat who had ridden the ox's back). The Jade Emperor commended the tiger for its great effort and recognized the tiger for the position of third animal in the cycle.

Chinese Astrology Not A Particular Accurate Term

The system discussed here is often called Chinese astrology. This is a misnomer for two reasons.  First, the holiday is far more widely observed than in just China, especially in Korea, Singapore, Bhutan, Japan, Tibet, Mongolia, Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam as well as those from these backgrounds living in other countries. 

East Asian lunar zodiac
That said, for all the culturally diverse places in which the Asian New Year is celebrated, the calendar on which it is based does have its origins in China. The first written records of the calendar and the celebration of the New Year date to China’s Shang Dynasty (1766-1050 BC), although traditionally it is believed to date back to the rule of the semi-mythical Yellow Emperor Huang Di around 2600 BC.

A second reason the phrase Chinese astrology is a misnomer is that the system really has nothing to do with constellations as astrology does in the West. It is less a reading of the stars than an interpretation of the importance of the time, date and year in which one is born.  To the extent that when one is born matters to Western-style astrology, there is a correspondence. Moreover, there is another similarity as the five elements in the system, in fact, do correspond with the five planets known in ancient China.



Tang Dynasty (8th Century), Shaanxi Archaeology Institute, Xian, China


Because of these corresponding commonalities with Western astrology, many people call the Asian system’s combinations of animals and elements the lunar or Chinese “horoscope”.  This is a bit of a misnomer, however, not only for the reasons just described but because the way in which people view the two “horoscopes” is very different.  

The difference here is that many people (although with many exceptions) in Europe, Australia and the Americas consider the Western zodiac horoscope of star signs (Scorpio, Sagittarius, etc.) to be a form of superstition, a game or something believed only partially. 

This is NOT the case with the Asian lunar horoscope cycle, where people follow their sign very seriously. As a result, the system, though it transcends that of any specific religion, should be treated with the respect accorded religious beliefs. In any case, the point here is that in a cross-cultural and inter-religious sense, the issue of lunar horoscope animal element signs should be treated with respect.

Geomancy, Feng Shui and Zodiac Consultants' Influence

The importance attributed to the predictions of the each animal affects business and political decisions for over one billion people. Among the notable masters, many have an influence among Chinese and other East Asian diaspora communities as well as a growing number of non-Asian adherents. Among the earlier populizers of East Asian zodiac forecasting were book authors such as Man-ho Kwok who published over a dozen books in English on the subject in the 1990s. 

As the Internet grew and ties with East Asian business leaders became more intertwined,  many other Masters grew in importance outside of East Asia. For example, the Trump organization and Donald Trump himself relied on the guidance of New York-based Master Pun-Yin in the building of Trump Tower. Canadian-based Paul Ng was notable already for a wide range of clients in 66 countries before his appearances on US-based CNN in 2013, US-based Bloomberg TV and Canada's CTV in 2014 made him a recognizable figure thereafter to a wide audience. Likewise Hong Kong-based Grand Master Raymond Lo has had audience's well outside of China also appearing on the BBC, CNN, "Good Morning America" more. He has carried a wide following since his prediction of the fall of the USSR's Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991 and the 2000 NASDAQ collapse.  

Personality Traits and Asian Astrological Year


Many people attribute a great deal of significance to the personality traits attributed to the animal associated with the year in which they are born. These are not something that people take lightly.
Year of the Tiger sidewalk plate
Philadelphia Chinatown

Each animal has its own traits, and then each animal and element combination has their own subtraits. These are explained later in the blog.

As with all Asian Lunar zodiac animals, Tiger people have both positive and negative attributes. 

Positive Tiger Traits

Tiger people (and thus the effects of the Year of the Tiger) are associated with a strong but steady approach. As  Master Pun-yin puts it: "The Tiger has the quality of idealism. Flamboyant, passionate, powerful, and egotistical, the dynamic Tiger is usually right in the center of the action. " 

 

Tiger people are famous for trusting their instincts and their confidence in their abilities. Tigers seem to others that they almost innately to know when to take action... but Tiger actually assess the situation before pouncing. Once they act, though, there is no going back for them.
Tiger painted on outside wall of Mountain shrine, Bonggok-sa Temple
Chungcheongnam Province, South Korea



Man-Ho Kwok in his book on Chinese Astrology builds on this, noting that Tiger people:

are excited by new challenges, unusual places, and unexpected events... Your attention is caught by the unpredictable, and while others may be cautious, you are not afraid to explore the potential in unlikely situations. (p. 16).

