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Cultural appropriation

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Today when people say "happy lunar New Year", others know they are talking about Chinese New Year or Korean new year or Vietnamese new year with zodiacs and similar themes. Because that is what they're referring to. Lunar New Year was a colloquial term meant for only the East Asian lunar New Year celebrations. Britannica did a good job in describing it well.[1] Yet some editors now thought it was a good idea to rewrite what the term means and now claim that the Jewish and south Asians also celebrate lunar new year. Despite the fact that Jewish New Year, barely even uses the moon as the primary theme of their new year. Also I have never heard a Jew say "happy lunar new year" to each other because they don't. Their top theme is their religion. Meanwhile the Eastern Asian lunar New Year is about agriculture harvest, the celebration of the moon itself. Not just having a lunar calendar but actually literally celebrating the moon with mooncakes, stories about the moon rabbit living on the moon and so many other cultural traditions to honour their moon. It does not just uses a lunar calendar but does far much more than that. It is very Moon theme centric unlike the Jewish New year (Rosh Hashanah) that barely does any top focus or overwhelming worship to a moon but see it as just a moon. Please don't do cultural appropriation and take ownership of Lunar New Year away from East Asia and insert other countries as if their Lunar New year event is what now dominates the lunar New Year celebrations, when it is originally supposed to be an East Asian traditional event. Sorry for the criticism but this article is borderline disrespecting East Asians and felt it needed to be discussed. SoyDream888 (talk) 08:19, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Also GOOGLE (lunar new year) and lookup what it brings up. There are top sources, companies, governments, local councils etc that only refer to East Asian lunar new year.[2] why? I Never once seen them ever say it's also celebrated by Jewish or indian people. Is there even any source seriously saying that Jews celebrate "lunar new year"? That their celebration is strongly dependent on the moon and is very Moon theme centric. I am sorry if you took a long time to edit but nobody is saying that and so it is original research. And the Wikipedia rule is No original research (NOR)[3]. Nobody is saying that the term refers to indian and Jewish New Years. EVERYONE knows the term means East Asian lunar New year celebrations which includes mostly Chinese New Year, Korean New Year and Vietnamese new year. East Asia doesn't have that many international celebrations. Lunar new year is like their only international major one and so you should not be misconstruing what it means to celebrate lunar new year. Do not take that one celebration away from them. I said my piece. SoyDream888 (talk) 08:38, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

