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              How
              and when 
              do people in 
              other countries 
              celebrate New Year?  | 
            
               
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        Not
              all countries 
        celebrate New Year 
        at the same time, 
        nor in the same way. 
        This is 
        because people in different parts of the world use different calendars. 
        Long ago, people divided time into days, months, and years. Some 
        calendars are based on the movement of the moon, others are based on the 
        position of the sun, while others are based on both the sun and the 
        moon. All over the world, there are special
        
        beliefs 
        about New Year.  
         
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        Long
        Ago Festivals 
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        Ancient
        Egypt
        
        
         
        In
        ancient Egypt, New Year was celebrated at the time the River Nile
        
        
        flooded, which was near the end of September. The flooding of the Nile
        was very important because without it, the people would not have been
        able 
        to grow crops in the dry desert. 
        
        
        At
        New Year, statues of the god, Amon and his wife and son 
        
        
        were taken up
        the Nile by boat. Singing, dancing, and feasting was done for a month,
        and then the statues were taken back to the temple.
        
        
        
         
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        Babylonia 
        
        Babylonia
        
        lay 
        in what is now the country of Iraq. Their New Year was in the Spring. 
        During the festival, the king was 
        
        stripped 
        of his clothes and sent away, and for a few days everyone could do just 
        what they liked. Then the king returned in a grand procession, dressed 
        in 
        fine robes. 
        Then, everyone had to return to work and 
        
        
        behave properly.
        
        Thus, 
        each New Year, the people 
        
        
        made a new start to 
        their lives. 
        
        
        
         
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        The
        Romans 
        For
        a long time the Romans celebrated New Year on the first of March. Then,
        in 46 BC, the Emperor Julius Caesar began a new calendar. It was the
        calendar that we still use today, and thus the New Year date was changed
        to the first day of January. January
        is named after the Roman god Janus, who was always shown as having two
        heads. He looked back to the last year and forward to the new one.
        The
        Roman New Year festival was called the Calends, and people decorated
        their homes and gave each other gifts.  
        
        
        
        Slaves and their 
        
        masters ate and
        drank together, and people could do what they wanted to for a few days.
        
        
         
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        The
        Celts 
        The
        Celts were the people who lived in Gaul, now called France, and parts of
        Britain before the Romans arrived there. Their New Year festival was
        called Samhain. It took place at the end of October, and Samhain means
        'summer's end'. 
         
         At
        Samhain, the Celts 
        
        gathered mistletoe
        
        
        to keep ghosts away, because they
        believed this was the time when the ghosts of the dead returned 
        
        
        to haunt
        the living.
        
        
          
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        Jewish
        New Year 
        
        
        The
        Jewish New Year is called Rosh Hashanah. It is a holy time when people
        think of the things they have done wrong in the past, and they promise
        to do better in the future.
        Special
        services are held in synagogues, and an instrument called a Shofar,
        which is made from a  
        
        ram's horn is played. Children are given new
        clothes, and New Year  
        
        loaves are baked and fruit is eaten to remind
        people of harvest time.
        
         
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        Muslim
        New Year 
        
        The
        Muslim calendar is based on the movements of the moon, so the date of
        New Year is eleven days earlier each year. Iran
        is a Muslim country which used to be called Persia. The people celebrate
        New Year on March 21, and a few weeks before this date, people put
        grains of 
        wheat or barley in a little dish to grow. By the time of New
        Year, the grains have produced 
        
        shoots, and this reminds the people of
        spring and a new year of life.
        
        
         
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        Hindu
        New Year 
        
        
        Most
        Hindus live in India, but they don't all celebrate New Year in the same
        way or at the same time.
         The
        people of West Bengal, in
            
        
        Northern India, like to wear flowers at New
        Year, and they use flowers in the colors of pink, red, purple, or white.
        Women like to wear yellow, which is the color of Spring.
         In
        Kerala, in
             
        Southern India, mothers put food, flowers, and little gifts
        on a special   
        
        
        tray. On New Year's morning, the children have to keep
        their eyes closed until 
        
        they have been led to the tray.
         In
             
        
        Central India, orange flags  
        
        
        are flown from buildings on New Year's Day.
        