Tiger people are the eternal optimists of the Zodiac. Man-Ho Kwok explains that the strong points of Tiger people are 
Optimism, determination and initiative [and that]... your energetic response to challenge will serve you well in your career. The appeal of work for you is generally in the excitement and the quality, not the profit. (p. 17)

The Year of the Tiger is a year for optimism and taking on challenges. This is a hopeful sign, as  Xiaohua Yang, professor and director of the China Business Studies Initiative at the University of San Francisco told USA Today

"This nicely coincided with hopeful recovery from the pandemic crisis... This actually is quite significant year in terms of the symbol."


Negative Tiger Traits

The negative side of Tiger people is the flip-side of their enthusiasm and self-confidence. As Moon-ho Kwok explains, Tiger people are famously sore losers who
do not deal well with failure and are embarrassed when colleagues discover that you have misjudged situations. (p. 17)
Relatedly, Tiger people are the least accepting of authority of all the Zodiac signs. As Fefe Ho and Chloe Chiao explain on ChineseNewYear.net:
 Tigers can be very rebellious, often too self-confident to want to coordinate or communicate with others.
This rebelliousness often translates into intransigence and arguing with figures of authority, including parents. The belief that Tiger people will result in disrespectful and argumentative children has very real effects on the birth rates in east Asia. Less people have children in the Year of the Tiger than in the years of any other Zodiac animal sign, as explained by Danique Hutton of the University of Groningen (Netherlands) Faculty of Spatial Science in her article "How zodiac signs influence birth rates in Asia"(March  5, 2019), writing: 

we actually see a decline in fertility rate in the year of the tiger in countries such as Taiwan and Singapore. It is believed that anyone that is born under this sign does not respect authority and is therefore likely to get in trouble. Especially in Asia where the culture is very collective, this is not a desirable trait. 

As Hutton's chart (above) shows two of the three of the last Tiger Years, showed the greatest decline in fertility in Hong Kong. As Ralph Jennings explained,  Hong Kong was still the third lowest birth rate in the world in 2010 with an increase of only 1.07%. The bottom two lowest birth rates were also in East Asia with the lowest birth rate in the world that year, at 0.90% in Taiwan and 0.92% in Macau.   

Compatibility With Other Signs

Tang Dynasty Tiger, 
China 6th-8th Century
Royal Ontario Museum
Toronto, Canada 

Poor compatibility.


Tiger people have few natural enemies.  Still, Tiger people are at greatest risk with those born in the Year of the Snake and the Monkey. Snake people find favor advance planning and quiet routine, both of which conflict with the Tiger's loud enthusiasm and desire for change. Those signs that are the six years apart in the Zodiac circle are natural antagonists. This is the case with Tiger and Monkey signs. Tiger people see Monkey people as overly subtle, hard to read and caught up in devising schemes. Monkey people see these traits as signs of their astuteness at foreseeing all possibilities-- and this goes against Tiger people's preference for bold moves, which the Monkey see as acting without fully considering the consequences irritating or even dangerous. 
 
High Compatibility

Tiger people are generally most compatible with people born in the Year of the Horse, the Dog and the Pig. Tiger People share the love of the new and the festive with those born in the Year of the Horse. While Dog people are seen as more risk-averse than Tiger people, the two share a strong bond in fighting on behalf of others and together form the most protective team possible in battle or a common fight. Tiger and Pig people are supposed to share a similar balance of independence and friendship, and Tiger people do well with the tendency of Pig people to openly express their admiration of others -- a highly compatible characteristic for the praise-seeking Tiger.
 

