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Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
New Twists to New Year's Event

New attractions will join the annual bell striking ceremony at Shanghai's Longhua Temple on New Year's Eve.

 

A 10-meter-tall brass "Wishing Tree" will be erected for the first time in the square outside the temple.

 

"The Wishing Tree will hopefully become another symbol of the New Year," said Deng Yongxi, deputy director of the Shanghai Xuhui District Tourism Bureau.

 

The tree will be lit on New Year's Eve and visitors can write down a wish and tie it on a branch.

 

A lotus-shaped stand is built underneath the tree with the Chinese character fu (meaning luck) engraved on it 1,000 times.

 

"Before we used paper and cardboard to build the tree," said Deng. "But this year we want something more solid that can last for the next few years."

 

The Wishing Tree will stay in the square until after Chinese New Year, according to Deng.

 

Charity donations will also be held before the bell is struck 108 times.

 

Red Cross volunteers will circulate around the square to collect money.

 

The bureau has also set up boutiques to sell gifts and snacks. Visitors in the square will be able to watch ongoing events inside the temple on a huge TV screen.

 

Most tourists at the bell striking ceremony are from Japan, according to the bureau. This year the temple expects about 700 Japanese tourists, Deng said.

 

Meanwhile, Koreans and travelers from Southeast Asian countries are also increasing gradually.

 

The Longhua bell striking ceremony has been a tradition since 1988.

 

Every New Year's Eve, 108 honored visitors climb the Longhua Bell Tower and strike the 2-meter-high bronze bell.

 

(Shanghai Daily December 16, 2005)

 

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