No, it is a collision of cultures, no appropriation involved. It is certainly true that the Chinese New Year is the most visible of these events but it is not the only one: Wikipedia is doing its job well if it helps readers understand that theirs is not the only perspective. WP:WORLDWIDEVIEW applies to the east just as much as it does to the west. This article is about the general principle of new year's day in lunar and lunisolar calendars: there are whole articles dedicated to each culture's own celebration.
I realise that some people from South-east Asia dislike the prefix "Chinese" being applied to their celebration of the event. We have Vietnamese New Year, Thai New Year, etc. But if the issue that concerns you is broader than that, I don't see what Wikipedia can do about it: it is not our place to put WP:right great wrongs. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 11:29, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
In fairness to all sides, 'lunar calendar' is what Judaism bases their calendar on, but their new year is indeed only marked by the lunar calendar, there is certainly no 'worship' or reverence for the moon or anything if SoyDream888 is implying that there is something like that among Asian cultures? If you can find sources to validate some of these issues SoyDream888, then make some edits accordingly. After all, Wikipedia is a work in progress. Worst case you get reverted as long as all was in good faith and as long as you don't then start to edit war after the fact. That is what I love so much about this project, generally we won't block you or take issue with any sort of experimentation with good faith improvements in mind (I say 'generally' because I have seen mistakes made, but even those are generally fixed rather quickly). TY Moops T 17:32, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
To Moops and JMF - I understand what you are trying to say. Then you should better differentiate between (new lunar year) and (lunar New Year) then. You don't provide any sources that Jewish people celebrate what is termed (lunar New Year). Such a specific term is only ever used to describe Asian celebrations and that is why I said (no original research). Only you are redefining what the mainstream colloquial term is. If you are talking about the literal new lunar year celebrations. Then sure, you can talk about that and include every single new lunar year celebrations from the Globe. But you should call that article as (new lunar year celebrations) as you mean that term literally. But the precise wording and term (Lunar New Year) has become a mainstream colloquial term that ONLY refers to East Asian lunar New Year celebrations. And the article needs to respectfully reflect what the world means when they say (happy Lunar New year). Every major source only use that term to refer to Asian celebrations. [4] [5] I propose two articles - ( new lunar year celebrations) and (lunar New Year) and the latter is respectfully dedicated to Asia to avoid cultural appropriation or claiming that their Mainstream celebration is shared by other regions. SoyDream888 (talk) 19:22, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
For what it is worth, it would not be hard to find sources on the subject like this. Moops T 19:24, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
That article doesn't specifically say Jews celebrate (lunar New Year). And I have yet to find a SINGLE source that says Jews celebrate (lunar New year). At best, they only mention a use of a lunar calendar but that's it. The specific wording (lunar New Year) is only ever uniquely mentioned in reference to East Asian lunar New year celebrations. When it comes to others, I have not found a single sources specifically stating that Lunar New Year (exact word order) is celebrated by Jewish and indian people. There is none and believe me, I have searched. Every major Mainstream source and Media only talks about Lunar New Year as celebrations that are in East Asia. So I believe you are going a new direction and taking the term too literally instead of recognising it is a colloquial Common reference to new lunar year celebrations in East Asia. SoyDream888 (talk) 19:36, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I'm afraid that this one is not easily resolvable because Wikipedia tries to take a worldwide view and not give precedence to any one culture (not always successfully but at least we try). The current lead of the article, it seems to me, reports fairly that "Lunar New Year" is the WP:COMMONNAME for the festival in the East Asian cultural sphere. If you think it should be more, then please feel free to propose some text. But it must respect the cultural traditions of other countries. Conversely, it should not overstate its importance in these cultures: for example LNY is part of the Jewish tradition but is nothing like as significant an event as it is in East Asia.
The neologism "new lunar year" doesn't really make sense because each lunar month just follows the next without any line to cross. "New Lunisolar year" would be an even bigger neologism but at least it would have a logic like "first new/full moon after the winter solstice / the equinox / the transit of Aries". But that definitely takes us into WP:No original research territory, which is not acceptable. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 20:25, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I would beg to differ. Just to clarify, lunar New Year is the accepted mainstream English term given to specific east Asian festivals at a certain time of the year. Do not claim that when people say "lunar New year", they are referring to Jewish and indian celebrations as nobody says that. The colloquial term is well established towards east Asia. When you look up Google, it says it's tomorrow. When you lookup top sources, it describes only east Asian celebrations because it's how everyone understands it nowadays. [6] So the key issue is that you really cannot redefine it all by yourself. Respectfully, you are not some significant person that can Change what the world means when they say (lunar New year). You need to properly recognise it has become a very significant colloquial term globally and this is the critical reason why I urged for two articles. One dedicated to such infamous colloquial common term (Lunar New Year) and another article titled (Lunar annual celebrations) for the more umbrella literal term. I think (celebrations that uses a Lunar calendar) is a good enough title. BUT you simply cannot share the same exact wording as an extremely common "colloquial term" used internationally. As you fail to recognise that today, people use the term "Lunar New Year" as a colloquial Common term for East Asian celebrations. It's imperative to not mix up a very well established colloquial term and then go claiming that other countries are known to also celebrate "lunar New Year" as well, is what's original research (by making claims that is not explicitly written anywhere by All Mainstream sources [7] or all international organisations [8] whenever they specifically refer to the globally famous term - "Lunar New Year").SoyDream888 (talk) 21:44, 20 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Semi-protected edit request on 23 January 2023

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It's a Lunisolar Calendar thus Chinese New Year is Lunisolar New Year. Muslim calendars are Lunar, so the Muslim Calendar's New Year is Lunar New Year... so much widespread ignorance. Even your own links show that I'm correct. 2607:FEA8:440:7D90:6726:BB42:A5ED:68A0 (talk) 04:39, 23 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

