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The Qing Ming Festival

The QingMing Festival is a traditional Chinese festival on the 104th day after the winter solstice
(or the 15th day from the Spring Equinox), usually occurring around April 5 of the Gregorian
calendar/Chinese calendar. Astronomically it is also a solar term. It means clear and bright in
Chinese. The QingMing festival falls on the first day of the fifth solar term, named QingMing. Its
name denotes a time for people to go outside and enjoy the greenery of springtime and tend to the
graves of departed ones.
QingMing has been regularly observed as a statutory public holiday in Taiwan and in the Chinese
jurisdictions of Hong Kong and Macau. Its observance was reinstated as a public holiday in
mainland China in 2008, after having been previously suppressed by the ruling Communist Party in
1949.
The transcription of the term QingMing may appear in a number of different forms, some of which
are:
QingMing
Qing Ming
Qing Ming Jie
Ching Ming (official in Hong Kong)
Ching Ming Chieh

Introduction
The holiday is known by a number of names in the English language:

All Souls Day


Clear Bright Festival
Ancestors Day
Festival for Tending Graves
Grave Sweeping Day
Chinese Memorial Day
Tomb Sweeping Day
Spring Remembrance

Tomb Sweeping Day and Clear Bright Festival are the most common English translations of
QingMing Festival.

Origin
QingMing Festival originated from Hanshi Day (Day with cold food), a memorial day for Jie Zitui. Jie
Zitui died in 636 BC in the Spring and Autumn Period. He was one of many followers of Duke Wen
of Jin before he became a Duke. One time, during Wen's 19 years of exile, they didn't have any
food and Jie prepared some meat soup for Wen. Wen enjoyed it a lot and wondered where Jie got
the soup. It turned out Jie had cut a piece of meat from his own thigh to make the soup. Wen was
so moved he promised to reward him one day. However, Jie was not the type of person who sought
rewards. Instead, he just wanted to help Wen to return to Jin to become Duke. Once Wen became
Duke, Jie resigned and stayed away from the Duke. Duke Wen rewarded the people who helped
him in the decades, but for some reason he forgot to reward Jie, who by then had moved into the
forest with his mother. Duke Wen went to the forest, but couldn't find Jie. Heeding suggestions
from his officials, Duke Wen ordered men to set the forest on fire to force out Jie, however, Jie died
in the fire. Feeling remorseful, Duke Wen ordered three days without fire to honour Jie's memory.
The county where Jie died is still called Jiexiu.
QingMing has a tradition stretching back more than 2,500 years. Its origin is credited to the Tang
Emperor in 732. Wealthy citizens in China were reportedly holding too many extravagant and
ostentatiously expensive ceremonies in honour of their ancestors. Emperor Xuanzong, seeking to
curb this practice, declared that respects could be formally paid at ancestors' graves only on
QingMing. The observance of QingMing found a firm place in Chinese culture and continued

uninterrupted for over two millennia. In 1949 the Communist Party of China repealed the holiday.
Observance of QingMing remained suppressed until 2008, when the Party reinstated the holiday.

