The Mid-Autumn Festival also
known as the Moon Festival, is a popular East Asian celebration of abundance and
togetherness, dating back over 3,000 years to China’s Zhou Dynasty. In Malaysia
and Singapore, it is also sometimes referred to as the Lantern Festival or
“Mooncake Festival”, which is just the same as “Mid-Autumn Festival” but with
different names.
The Mid-Autumn Festival falls on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month of the
Chinese calendar (usually around mid- or late-September in the Gregorian
calendar), a date that parallels the Autumn Equinox of the solar calendar. This
is the ideal time, when the moon is at its fullest and brightest, to celebrate
the abundance of the summer’s harvest. The traditional food of this festival is
the mooncake, of which there are many different varieties.
The Mid-Autumn Festival is one of the two most important holidays in the
Chinese calendar (the other being the Chinese Lunar New Year), and is a legal
holiday in several countries. Farmers celebrate the end of the summer harvesting
season on this date. Traditionally, on this day, Chinese family members and
friends will gather to admire the bright mid-autumn harvest moon, and eat moon
cakes and pomeloes together. Accompanying the celebration, there are additional
cultural or regional customs, such as:
Eating moon cakes outside under the moon
Putting pomelo rinds on one’s head
Carrying brightly lit lanterns
Burning incense in reverence to deities including Chang’e
Planting Mid-Autumn trees
Lighting lanterns on towers
Fire Dragon Dances
Shops selling mooncakes, before the festival, often display pictures of
Chang’e floating to the moon.
While Westerners may talk about the “man in the moon”, the Chinese talk about
the “woman in the moon”. The story of Chang’e and her flight to the moon,
familiar to every Chinese citizen, is a favourite subject of poets. Unlike many
lunar deities in other cultures who personify the moon, Chang’e lives in the
moon. Tradition places Houyi and Chang’e around 2170 BC, in the reign of the
legendary Emperor Yao, shortly after that of Huang Di.