Famous Tiger People
 

 

Tiger People's Drive and Need for Recognition  result in their disproportionate number in the fields of acting and music   

Famous Tiger People Acting
  • Amy Adams (Italian-born US actress, winner of two Golden Globes and nominee for six Academy Awards and seven BAFTAs)
  • Mahershala Ali (US actor and winner of two Academy Award Oscars, three SAG Awards, a BAFTA, a Golden Globe and a Primetime Emmy Award)
  • Christian Bale (Welsh actor winner of two Golden Globes and an Academy Award as well as several nominations for both, and well-known for his version of Batman)
  • Mel Brooks comedian, actor, screenwriter, television writer (Get Smart!), director and producer, a member of the 16 EGOT (Emmy, Golden Globe, Oscar, Tony Award winners) list
  • John Candy, Canadian comic actor and SNL cast member
  • Steve Carrell, US Golden-Globe comic actor known for his leading role in the television series The Office as well as his comic movies and more serious roles such as his Oscar-nominated roles in Foxcatcher, The Big Short, and Little Miss Sunshine
  • Emilia Clarke, English actress best-known for her role as Daenerys Targaryen in Game of Thrones, for which she received four Emmy Primetime Award Nominations
  • Olivia Colman, British Golden Globe and Academy Award winning actress
  • Bradley Cooper, US actor with six Golden Globe, eight Academy Award Oscar and one Tony Award nominations as well as two Grammy Award wins
  • Tom Cruise, US actor among the highest-grossing stars of all time, famed fr his role in action films as well as serious films that have earned him three Academy Award and three Golden Globe nominations
  • Penelope Cruz, Spanish Academy Award and BAFTA winning actress
  • Leonardo DiCaprio, US actor and film producer, winner of three Golden Globes, a BAFTA and an Academy Award Oscar
  • Emilio Estevez, US actor, director and screenwriter
  • Elle Fanning, US actress who started as a child actress and grew into a respected film career as an adult; at 21 (in 2019) she became the youngest person to serve as judge at the Cannes Film Festival
  • Ralph Fiennes, British Shakespearean actor with a notable film career as well
  • Jodie Foster, US actress, filmmaker and producer with two Academy Award Oscars, three BAFTA and three Golden Globe Awards
  • Megan Fox, US actress who grew to fame through her role in the Transformer franchise movies
  • Whoopi Goldberg, actress, comedian and a member of the 16 EGOT (Emmy, Golden Globe, Oscar, Tony Award winners) list
  • Kit Harrington, English Primetime Emmy and Golden Globe-winning actor best-known for his role as Jon Snow in Game of Thrones
  • Paris Intarakomalyasut, Thai singer and actor known for his role in the mystery series In Family We Trust
  • Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Hong Kong actor and singer, seven time of Hong Kong Film Festival winner, three-time Golden Horse (Taiwan) Film Festival winner, and winner once each of a Cannes Film Festival and Venice Film Festival Golden Lion Award
  • Rebecca Lim, Singaporean actress who has won awards across Asia for her roles in film and television 
  • Jasper Liu, Taiwanese actor and electronic post-rock musician and former male model, whose roles in More Than Blue, Before We Get Married, Pleasantly Surprised and Triad Princess has made him one of East Asia's best-known pop icons
  • Marilyn Monroe, top-billed actress of her day and continuing pop cultural icon
  • Demi Moore, US actress at one time the highest paid in history (in 1996)
  • Bill Murray, 2016 Mark Twain Award Recipient and Emmy, Golden Globe and BAFTA-winning US actor
  • Randall Park, Korean-American actor and screenplay writer with over 120 IMDB credits, but probably best-known worldwide as FBI Agent Jimmy Woo in the Marvel cinematic universe and for his leading role in the Netflix rom-com Always Be My Maybe (which he co-wrote)
  • Linh Dan Pham, Vietnamese-born French actress who debuted in the 1992 Academy Award Oscar-winning Indochine
  • Joaquin Phoenix, Academy Award Oscar, BAFTA, Grammy and Golden Globe winning Puerto Rican-born actor and animal rights activist
