SYDNEY'S CHINATOWN.
CELEBRATION OF NEW YEAR. intoH OUK OWN CORRISFONDINT.) SYDNEY, February 9. Sydney has a rather scattered Chinatown—but the yellow-skinned community, while not particularly numerous, clings together and stubbornly preserves the ideas and habits of the native land. The Chinese communities may be found, in patches, in the meaner suburbs which lie south-east and south of the Central Railway Station. Here and there, there are whole streets of Chinese—quiet, inoifensive, industrious men and women, who are Europeanised in, the streets, but in whose dwellings are preserved all the forms of life in ancient China.
The Chinese celebrated their New Year on the night of February 7th, and, tucked away in a corner of Alexandria, a typical bit of Chinatown was discovered. A narrow cul-de-sac runs up off Botany road. The far end widens out into a neatly-turfed court, and at one side is a joss-house.' Chineso houses cluster all about. On Thursday night, as midnight approached, the patter of slippered feet and the harsher clatter of gardening boots sounded frequently, as the people gathered in the josshouse. Steam' issued from the little houses nearby, and the hot night air was alive with the aroma of cooking duck. Two Chinese, on the steps of the joss-house, occasionally hammered on huge gongs. Inside, the joss-house was Orientally splendid. Its three great ebony altars, inlaid with mother-of-pearl and- draped with gaudy silks, supported huge bowls containing offerings of confectionery, fruit, and flowers. Conspicuous on one altar, from which many sticks of incenso wafted their pungent fumes, stood a largo glass bowl, in which sported a number of silver fish, their glistening sides shimmering in the light of the Chinese tapers. Midnight struck, and a band of six Chinese instruments bqrst into-a frightful din, reinforced by the shrieks of numerous youngsters. Alternately kneeling and bowing, the Chinese prayed for forgiveness of sins committed during the year. A man out on the lawn exploded bombs, thus to scare away evil spirits. It was a wild twenty minutes of bang! and crackle! Packets of money, in red paper, were distributed in the joss-house—a reversal of the usual order of things, as we know them—and the young people went forth joyously to take part in a dragon procession through the Chinese streets. They were all in fantastic silk costumes.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume LVII, Issue 17072, 17 February 1921, Page 8
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383SYDNEY'S CHINATOWN. Press, Volume LVII, Issue 17072, 17 February 1921, Page 8
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