Lunar New Year 20 - Interfaith Practice

 We are in the midst of the Lunar New Year!

Happy Year of the dragon! 

photo by Rutpratheep Nilpechr on unsplash
Did you know that Lunar New Year is not just celebrated in China? Countries that celebrate Lunar New Year include Vietnam, Korea, Tibet, Mongolia, China, Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Macau, Malaysia, and the Okinawan community  in Japan. It is called Seollal (Korea), Tet (Vietnam), Losar (Tibet), and Tsangaan Sar (Mongolia).

As a lower school community, we embrace the opportunity to learn about this celebration.



My hope for my students is that they learn to approach every new opportunity with curiosity and openness. Rather than notice differences or ideas of shock or strangeness, imagine holding space for wonder! 

As a way to encourage this approach, I have created an extended thinking routine of sorts. It is our interfaith dialog and education thinking routine. We use this routine throughout the year with each new observance or tradition, each new opportunity for interfaith exploration and wonder. Teachers are free to adapt, simplify, or chunk the thinking moves in the routine in any way that makes sense for their learners. Our hope is that teachers will settle on a version that they can use again and again, making this interfaith routine, routine.

We often begin with a story. It may be a story that is read by a member of the community or the teacher. It may be a story that a member of our community shares from their own personal history or identity.

You might use this story Bringing in the New Year by Grace Lin

:

Grace Lin

Exploring the Lunar New Year, a thinking routine:


As you reflect upon the Lunar New Year story…


What is important to know about the Lunar New Year?

What feels familiar?

What surprises you? What is unexpected?

 



Further thinking about a point of view and the connectedness to our Quaker identity/the faith or non-faith based elements of our community’s identity:


Whose perspectives are being represented? How do you know? 

Whose perspective might be missing? 

In what ways might this connect to Quaker ideas or practices?

In what ways might this connect to your own story?




Further thinking about the relevance of all of this in the larger community or in our world:


Why might hearing these stories or learning about these traditions be important?

What role do these ideas play in our families? In our community? In our world? (Why might learning about this be important?)



 

Always great questions to ask:

What connections can you make?

What do you wonder?


How does the idea of light connect to the Lunar New Year? To our Quaker identity? To each of us?




What do you do with this thinking routine? Some options...

  • use the queries to guide a conversation
  • write about your thinking in response to the queries
  • paint or draw or create an artful representation in response to these queries (painted reflection journals)
  • use a query as a chalk talk prompt



Want to learn more?


This interfaith thinking routine is adapted from the See Familiar Surprise Wonder routine.

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