Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - How to write the traditional festival composition in the third grade of primary school

How to write the traditional festival composition in the third grade of primary school

The composition of traditional festivals in the third grade of primary school is as follows:

"It rains a lot during the Qingming Festival, and pedestrians on the road want to break their souls ..." Every year in this solar term, we will meditate on this poem by Du Mu, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, to express our feelings for our ancestors.

I set off early in the morning with great expectation. The cemetery of our ancestors is on a hillside, and a steep stone step is the only access. There are tall and lush trees and short weeds here, and there are many stone tablets engraved with the names of our ancestors.

Before the ancestor worship, we were all busy preparing supplies. Everyone prepared tea, wine, fish, fruit, vegetarian food, roast pig, roast goose and so on. The ancestor worship began. We put what we need into the laundry basket and carried it with a pole.

Then, everyone is busy putting the prepared food on the tray. Then we lit incense, lit candles and bowed to our ancestors. I was also busy lighting incense and burning paper money, and accidentally burned my finger. After burning incense to worship ancestors, it's time to set off firecrackers I quickly hid aside and covered my ears.

Tomb-Sweeping Day's grave-sweeping is not only to show his respect and love for his ancestors, but also an opportunity for family reunion.

Traditional festivals in China:

Traditional festivals in China include: Spring Festival, Lantern Festival, Tomb-Sweeping Day, Dragon Boat Festival, Double Ninth Festival, Winter Solstice, New Year's Eve, Chinese Valentine's Day, Laba Festival and Mid-Autumn Festival. Among them, the Spring Festival is the grandest and most lively ancient traditional festival in China, commonly known as "Chinese New Year".

According to the China lunar calendar, the first day of the first month is the beginning of a year. Traditional celebrations last from New Year's Eve to the Lantern Festival on the 15th day of the first month.

In addition, the 24 solar terms correspond to different traditional festivals, and ethnic minorities in China also keep their own traditional festivals, such as the Water-splashing Festival of the Dai people, the Nadam Festival of the Mongolian people and the Torch Festival of the Yi people.