Why they celebrate the Moon Festival is the equivalent to the reasoning behind Americans celebrating Thanksgiving. This festival is known as a tradition amongst the Chinese culture.
It depends on which society you are referring to. Not all societies celebrate the same festivals.
Because they want to
In India there are many festivals related to the moon. eg:- some hindu festivals are Shivratri{day before new moon};holi,budhha purnima, guru purnima, {all on full moon};diwali{on new moon} Others are janmashtami,rath yatra. All muslim festivals depend on the moon.In calendars 'Id' is mentioned that it is subject to appearance of the moon.
The Moon doesn't have a birthday in the traditional sense, as it is a natural satellite rather than a living entity. However, if one were to consider its formation, the Moon is believed to have formed about 4.5 billion years ago, shortly after the formation of the solar system. Therefore, one could whimsically celebrate the Moon's "birthday" on that approximate date.
In "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Achebe, the festivals that occur include the New Yam Festival, the Week of Peace, the Feast of the New Year, and the Egwugwu festival, among others. These festivals play significant roles in the traditional Igbo society depicted in the novel, showcasing their cultural beliefs, values, and social norms.
The Hindus Celebrate this festival, on the eve before the 6th moon.
no
because they are a religious thing that we must celebrate!!
Chinese new year, moon festival, and lantern festival.
Chinese New Year and Mid-Autumn Moon Festival are two of them.
the Chinese people started to celebrate the moon festival at the 1898. they decide that it would be fun and bring the luck to the moon. for my luck, my record is to make paper cranes
The Mid-Autumn Festival, also known as the Moon Festival, has been celebrated by the Chinese people for over 3,000 years. It falls on the 15th day of the 8th month in the lunar calendar when the moon is at its fullest and brightest.
China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines.
Chinese celebrate Chinese New Year, Moon Cake, and Lantern festival.
They celebrate New Year, Chinese New Year, Christmas and Full Moon festival. I hoped this help!
If you're asking about the Moon Festival aka Mid Autumn Festival, it's largely celebrated by Chinese from many parts of the World (China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia e.t.c.). The Vietnamese and Filipinos also celebrate this occasion. Note that in culturally diverse countries such as Singapore and Malaysia, it's not unusual for non-Chinese to also celebrate it casually.
The Japanese eat food such as rice, chicken, noodles and more