 Not done: it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a "change X to Y" format and provide a reliable source if appropriate. Cannolis (talk) 04:45, 23 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I guess poster mainly mentioned about the ambiguity betweenLunar calendar and Lunisolar calendar, which is presented in the quote, "Lunar New Year is the beginning of a lunar calendar or lunisolar calendar year, whose months are moon cycles. The event is celebrated by numerous cultures in various ways at diverse dates." and it comes from Lunar New Year page. I also kinda wonder if we can define them more accurate. According to Lunar calendar and Lunisolar calendar pages, one is no intercalation and one has it, the date of two calendars will be different when both of them enter the second cycle. Then, the beginning of these two years are inconsistent. Would it still be suitable to call it as a Lunar New Year for both? Or some cultures do call them as the Lunar New Year but some are not?
Use the Chinese New Year as an example. The interesting thing is there was a old paper https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/document?repid=rep1&type=pdf&doi=a7d4e92bc40ce2d613ed7dad4c320df34ff66831 talks about the Chinese new year is not a lunar new year. However, I found there are a lot of paper try to link chinese new year with lunar new year by using something like chinese lunar new year (like papers in https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C31&as_vis=1&q=chinese+lunar+new+year&btnG=&oq=chinese+lunar). In this case, is that still be appropriated to use Lunar New Year to Chinese New Year?
I kinda want to bring it on table as a discussion but I don't have a good proposal here.
best Hailaishoya (talk) 10:49, 30 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]
We have a policy, WP:COMMONNAME, which covers this sort of case, where a name is very widely used even if technically incorrect (as in this case). The term "lunisolar new year" is not used to any significant extent: the term "lunar new year" is overwhelmingly dominant for both types of calendar. So that is what we call the article. NB that (despite many well-meaning attempts to change it) the article is not called Chinese New Year (that has its own article) but neither is it called Islamic New Year (that too has its own article). The article identifies the Hijri calendar in the lead and in the body: I suggest that is a fair balance of competing perspectives. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 11:17, 30 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Invoking WP:BRD for major revision by User:Hungrycitrus

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@Hungrycitrus, I reverted your edit because it is so substantial as to need consensus first. The article as it stands is a delicate balance between competing perspectives and national(istic) sensitivities. Per WP:COMMONNAME, we describe what is (as multiple WP:Reliable sources attest, not what should be, whether or not it is more 'correct'. See also WP:Righting great wrongs. So you need to set out here what you believe needs to be changed and wait to see if there is a consensus in favour. 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 15:22, 30 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Infobox montage

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I think the montage of pictures in the infobox doesn't do justice as it is exclusively the Lunar celebrations of East and South East Asia. Some images should be changed so that other Lunar celebrations are also represented. WR 18:34, 8 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Such as? The only other obvious candidate is Islamic New Year and that doesn't even have an illustration in its own article. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 20:48, 11 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

"but is before or near the spring equinox"

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Jaredscribe, can you clarify the text you added?

  • The Chinese new year is the second full moon after the winter solstice – before, yes, but so is the Gregorian new year, so in effect a meaningless assertion. The trigger event for the CNY is the solstice, not the equinox.
  • The Hindu new year is when the sun moves into the constellation of Pisces and happens after the equinox.[1]

I'm seeing wp:SYNTH ahead. Something doesn't add up. 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 21:48, 23 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

And just to keep it entertaining, there are two Hindi New Year's Days:

If the first is intended, it needs to be explicit. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 21:53, 23 March 2023 (UTC) [stating the obvious, so deleted. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 21:58, 23 March 2023 (UTC)][reply]

Relevance of Nissan?

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According to https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/2842/jewish/Our-Other-Head.htm, the Jewish year begins on the first of Tishrei—a day we observe as Rosh Hashanah, “the Head of the Year”—and ends twelve (or thirteen) months later, on the 29th of Elul. and then it goes on to say that the month of Nissan, occurring midway through the Tishrei-headed year, designated—in the very first mitzvah commanded to the Jewish people—as “the head of months, the first of the months of your year” The source goes on to explain the apparent dichotomy, but the fact remains the Hebrew New Year is Rosh Hashanah. It also seems very significant that https://www.timeanddate.com/holidays/israel/ gives the dates for Rosh Hashanah but not for Nissan as it is not a public holiday. TL;DR: why is Nissan even mentioned in this article? --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 23:00, 23 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Minimally, it needs to be generalised

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Qiushufang has deleted your addition as unsourced. (I concur.) If it could be supported by citation, it would need to say something more general and not get bogged down in detail of a specific year. I suggest something The Hindu calendar's first month is Chaitra (variable dates in March/April[2]), which is the first new moon after the March equinox.[citation needed] This is the same basis for calculation as that for Nisan (the first month of the Hebrew calendar, though not its New Year's Day). but its showstopper is that I have observed (aka WP:OR) the rule "first new moon after the March equinox" but I haven't found a citation for it. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 23:27, 23 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]


References

  1. ^ TimeAndDate.com presents Chaitra Sukhladi in Gregorian Calendars
  2. ^ "Chaitra Sukhladi in India". TimeAndDate.com. (Chaitra Sukhladi v Gregorian dates)