Monday, March 11, 2013

Life & Style | Persian New Year




In my family, we are lucky to celebrate two New Years each year. One American and one Iranian. 

Iranian New year or Norooz starts on the first day of Spring. 

This year, Persian New Year starts on Wednesday, March 20th at 4:01 am and we are celebrating the year 1392

Before the new year, all the Iranian families do serious spring cleaning.

For spring cleaning we wash and clean everything and anything including our Persian carpets & curtains & every single dish from every single cabinet. The darn Spring cleaning took a good two weeks to complete.

I even had to help out my grandma with taking down all her curtains and hanging them afterwards since she was too afraid to climb a ladder and I am telling you her house had lots of windows. One of the joys of being an adult is to choose not to do any radical spring cleaning. Some traditions need to be modified, I tell you.

For kids, Norooz means skipping school for 13 straight days.

To celebrate Norooz, we set up a beautiful table that includes at least 7 items which start with sound of C in Farsi and some other traditional items.  We call this table (Haft Sin or seven C's)

These are the items that I place on my table for Norooz.
  • Sonbol ( Hyacinth)
  • Serkeh (Vinegar)
  • Sir (Garlic)
  • Sekeh (Coins)
  • Sib (Apple)
  • Samanoo (Sweet delicacy made from germinated wheat)
  • Saat (Clock)
  • Cenjed (Dried fruit from the lotus tree)
  • A beautiful mirror
  • A bowl of water with a red gold fish
  • Colorful eggs
  • Sabzeh (Lentil or wheat sprouts)
  • Candles
Each of these items are metaphors for things such as " beauty, prosperity, fertility and so on and on" but don't ask me to demystify this table for you since I am clueless and so are half of the Iranians who set up this table each year. Let's just say that it tradition and leave it at that.

 
The Tuesday night before our New Year is called Char-Chan-Be-Sori.

To celebrate, we buy fireworks and jump over bonfires. We chant this song as we jump over the fire:

Zardi man as too, Sorkie to az man.( Which basically means: I am giving you my yellowness and taking away your redness. We are just hoping for a healthy New year ahead...I guess)

Back home, we used to get together with all my cousins and neighbors and friends and make rows of bonfires and jump over them and then we enjoyed the fireworks after dark. Then we would go to my grandma's house to have a feast with at least 20 cousins and aunts and uncles. That was a very fun and noisy endeavor.

A week or so before the New Year, Parents usually take their kids shopping for new shoes and clothes. Usually government workers get bonus pay right before the New Year in Iran.

At the moment of the new Year, we gather around our table and pray or read poetry. We only receive gifts from our immediate family. If you are a kid, you also get money from family and friends.

The Persian calendar starts on the first day of Spring. The first month in Persian calendar is called " Farvardine".

For Norooz, you are expected to visit family and friends to wish them happy New Year and it involves going from one house to the next and it involves lots of tea drinking and pastry eating. In a single day, you might end up visiting several families and friends. You have about 2 weeks to make your rounds.

Iranians outside Iran also celebrate Norooz. There are 470,000 Iranians in the U.S.A who celebrate Norooz each year.

So on Tuesday, March 19th, I am going to jump over the fire in Sacramento and then I am going to wake up really early the next day to celebrate the New Iranian Year at 4:01 am in the morning.

On the 13th day after the New Year, all Iranian families go on a picnic. We call this day Siz Da Bedar.

In Stockton, all the Iranians get together in Oak Grove Regional Park every year to have a big picnic to celebrate this day. There are at least  150 Iranians who show up for this picnic each year.
Ok, I am letting you go, I got to start my spring cleaning before it is too late.



Signing off until next Monday- Panteha



2 comments:

  1. Thank you for opening the door and setting the table so we can learn about another culture with wonderful traditions. Happy New Year!

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  2. What fun to learn about how different cultures celebrate a New Year! So many interesting things to wonder about...I will choose carefully to ask only one question though--so, I will not ask about the reasons for the items on the table (as you said not to do!) But--what is the significance of 4:01 am for the start of the New Year? Just curious...

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