Vietnam is no different. Millions in the country as well as abroad gather at home with their families and loved ones to celebrate what is possibly the most beautiful moon of the year.
The full moon of the lunar month of August has been celebrated for up to 20,000 years across Oriental Asia.
Known as Tsukimi in Japan, and Chuseok in North and South Korea, this specific date is when the moon’s orbit is at its lowest angle to the horizon, making the moon appear larger and brighter than at any other time of the year.
People would gather to watch this auspicious event and pray that it brought good fortune in its wake.
The legend surrounding the holiday takes place in the 8th century. According to ancient folklore, Emperor Duong Minh Hoang was whisked away to the moon with the help of a magician friend where he witnessed a beautiful dance by the fairies who inhabited it.
He then learned their dance, combining it with another local dance known as Ba Lon. He then spread this dance and accompanying music across his empire and that’s where the tradition of moon watching, singing, and dancing originates.
As Vietnam is a country of 70 million inhabitants, celebration varies depending on region, area, and family.
However, moon cakes are a common feature in every household during the Mid-Autumn festival. These cakes are round, dense, and usually feature some detailed pattern on the crust.
Typical fillings include meat, eggs, dried fruit, pumpkin’s seed, or peanut, and can be sweet or savory.
For weeks leading up to the event, moon cake stalls pop up all over towns and cities awaiting peckish patrons, who usually buy them in bulk and then give them away as gifts.
The other main tradition surrounding the holiday is lanterns that vary in shape and color, but are usually moon, star, or flower themed.
On the day of the festival, the lanterns are usually led in a procession towards a main meeting point filled with music, held by children wearing brightly colored masks of various animal designs.
Lion and dragon dances are also common, as well as the burning of incense, which fill the streets with a beautiful smoky aroma.
Much like Thanksgiving in the United States, the Mid-Autumn festival is the time of year when members of the family can gather together and share what they’re grateful for in the year gone by.
The young generation pay their respects to their older relatives, and the older generation do the same for the young.
As the festival coincides with the start of the new school year, it is commonplace for children and teenagers to receive gifts such as new pencil cases and clothes.
However, traditionally people would celebrate the end of harvest season, and would share homegrown food and wine.
If you get the chance, Hoi An is certainly the place to be for the Mid-Autumn Festival. Known year-round as the City of Lanterns, lucky visitors to Hoi An during the full moon are in for a real treat.
The entire town shuts off all electricity so that only the lanterns, candles, and natural light of the moon can be seen.
Lively crowds chatter, sing songs, and bask in the radiant glow of the largest and moon of the year, as their ancestors have done for millennias.
Vietnamonline/VNN