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Home Page » Family & Home » Home Trips & Holidays
 

Happy New Year Latin Style: Unusual South American Customs for Bringing in the New Year

 

Question: What do a suitcase, 12 grapes, a sheaf of wheat, the color yellow, three potatoes and a stuffed dummy all have in common? Right! They each represent a custom for bringing in the New Year. But do you know these customs and how theyre celebrated?

Get That Suitcase Out

Many South Americans believe that if you carry an empty suitcase around the block on New Years Day you will be fortunate to travel during the course of the year. When my elderly neighbor sauntered out of her front gate in Cali, Colombia with a beat-up valise shed dusted off for the occasion, she brushed off my queries brusquely.

Dont bother me now! Im leaving!

Minutes later, her tour complete, she confided her desires to see the states this year. According to her, a voyage this year was now, in the bag.

Around the middle of December you begin to notice a disproportionately large number of fruit and vegetable street vendors starting to sell grapes. Grapes are everywhere by Christmas. Green grapes, purple grapes, mixed grapes they roll down the street and squish beneath your careless feet as you stroll market areas and shopping districts. Eating 12 grapes at or near midnight of New Years Eve will bring you good luck throughout the New Year. Green grapes are preferred by the majority, but any will suffice I was told by Anna Lucia who walked into the room with a bag of mixed grapes ample enough to produce a case of vino.

Youre not planning to eat all those, are you? I chided.

No, theyre not just for me. Theyre for my family too.

I remembered that she and her husband have five children. Add in the extended family and well, enough said. Havent had your twelve yet? Hurry up, theres still time.

A Bundled Sheaf of Wheat

A black youth stood on a downtown Pasto, Colombia corner hovering over a five-gallon bucket full of bundled sheaves of wheat. Each was wrapped with a brightly colored ribbon or two. Some were enhanced even further with a flower or small bouquet. People up and down the streets walked with a similar-looking sheaf held upright out in front of them like a siren in front of a fire engine. Crossing the Zocalo, or main square downtown, a young girl sitting on a park bench waved her sheaf at us like a magic wand.

Thats a new one on me, I said to my companion when she explained.

If you hang a bundled sheaf of wheat in your home its very good luck.

She continued, It has twelve stalks of wheat in each bundle.

How much for one? I asked the youth.

We quickly bargained to a lower price.

Are you sure therere twelve in here? I questioned, not wanting to get short-changed.

Oh yeah. Go ahead and count them.

When my partner responded, No therere only eleven.

He quickly snapped back, No way! Count them again.

We did and there were twelve. This New Years luck thing is serious business. The flowered sheaf stands guard now on the bookcase over my desk. Wish me luck, okay?

The Color Yellow

Not all mind you, but quite a few Latinos in Colombia and Ecuador use the color yellow for the New Year. There are a number of ways to do it. You can paint a room yellow. Place something yellow in the room. Wear a yellow item of clothing and youll shower yourself with fortune for the New Year. For reasons which as yet elude me, a favorite is to wear yellow underwear. (The preferred color in Mexico is red.) Both men and women have a pair or two on hand for the occasion or so Ive been repeatedly told. Okay, okay, Ill fess up; I have a couple of pairs of yellow underwear myself. So call me fickle. I have red ones too. Do I wear a pair for New Years? Ill never tell!

Be sure to read How to Use Three Potatoes and a Stuffed Dummy for Bringing in the New Year for more unusual Latin American New Years customs. Its online at: http://bettereflteacher.blogspot.com/

Happy New Year! and get that suitcase out!

Author: Larry M. Lynch
 
Author Bio:

Larry M. Lynch

Larry M. Lynch is an American English Language Specialist, ELT professor, TOEFL Examiner and EFL Teacher Trainer at the Santiago de Cali University with 15 years teaching experience in Latin America, the USA and Europe. He has presented plenary sessions, seminars, workshops and teacher training sessions at numerous TEFL conferences and educational institutions and holds a post-graduate diploma in TESOL from the Trinity College ? London (UK). He also holds CELTA, DELTA and Business English teaching certifications from England, Spain and the USA and has taught EFL at the secondary, university undergraduate and post-graduate levels in Cali for the past 11 years. An active ELT academic researcher and prolific author, he has more than 340 current articles, presentations, academic papers, books, reference works, workshops and publications related to TESOL or English language-learning & acquisition worldwide along with extensive experience in Testing, CALL, curriculum review and course development including development of alternative methods of evaluation and assessment online and using multi-modal didactic techniques.

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