  • Martin Short (Canadian American actor and SNL cast member)
  • Wesley Snipes (US actor and martial artist)
  • Hilary Swank (US actress, winner of 2 Academy Award Oscars and 2 Golden Globes for Boys Don't Cry and Million Dollar Baby)
  • Dylan Wang, (Chinese actor, star of television series Meteor Garden)
  • Michelle Yeoh (Malaysian actress and martial artist best-known for her leading role in Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies and the rom-com Crazy Rich Asians)
Famous Tiger People -- Talk Show Hosts
  • Craig Ferguson, host of the Late, Late Show 2005-14
  • Jay Leno, host of the Today Show 1992-2009, and 2014 recipient of the Mark Twain Award of American Humor
  • Jon Stewart, host of Daily Show 1999-2015, winner of 22 Emmy Awards and 2022 recipient of the Mark Twain Award of American Humor
Famous Tiger People -- Singers and Musicians
  • Paula Abdul , US singer who topped the Billboard 100 chart six times and 2-time Emmy Award winning choreographer and American Idol
  • Jon Batiste US jazz performer, Creative Director of the National Museum of Jazz, bank leader of the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and composer whose (co-authored) musical score for the animated film Soul won a BAFTA, Golden Global and Academy Award Oscar
  • Ludwig van Beethoven, one of the greatest of all classical composers
  • Chuck Berry, US singer, songwriter and guitarist considered as among rock and roll's pioneering figures
  • Jon Bon Jovi, US singer, songwriter and guitarist
  • Tony Bennett, US singer with over 50 million records sold worldwide, winner of 19 Grammy Awards (including a lifetime achievement award), two Primetime Emmy Awards
  • Garth Brooks, US country/pop singer with over 170 million records won and winner of 17 American Music Awards, two Grammy Awards and 2020 recipient of the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. 
  • Campino, German-British lead singer of the German punk band Die Toten Hosen
  • John Coltrane, US saxophonist, composer, band leader jazz music pioneer
  • Miles Davis, US trumpeter, composer, band leader jazz music pioneer
  • Drake, Canadian rapper, singer and actor whose 2021 album Certified Lover Boy set the record for most Billboard Top Ten songs (nine in all) from a single album, recipient of four Grammy and six American Music Awards
  • Peter Frampton (British rock singer and guitarist)
  • Peter Gabriel (British rock singer and drummer, winner of six Grammy Awards whose "Sledgehammer" was ranked the most popular MTV Video of all time, and human rights activist awarded the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates' "Man of Peace" Award in 2006
  • Lady Gaga, US singer, songwriter and actress and whose song "Shallow" (2018) was the first ever by a female artist to win an Academy Award Oscar, Golden Globe, BAFTA and Grammy Award in the same year 
  • Sumi Jo, generally considered South Korea's greatest opera singer
  • Anthony Kiedis, lead singer of Red Hot Chili Peppers
  • Shawn Mendes, Canadian singer and songwriter
  • Niccolò Paganini, Genoan composer and considered the most talented violinist of the 19th century
  • Hillel Slovak, Israeli-born founding guitarist of Red Hot Chili Peppers
  • Stevie Wonder, US singer, songwriter, record producer with the most Grammy Award wins (25) by a single artist; pioneer across such diverse genres as Motown, R&B, soul, funk, gospel blues, jazz and pop, recipient of the 2014 Presidential Medal of Freedom
Famous Tiger People -- Business Leaders
  • Sir Richard Branson, British entrepreneur and founder of Virgin Group
  • Ingvar Kamprad, Swedish entrepreneur and founder of IKEA
  • Kate Spade, US entrepreneur and fashion designer
  • Ted Turner, US entrepreneur and philanthropist, founder of CNN and TBS and donator of a $1 billion gift to the United Nations, Co-Found of the Nuclear Threat Initiative
  • Cornelius Vanderbilt, US entrepreneur, shipping and railroad magnate, and philanthropist
  • Zig Ziglar, US motivational speaker, author and sales person
Famous Tiger People -- Authors
Famous Tiger People -- World Leaders  
 