Celebration
The QingMing Festival is an opportunity for celebrants to remember and honour their ancestors at
grave sites. Young and old pray before the ancestors, sweep the tombs and offer food, tea, wine,
chopsticks, joss paper accessories, and/or libation to the ancestors. Some people carry willow
branches with them on QingMing, or put willow branches on their gates and/or front doors. They
believe that willow branches help ward off the evil spirit that wanders on QingMing. Also on
QingMing people go on family outings, start the spring ploughing, sing, dance, and QingMing is a
time where young couples start courting. Another popular thing to do is fly kites (in shapes of
animals or characters from Chinese opera). Others carry flowers instead of burning paper, incense
or firecrackers as is common.
The holiday is often marked by people paying respects to those who died in events considered
sensitive in China. The April Fifth Movement and the Tiananmen Incident were major events on
QingMing that took place in the history of the People's Republic of China. When Premier Zhou Enlai
died in 1976, thousands visited him during the festival to pay their respects. Many also pay
respects to victims of the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 and the graves of Zhao Ziyang and
Yang Jia in areas where rights of free expression are generally recognized, as in Hong Kong; in
most areas of China such observances are suppressed and all public mention of such subjects is
taboo. In Taiwan the national holiday is observed on April 5 because the ruling Kuomintang moved
it to that date in commemoration of the death of Chiang Kai-shek on April 5. The holiday is
nevertheless observed in the traditional manner, with families gathering to honour their own
ancestors, visit and maintain their family shrines, and share traditional meals.
Despite having no holiday status, the overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asian nations
such as those in Singapore and Malaysia take this festival seriously; deep in heritage, rituals and
strict decorum. Qing Ming in Malaysia is an elaborate family function or a clan feast (usually
organized by the respective clan association) to commemorate and honour their late relations at
grave site and their distant ancestry of China at home altar, clan temple or a makeshift altar in a
Buddhist or Taoist temple. For the overseas community, QingMing festival is very much a family
heritage and at the same, a family obligation. The overseas Chinese see this festival as a time to
reflect, honour and give thanks to their forefathers. The overseas Chinese normally visit the graves
of their late relations at the nearest weekend of the actual date.
According to the ancient custom, grave site veneration is only feasible 10 days before and after
QingMing Festival. If the visit is not on the actual date normally veneration before QingMing is
encouraged. QingMing Festival in Malaysia and Singapore normally starts early in the morning, with
the ancestral veneration at home altar paying respects to the distant ancestors from China. This
would be followed by visiting the graves of their close relations in the country. Some would take the
extent of filial piety to visit the graves of their ancestors in mainland China. Traditionally, family will
burn paper money (paper that have imprint of money) and paper replica of some good materials
such as car, maid, home, phone, and etc. In Chinese culture, even though a person died, he/she
may still need all of these in the afterlife. There should always an even number of dishes put in
front of the grave and a bowl of rice with incense stick upright. Then, family members start taking
turn to bow before the tomb of the ancestors. Bowing will go in order, which starts with the most
senior member of the family and so on. After the ancestor worship at the grave site, the whole
family or the whole clan would be feasting the food and drinks they brought for the worship at the
site or nearby gardens in the memorial park, signifying family reunion with the ancestors.
Hanshi, the day before QingMing, was created by Chong'er, the Duke Wen of the state of Jin during
the Spring and Autumn Period. The festival was established after Chong'er accidentally burned to
death his personal friend and servant Jie Zitui and Jie Zitui's mother. Chong'er ordered the hills
they were hiding in set on fire in hopes that Jie Zitui would return to his service, but the fire killed
Jie and his mother. On Hanshi, people were not allowed to use fires to heat up food, thus
nicknaming it the Cold Food Festival. Eventually, 300 years ago, the Hanshi "celebration" was
combined with the QingMing festival, but later abandoned by most people.

QingMing in painting
The famous QingMing scroll by Zhang Zeduan is an ancient Chinese painting which portrays the
scene of Kaifeng city, the capital of Song Dynasty during QingMing period

Panorama of Along the River During QingMing Festival, 12th century original by Zhang Zeduan (1085-1145)

Panorama of Along the River During QingMing Festival, an 18th century remake of the 12th century original.

QingMing in literature
QingMing
A drizzling rain falls like tears on the Mourning Day;
The mourner's heart is breaking on his way.
Where can a wine house be found to drown his sadness?
A cowherd points to Almond Flower (Xing Hua) Village in the distance.

In the Vietnamese epic poem The Tale of Kieu, QingMing is also mentioned as the occasion where
the protagonist Kieu meets a ghost of a dead old lady. The lines describing the sceneries during this
festival remain some of the most well-known lines in Vietnamese literature:
Swift swallows and spring days were shuttling by
of ninety radiant ones three score had fled.
Young grass spread all its green to heaven's rim;
some blossoms marked pear branches with white dots.
Now came the Feast of Light in the third month
with graveyard rites and junkets on the green.
As merry pilgrims flocked from near and far,
the sisters and their brother went for a stroll.

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