This weekend marks the celebration of the Lunar New Year, also known as Chinese New Year, by more than a billion people worldwide.
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The celebration is a time for gathering with loved ones, friends, and food, and it frequently sparks the biggest yearly human migration
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Lunar New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, is observed by the Asian diaspora worldwide as well as in China and a large portion of Asia, Korea, Vietnam, and Singapore.
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Once legend that says the festivities started as an attempt to frighten off a beast known as "Nian," which is Chinese for "year," that prowled cities and villages every spring.
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Although it is primarily a secular holiday, there are cultural customs associated with it that come from Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism as well as from folklore and old myths.
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Nowadays, some of the largest Lunar New Year celebrations in the globe take place outside of Asia, with San Francisco hosting one of the most notable ones.
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The celebration was acknowledged as a state holiday in California for the first time last year.Dragon dances, lanterns, and cash gifts in red envelopes are all over the place.
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