Whatever your outcome for the year, Happy Year of the Black Metal Tiger!


Bunnies and tiger painted on outside side wall of Front Temple,
Sesimsa Temple, Chungcheongnam Province, South Korea





Clip Art Sources:



Yin Yang animation: http://www.eharrishome.com/Kungfu.html


The 12 Zodiac animals in their race:  http://media.photobucket.com/image/recent/firefoxthief/zodiaccolor.jpg'


Year of the Tiger  sidewalk plate, Philadelphia Chinatown: Own photograph

Tiger painted on outside wall of Mountain shrine, Bonggok-sa Temple, Chungcheongnam Province, South Korea: Own photograph
 
Tigress and Cub, Kishi Chikudō (1892) Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/757347 


Bunnies and tiger painted on outside side wall of Front Temple, Sesimsa Temple, Chungcheongnam Province, South Korea: Own photograph

Want to Learn More

 
For more on the Asian Zodiac and Astrology in General, please see:


Richard Craze, Handbook of Chinese Astrology, Lorenz Books, 2013.

Man-ho Kwok, Chinese Astrology: Forecast Your Future from Your Chinese Horoscope, Tuttle Publishing, 1997.

Theodora Lau and Laura Lau, The Handbook of Chinese Horoscopes (7th edition), Collins Reference, 2010.

Susan Levitt and Jean Tang, Taoist Astrology: A Handbook of the Authentic Chinese Tradition, Destiny Books, 1997.

David W. Pankenier, Astrology and Cosmology in Early China: Conforming Earth to Heaven, Cambridge University Press, 2013.

Neil Somerville, Your Chinese Horoscope for Each and Every Year, Harper Thomsons, 2017.

Ruth Q. Sun and Norma Sun, Asian Animal Zodiac, Tuttle Publishing, 2012.

Xiaochun Sun, "Crossing the Boundaries Between Heaven and Man: Astronomy in Ancient China," in Astronomy Across Cultures, ed. Helaine Selin and adv. ed. Sun Xiaochun: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000.

David Twicken, Five Element Chinese Astrology Made Easy, iUniverse, 2000.

Derek Walters, The Complete Guide to Chinese Astrology, Watkins Publishing, 2005.

Suzanne White, The New Chinese Astrology, Thomas Dunne Books, 2015.

Charles Alfred Speed Williams. Chinese Symbolism and Art Motifs (2000), New York: Castle Books.

Shelly Wu, Chinese Astrology: Exploring the Eastern Zodiac, New Page Books, 2005.

Shelly Wu, The Definitive Book of Chinese Astrology, Weiser, 2010.

Zhongzian Wu, The 12 Chinese Animals: Create Harmony in your Daily Life through Ancient Chinese Wisdom, Singing Dragon Press, 2010.

Zhongzian Wu and Karin Taylor Wu, Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches: The Heart of Chinese Wisdome Traditions, Singing Dragon Press, 2016.

Master Pun-Yin, "Chinese Zodiac," https://www.punyin.com/feng-shui/chinese-zodiac/index.html

Ho-Peng Yoke, Chinese Mathematical Astrology: Reaching Out to the Stars, Routledge, 2003. This is the pre-eminent book on the mathematical science of Asian lunar horoscope calculations. It is downloadable at http://www.ebook3000.com/Chinese-Mathematical-Astrology--Reaching-out-for-the-stars--Needham-Research-Institute-Series-_130932.html




For general popular websites on Asian Astrology and the Zodiac, please see:

China Voc.com "Zodiac" http://www.chinavoc.com/zodiac/index.asp

Chinese Fortune Calendar http://www.chinesefortunecalendar.com/5EBasic.htm

Chinese Horoscope-e.com, "Basic Chinese Horoscope," http://chinesehoroscop-e.com/index.html

Malaysia Site, "Chinese New Year,"  http://www.malaysiasite.nl/newyear.htm

Online Chinese Astrology http://www.onlinechineseastrology.com/

Topmarks Education, "Zodiac Story, Chinese New Year."  http://www.topmarks.co.uk/ChineseNewYear/ZodiacStory.aspx

"Your Chinese Astrology": https://www.yourchineseastrology.com/

Monday, September 21, 2020

Autumnal Equinox 2023: Mabon, Higan, East Asian Moon Festival, and Chuseok


For 2023, the Autumnal Equinox falls on Friday, September 22 (at least in the Northern Hemisphere). 

The Autumnal Equinox is a holiday in several traditions. In Wicca, neo-Druidic and neo-Pagan traditions, it is celebrated as Mabon, Alban Elfed or Mea'n Fo'mhair. 

In several East Asian Buddhist traditions, the Autumnal equinox is celebrated as the Moon Festival. In Japanese Buddhist tradition, it is celebrated as Shūbun no hi 秋分の日,one of two Higan (お彼岸), the other being at the Spring Equinox. In Japan it is an official state holiday, but in keeping with the separation of state and religion in Japan, the official name is called Shūbun no hi (お彼岸) or Autumnaal Equinox Day. In Chinese and Vietnamese Buddhist tradition, it is celebrated as the Moon Festival Zōngqiū Jié in Chinese and Tết Trung Thu in Vietnamese. In Korea, the holiday lasts three days and is known as Chuseok (한가위) or "the eve of Autumn." In the East Asian traditions, the holiday may be celebrated at dates varying from the actual equinox and may run for several days. In 2023, for instance both Zōngqiū Jié and Tết Trung Thu falls on September 29. In Korea, Chuseok in 2023 runs from September 29 through September 30. 

