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Sep 25, 2015 / 14:39

Capital lights up for mid-autumn festival

The mid-autumn festival is underway in Hanoi`s Old Quarter with numerous activities organised to serve people, especially children.

The festival kicked off at the Old Quarter's Information Centre, 50 Dao Duy Tu Street, on September 23 with an exhibition of cardboard toys by painter Nguyen Phan Bach.
The exhibition displays photos and documents featuring traditional mid-autumn festivals in the Old Quarter in the past.
The centre also hosts puppetry performances by artists from Te Tieu village on Friday and Saturday nights.
The festival's opening ceremony attracted many students in Hoan Kiem district, including 11-year-old Hoang Anh Tuan.
"Painter Bach instructed us to make cardboard toys, and he allows us to paint on them with our favourite colours," Tuan said. "How funny, as each one of us chooses a different colour to paint on Bach's cardboard horse. When we finish, it appears so colourful."
Tuan added that he loves to make traditional toys and join the lantern parade during the mid-autumn festival.
From now until September 27, children can visit Kim Ngan Temple on Hang Bac street and learn how to make traditional toys and masks.
Also known as the full moon festival, the mid-autumn festival falls on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month. This year, it falls on Sunday (September 27). In Vietnam, this festival is primarily for children, who are the centre of activities.

 
Photo for illustration
Photo for illustration
While the main celebration is organised on the full moon day, many entertainment activities are held in the days leading up it. Children take glee in preparing their costumes, masks and lanterns for the parade, often spending weeks or even a month getting ready for the event.
Traditionally, during the night of the festival, children parade on the streets, singing with colourful lanterns shaped like butterflies, fish and stars in their hands. Another popular lantern includes den keo quan (a lantern which spins around with vivid, rotating paper-cut figures), symbolising the seasonal spinning of the earth around the sun.
Before or after the parade, parents prepare for their children a lavish tray of fruits and moon cakes called co Trung Thu, which they savour together while admiring the full moon.
The Vietnam Museum of Ethnology has made a commitment in recent years to offer children traditional mid-autumn festival events. Many foreign, imported toys and games have been applied to the mid-autumn festival, which some consider to be a decline in traditional values and the festival's identity.