        In
        Gujarat, in
            
        
        Western India, New Year is celebrated at the end of October,
        and it is celebrated at the same time as the Indian festival of Diwali.
        At the time of Diwali, small 
        
        
        
        oil lights are lit
        all along the roofs of
        buildings. At
        New Year, Hindus think particularly of the 
        
        
        goddess of wealth, Lakshmi. 
        
         
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        The
        Far East
        
        
         
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        Vietnam 
        
        In
        Vietnam, the New Year is called Tet Nguyen Dan or Tet
        
        for short. It
        begins between January 21 and February 19, and the exact day changes
        from year to year. They believe that there is a god in every home, and
        at the New Year this god 
        
        travels to heaven. There he will say how good
        or bad each member of the family has been in the past year.
        
        They
        used to believe that the god traveled on the back of a fish called
            
        
        a
        carp, and today, they sometimes buy a live carp, and then let it go free
        in a river or pond. They also believe that the first person to enter
        their house at New Year will bring either good or bad luck.
        
        
         
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        Japan 
        
        In
        Japan, New Year is celebrated on January 1, but the Japanese also keep
        some beliefs from their religion, which is called Shinto. 
        
        
        To keep out
        evil spirits, they hang a 
        
        rope of straw across the front of their
        houses, and this stands for happiness and good luck.
        The
        moment the New Year begins, the Japanese people begin to laugh, and this
        is supposed to bring them good luck in the new year.
        
        
         
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        Chinese
        New Year 
        
        
        The
        Chinese New Year is celebrated some time between January 17 and February
        19, at the time of the new moon, and it is called Yuan Tan. It is
        celebrated by Chinese people all over the world, and street processions
        are an exciting part of their New Year. The Festival of 
        
        Lanterns is the
        street processions, and thousands of lanterns are used to light the way
        for the New Year.
         The
        Chinese people believe that there are evil spirits around at New Year,
        so they
             
        
        let off firecrackers to frighten the spirits away. Sometimes
        they 
        seal their windows and doors with paper to keep the evil spirits
        out.
        
         
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        New
        Year in the West 
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        New
        Year's Day processions with decorated floats and bands are a part of New
        Year, and football is also played all over the United States on New
        Year's Day.  
         In
        Europe, New Year was often a time for superstition and
            
        
        fortune-telling,
        and in some parts of Switzerland and Austria, people 
        
        dress up to
        celebrate Saint Sylvester's Eve.
         In
        AD 314, there was a Pope called Saint Sylvester, and people believed
        that he captured a terrible sea monster. It was thought that in the year
        1000, this sea monster would escape and destroy the world, but since it
        didn't happen, the people were delighted. Since then, in parts of
        Austria and Switzerland, this story is remembered at New Year, and
        people dress up in fantastic costumes, and are called Sylvesterklauses.
         
        
        In
        Greece, New Year's Day is also the Festival of Saint Basil. Saint Basil
        was famous for his kindness, and Greek children leave their shoes by the
        fire on New Year's Day with the hope that he will come and fill the
        shoes with gifts.
          
        
        In
        Scotland, New Year is called Hogmanay, and in some villages 
         
        
        
        
        barrels of
        tar are set alight
        
        
        and rolled
        through the streets. 
        Thus, the old year is burned up and the new one allowed to enter.
        
          
        Scottish
        people believe that the first person to enter your house in the New Year
        will bring good or bad luck, and it is very good luck if the visitor is
        a dark-haired man bringing a gift. This custom is called 
        
        
        
        first-footing.
        
        
        The
        song,  Auld Lang Syne is sung at midnight on New Year's Eve, and this
        custom is now celebrated all over the world.
        
        
              
        
         
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                SOURCE:
              The Holiday Spot Website -
              Santas Website - Christmas.com Website  | 
             
            
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