While this is a significant holiday for all of  these faiths, it is not a day that would normally require the absence from class or work of faculty, staff or students. That said, those asking for accommodation should be allowed.

WICCAN, NEO-DRUIDIC AND NEO-PAGAN TRADITIONS

In neo-Druidic, neo-Pagan and Wiccan traditions, the Autumnal Equinox is viewed as a Major Sabbath. In all of these traditions, the holiday is celebrated as a harvest festival and as a time to recognize the balance in all things.  

A Wiccan Mabon altar
In all of these traditions, Autumn Equinox altars are set up that represent the balance of light and dark as well as the thankfulness for the harvest. Symbols of the balance of light and dark are placed on the altar (black and white objects of equal size and hanging balances). Symbols of the season on the altar typically reflect the fall colors (oranges, yellows and browns), the end of the harvest (sheaves of wheat, corn husks) and the bounty of the autumn harvest (squash, pumpkin, fall fruits). In some traditions (notably in Wicca), tools of the harvest (scythes and sickles) are also placed on the altar.  
MEA'N FO'MHAIR
Green Man of the Forest
For neo-Druids and some pagans, the Autumnal Equinox is celebrated as Mea'n Fo'mhair. In this tradition, neo-Druids gather in wooded areas and give offerings of the fall harvest (not only of berries but also of pine cones, acorns, apples and cider) to honor the Green Man of the Forest.   Such woodland harvest offerings are still practiced by neo-Druids and modern pagan (largely in England, Scotland and Ireland but with increasing practice in the US, Canada and New Zealand). 

ALBAN ELFED

In other neo-Pagan traditions (and notably in the Welsh tradition), the holiday has been known for centuries as Alban Elfed or the “Light of the Sun.” In this tradition, the same sort of offerings are proferred but to “The Lady” who is also called the “Spirit of the Land.”
MABON

In Wicca and neo-Pagan traditions the Autumnal Equinox is known as Mabon. This is one of the four Major Sabbats in the eight points of the Wheel of the Year. Mabon marks the time at which day and night are in total balance, and is accompanied by personal efforts of members of these faith to find a similar balance in their lives. 




Mabon is primarily a Wiccan name for the Autumnal Equinox. Other names used by Wiccans and others include the Harvest Moon  or the Harvest Home.  

Unlike the ancient names of Mea'n Fo'mhair and Alban Elfed, the Wiccan version of the holiday has been called Mabon only since the latter half of the 20th Century. Unlike many other Wiccan holidays, no corresponding name exists in ancient pagan traditions. Instead, the name was coined by the US Wiccan leader Aidan Kelley soon after the formation in 1967 of the NROOGD (New Reformed Orthodox Order of the Golden Dawn), one of the most important popularizers of the Wiccan faith.Kelley’s adoption of the name Mabon was to honor the early Welsh pagan divine son deity Mabon fab Mellt.
 CELEBRATION PRACTICES  
Both in ancient Druidic tradition and in modern neo-Druidic, pagan and Wiccan practice, offerings are often proffered in a horn of plenty called a cornucopia. As a result, Cornucopia is another name some practitioners use for the holiday. 

In Wicca, the holiday recognizes balance in all things. Mabon altars are set with symbols of balance as well the autumn harvest.

It should be noted that while the name Mabon has been growing in popularity in the UK and Ireland, many neo-Druids strongly oppose the term as a neologism. As a result, while it would be appropriate to wish a Wiccan a “Happy Mabon,” this may not be as appreciated for some neo-Druids and modern pagans.
RELATIONSHIP TO CHRISTIANITY'S MICHAELMAS

Archangel Michael trampling Satan
by Guido Reni (1636)
When Christianity first spread in the Celtic regions, the Roman Catholic Church attempted to syncretize existing pagan practices by co-opting the celebration of the Autumnal Equinox with a Christian overlay. 
To this end, the Church placed great emphasis on Michaelmas which, falling on September 29, came near the same time.  In this co-opting Catholic tradition, the Archangel Michael came to represent the power of light over darkness, an important attribute as the length of daylight began to shorten. 
Today, religious services honoring the Archangel Michael are still practiced in some Roman Catholic, Episcopalian and Lutheran congregations, especially in the United Kingdom. A folk custom still in evidence in the parts of the British Isles warns that it is unlucky to harvest blackberries after Michaelmas, as they have been cursed at that time by Lucifer.This custom that it is unlucky to harvest in the woods most likely has its origin in the woodland offerings of the autumnal harvest in pre-Christian Britain described above.

