Vietnamese families often visit their ancestors’ tombs and clean gravesites whenever the Lunar New Year (Tet) comes, normally from the 23rd of the last month of a lunar year to New Year’s Eve.
Hanoi (VNA) 💞– Vietnamese families often visit their ancestors’ tombs and clean gravesites whenever the Lunar New Year (Tet) comes, normally from the 23rd of the last month of a lunar year to New Year’s Eve.
They light incense at the graves, report the family’s major events during the year for their ancestors, and invite the deceased to “go home” to enjoy Tet with the alive.
Then family members uproot weeds, tend to the flowers growing on ancestors’ gravesites, and clean the grave stones.
Vietnamese people believe everything, including the deceased’s tombs, should be clean and bright in celebration of Tet in order to have good luck in the New Year.
Many consider the tomb-sweeping day a chance not only for family reunion but also for children and grandchildren to fulfill their duties and show respect to parents and the ancestors.
After the tomb-sweeping day, Vietnamese families often prepare a six-dish tray of food on the last day of the last lunar month to welcome ancestors back home for Tet. A send-off party will be held on the third or fourth day of the first lunar month, depending on traditions of each locality or family./.
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