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Language Matters | Why Hong Kong’s fire dragon dances, part of Mid-Autumn Festival celebrations, are so vital

Events like the Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance help Hong Kong’s intangible cultural heritage, including its language traditions, to survive

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Members of the Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance team spin balls of joss sticks as the “dragon” winds through Tai Hang, Hong Kong, during Mid-Autumn Festival celebrations on September 29, 2023. Such events are vital in preserving the city’s intangible cultural heritage, including its language traditions. Photo: AFP

A highlight of Hong Kong’s celebrations for the Mid-Autumn Festival – also known as the Moon or Mooncake Festival, which falls on the 15th day of the 8th lunar month – is the Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance.

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The dance involves no ordinary dragon. This one is 67 metres (220 feet) long, is made of bamboo and straw, comes festooned with more than 10,000 burning incense sticks, and is handled by 300 performers.

A fire dragon also dances every year at Pok Fu Lam Village.

These performances are much more than a festival event or tourist draw.

Crowds watch the Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance on September 28, 2023. Photo: Sam Tsang
Crowds watch the Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance on September 28, 2023. Photo: Sam Tsang

The Tai Hang Fire Dragon Dance has roots going back more than a century in the history of this traditionally Hakka village.

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