EAST ASIAN BUDDHIST TRADITIONS 
In Japanese, Chinese and Vietnamese Buddhist traditions, the Autumnal Equinox is celebrated as a significant festival, centered on the moon. It is sometimes called the Moon Festival as a result.
HIGAN
Higan is the Japanese celebration of the equinoxes. Higan is celebrated at both the Autumnal Equinox and the Vernal (Spring) Equinox. On both days, the holiday is an official public holiday in Japan. Buddhists of all major sects in Japan observe Higan. 

Emperor Shomu
The holiday has its origins with the institution of worship on that day by the 8th Century Japanese Emperor Shomu. The first official records of its celebration date to the year 806 CE when the government of Japan required all priests in Kokubun-ji temples to recite the Diamond Sutra at the Autumnal Equinox. Higan is also traditionally one of the days for the beginning of pilgrimages among the country's temples by the devout. 
Higan in Japanese literally means "the Other Shore." The term can refer to crossing to the other shore from the material world (i.e., to Enlightenment). The term can also refer to the transitory nature of the the material world (as all things are impermanent and must die, thus crossing to the other shore).
In Japan, Higan is traditionally a day for honoring the graves of the dead. The Guide to Japanese Buddhism of the Japanese Buddhist Federation explains:
During this period, it is customary for Buddhists throughout the country to visit temples and graves. They bring flowers, incense, water or their favorite food to be offered to the deceased and greet them with refreshed minds to report on their well-being.

Traditionally, Japanese Buddhists decorate the graves with the red spider lilies (lycoris radiata) whose Japanese name higanbana literally means "Higanflower."


Japanese higanbana
CHINESE AND VIETNAMESE MOON FESTIVAL
The Autumnal Equinox is celebrated as the Moon Festival or Moon-Cake Festival in Chinese and Vietnamese traditons. In both countries, the holiday is an official day off. Also in both countries, the holiday dates back thousands of years.
Vietnamese Moon Festival Lion Dancers
In Vietnam, the holiday is called Tết Trung Thu. The holiday focuses in large part on children, and has its origins in giving parents the opportunity to be with their children after long periods out of their company during the traditional harvest time. Because of this, the holiday is often called the "Children's Holiday."

Tết Trung Thu is the second most important in the year after Tet. In China, the holiday is also given considerable importance. The holiday is particularly marked by the traditional Lion Dance with lion dancers going door to door asking to dance. These are often performed by children, although professional lion dancers are a part of main events.

Chang-E's flight to the moon
In China, the holiday is known as Zōngqiū Jié. In Chinese tradition, the holiday has its origins in the tale of the mythical Chang-E who ate her husband's dangerous elixir to save him, and flew to the moon as a consequence where she became the moon goddess. As with Vietnamese traditions, the Moon Festival is tied to the Fall Harvest.

While the origins of the Chinese Moon Festival predates historical records, the first known observances go back to at least the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BCE).

In many Han Chinese traditions, sacrifices are made to the moon. In many Chinese ethnic minorities, unique customs are practiced. For example, among the Dong people, there is a custom of "stealing" harvested vegetables and fruit (this is, however, only symbolically stolen as these are set out for the purpose). The Bouyei people worship the Moon Grandmother, and bring rice cakes to her shrine. The Maonan people put incense in a hanging grapefruit, to represent the moon. Finally, in some Mongolian traditions, there are practices centered on chasing the moon. 
In all traditions, the festival celebrates the autumnal harvest. As the name Moon-Cake Festival suggests, it is customary to eat Moon Cakes at this time.


