Gulf News

Chinese community ushers in Year of the Rooster

COMMUNITY MEMBERS WELCOME THE NEW YEAR WITH A TWO-WEEK LINE-UP OF ACTIVITIES AND FESTIVITIE­S

- BY JANICE PONCE DE LEON Staff Reporter

The Chinese community in Dubai is welcoming the Year of the Rooster with hopes of good health, prosperity, wealth and success for family and friends.

The New Year begins today and will last until February 15, 2018, on the Chinese lunar calendar. The celebratio­n typically lasts days and ends on the 15th day of the year for the Lantern Festival (on February 11).

Also known as the Spring Festival, the Chinese New Year is the most important traditiona­l holiday in China. Expat Chinese workers traditiona­lly travel to their hometowns in China to celebrate New Year with family and friends. But for those who cannot, Dubai has enough options to make them feel at home, especially at Dragon Mart, Dubai’s unofficial China Town.

Dragon Mart is welcoming the Chinese New Year with a two-week line-up of entertainm­ent and activities, which started on Thursday with a spectacula­r fireworks display and an array of live shows.

Some of China’s most wellknown and talented performers have been flown in for the festivitie­s, which include everything from Kung Fu to calligraph­y and face-changing to fortune telling.

“It’s too cold now in the place where I come from in China. The weather here, however is pleasant, so it’s better here. Although we miss home, I’m glad Dragon Mart brought Chinese performers here, it’s like we have a piece of home this New Year. This makes us so happy,” You Fang Yu, a businesswo­man who has been in Dubai for 12 years, told Gulf News.

“This New Year, I hope to have good health and that business would pick up again. I am positive we’ll ride the wave of success again this year.”

For Zahra Jiang, good fortune is also on her wishlist this year. “I wish the new business I plan to open will succeed,” Jiang said. She welcomed the Chinese New Year with family as they watched Chinese programmes on television and shared traditiona­l Chinese food, including dumplings.

Can Cui, an engineer who recently moved to Dubai, said he hopes the Year of the Rooster would bring his family happiness and good health and more business for the company he’s working for.

Ling Ching Sun, who has a shop at Dragon Mart, only wishes good health for her parents back in China. She is confident the rooster will bring luck to everyone.

Dubai is currently home to around 200,000 Chinese, with an estimated 50,000 living at Internatio­nal City, adjacent to Dragon Mart.

Dragon Mart itself, the world’s largest Chinese trading hub outside China, has more than 4,500 shops and restaurant­s run by nearly 1,800 Chinese traders.

But this number is expected to grow, especially since the UAE granted visa-on-arrival status to Chinese tourists in September 2016.

“The visa-on-arrival status is good for us. Dubai is a dream destinatio­n for many of our compatriot­s. That’s because there are many “firsts” here and many advances in technology, especially in constructi­on. Burj Al Arab and Palm Jumeirah, for example, are a must-see for us,” Yu said.

 ??  ??
 ?? Arshad Ali/Gulf News ?? Children and families watch performanc­es by artists held as part of the Chinese New Year celebratio­ns at Dragon Mart in Dubai.
Arshad Ali/Gulf News Children and families watch performanc­es by artists held as part of the Chinese New Year celebratio­ns at Dragon Mart in Dubai.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates