Glimpse of Chinese New Year: Families toss up good fortune

In this photo taken on Monday, Feb. 16, 2015, Cheong Lan Yang, 68, rear left, tosses "yu sheng," a raw fish salad, with family members during a family reunion dinner for Chinese New Year, at a restaurant in Singapore. This Singaporean tradition is known as “lo hei,” which means “tossing up good fortune” in Cantonese and is done at the start of family reunion dinners before Chinese New Year. The raw fish in the salad symbolizes the abundance of wealth and long life that Cheong, who lives in Australia, hopes for in the new year. “I hope this Chinese New Year brings good health because I would like to live long enough to see my grandchildren one day,” he said. “Chinese New Year is a time for family gathering and that means a lot to me because I currently live abroad, and this is a time for us to share old memories as well as make new ones.” (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)

SINGAPORE — Twenty family members are seated at two round tables in a Chinese restaurant. At the start of the eight-course meal, Cheong Lan Yang, 68, with chopsticks in hand, joins other family members in tossing raw fish salad, known as "yu sheng," from plates placed at the center of each table.

This photo by Associated Press photographer Wong Maye-E shows the Singaporean tradition known as "lo hei," which means "tossing up good fortune" in Cantonese and is done at the start of family reunion dinners before Chinese New Year. The raw fish in the salad symbolizes the abundance of wealth and long life that Cheong, who lives in Australia, hopes for in the new year.

 

"I hope this Chinese New Year brings good health because I would like to live long enough to see my grandchildren one day," he said. "Chinese New Year is a time for family gathering and that means a lot to me because I currently live abroad, and this is a time for us to share old memories as well as make new ones."

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