 Vietnamese Banh trung thu
In Vietnam, Moon Cakes are called banh trung thu and are made up of ground beans, lotus and egg yolks. These are sold at street corners throughout Vietnam and made at home as well. A recipe for banh trung thu  can be found on the Viet World Kitchen site at:

http://www.vietworldkitchen.com/blog/2009/10/how-to-make-moon-cakes-banh-trung-thu.html


CHUSEOK

For Koreans, Chuseok is a major holiday. The holiday is celebrated much like the US Thanksgiving, with family gatherings and large meals. The holiday, however, has a more Confucianist aspect as well centered on three traditions: Charye (차레),  Beolcho (벌초), and Seongmyo (성묘).
Charye involves eating special foods that are set on one table for one's dead ancestors (called a Charyesang) and on another table for the living descendants who have gathered for the festival.
Charyesang

Traditionally, Koreans bow twice toward the table of the dead and once toward the elders among the living. This is no ordinary bow, though, but rather one in which those bowing kneel and then place their foreheads on the ground.  Generally during Charye, people choose a specific deceased ancestor to whom to pay particular respect. People write the name of the ancestor on a piece of special paper and burn it. After this, the window is opened for the spirits of the ancestors to join them.
The other two traditions take place at the graves of one's ancestors. Beolcho comes the day before Charye, and involves grass trimming, grave cleaning and clearing away of leaves or dirt. The day after Charye is when Seongmyo takes place. This involves bowing to the cleaned grave sites and honoring one's ancestors. 
CONCLUSION

As always in these write-ups, I welcome your feedback. This in no way endorses one practice or another. It is merely meant to be informational.

Please feel free to send me corrections or things you would like me to include next time (and feel equally free to let me know if you find these worthwhile). 
May you have a balance in your life on this Autumnal Equinox and a happy Moon Festival!


WANT TO READ MORE?
On Wiccan, neo-Pagan and neo-Druidic traditions:

Celtic Druid School, "Autumn Equinox": 
http://www.druidschool.com/site/1030100/page/874527
Crystal Links, "Autumn Equinox -- Mabon": http://www.crystalinks.com/autumn.html
Mabon 2023: A Witch's Guide to Embracing and Celebrating the Harvest," Moonfall Metaphysics, https://www.moonfallmetaphysical.com/s/stories/mabon-2023
Mystic Familiar, "Alban Elfed -- Autumn Equinox": http://www.mysticfamiliar.com/library/witchcraft/alban_lfed.html

Sagento A, Spell Research, "A Mabon Outline": http://spellresearch.com/spellbook/1993/10/12/a-mabon-outline.html

Wicca Chat, "Mabon": http://www.wicca-chat.com/witch_sabats/mabon.htm

Wiggington, Patti, About.com -- Paganism/Wicca, "All About Mabon, the Autumn Equinox": http://paganwiccan.about.com/od/mabontheautumnequinox/a/AllAboutMabon.htm

On Higan

Japanese Buddhist Federation, Guide to Japanese Buddhism, "Major Japanese Buddhist Festivals":http://www.buddhanet.net/nippon/nippon_partII.html 

Zenku Smyers, Zen Buddhist Temple of Chicago,  "The Other Shore": http://www.zbtc.org/downloads/zenku-othershore.html

Time and Date, "September Equinox Customs": http://www.timeanddate.com/calendar/september-equinox-customs.html

On the Moon Festival

China Culture, About.com, "The Moon Festival": http://chineseculture.about.com/library/weekly/aa093097.htm

Michael Tartaski, Holidaysia, "Tet Trung Thu 2013 – Vietnam’s Mid-Autumn Festival": http://www.holidaysia.com/events/tet-trung-thu/

Passion Vietnam, "Full Moon (Mid-Autumn) Festival": http://www.passionvietnamtravel.com/en/nord-du-viet-nam/full-moon-mid-autumn-festival.html

Travel China Guide, "Mid-Autumn Festivals": http://www.travelchinaguide.com/essential/holidays/mid-autumn.htm

Fang Yang, Xinhua News Agency, "The Mid-Autumn Festival and Its Traditions": http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/culture/2011-09/12/c_131134150.htm

On Chuseok
Chuseok.org, "Chuseok 2020", https://www.chuseok.info/customs/
Imagine Your Korea, "Traditional Korean Holiday of Bountiful Harvest, Chuseok," https://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/ATR/SI_EN_3_6.jsp?cid=811650
CLIP ART SOURCES