Traditions

‘Chuseok’ Korean Thanksgiving Day


Chuseok
, also known as Korean Thanksgiving Day, is one of the most important and festive holidays of the year. This year 2024, Chuseok falls on Tuesday, September 17th, but the holiday period actually lasts for three days in total – including the day before and after Chuseok.

Traditionally, Koreans return to their ancestral hometowns to celebrate with their families, causing one of the biggest traffic jams of the year as people often take to the road to reach the provinces outside of Seoul.


The origins of Chuseok can be traced back to Korea’s past as an agrarian society. Chuseok is also known as Hangawi, which means the 15th day of August, according to the lunar calendar. On this day, a full harvest moon appeared in the sky and families gathered to enjoy time together and give thanks to their ancestors for the plentiful harvest.

The women of the family also prepared an ancestral memorial ceremony called charye by filling a table with food including newly harvested rice and fruit.


Koreans celebrate Chuseok by making special foods, particularly a certain kind of rice cake called songpyeon. Songpyeon is made with finely ground new rice and the dough is kneaded into small round shapes and filled with sesame seeds, chestnuts, red beans, or other similar ingredients.

The rice cakes are arranged upon layers of pine needles as they are steamed, filling the home with the delicate and fresh fragrance of autumn. On the eve of Chuseok, family members gather to make songpyeon together, illustrating the importance of family in Korean society.


Another Chuseok tradition in modern-day Korea is that of gift-giving. Koreans will present gifts to not only their relatives, but also to friends and business acquaintances to show their thanks and appreciation. Some customary gift ideas are high-quality cuts of beef, fresh fruit such as apples, and gift sets of everything from traditional Korean snacks to useful items like shampoo.

If you look around supermarkets and department stores before Chuseok, you will no doubt encounter a huge variety of gift sets on sale. Spam, which is extremely popular in Korea, is actually one of the most popular gift sets to present to those near and dear to you.


Korea isn’t the only country that celebrates the harvest season with festivities. Here is a look at some of the traditions that take place around the world during the harvest.

China

China’s Mid-Autumn Festival takes place on August 15th according to the lunar calendar. People usually mark this festival by having a delicious feast as well as making and giving moon cakes to one another. The moon cakes are round in shape and have filling such as red bean paste. Another tradition during the Mid-Autumn Festival is to light and carry colorful lanterns, which have become an important symbol of this holiday.

United States

American Thanksgiving is held on the fourth Thursday of November and originated in the autumn of 1621. It is held that the Pilgrims from England shared a feast with the Wampanoag Native Americans in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Thanksgiving is an official holiday on which Americans typically eat foods such as turkey and give thanks for the harvest. 

Argentina

Vendimia, the National Grape Harvest Festival, takes place in Mendoza, Argentina and starts on the first weekend of March. Prior to that, the Archbishop of Mendoza traditionally gives a benediction of the newly harvested grapes on the last Sunday of February. The festival has religious roots that stretch back to the 17th century and today, it is one of the largest harvest festivals in the world. 

National Liberation Day of Korea

August 15th, Liberation Day celebrates Korea’s independence from Japan on August 15th, 1945, and also establishment of the Korean government on August 15th, 1948

July 7th in the lunar calendar ‘Chilseok’

Chilseok is one of the national holidays and refers to the 7th day of the lunar calendar which famous for the legend that Gyeonwoo and Jiknyeo meet once a year.

July 17th, The Constitution Day of South Korea

Constitution Day is a national holiday of the Republic of Korea, which commemorates the day of the enactment of the Constitution on July 17, 1948

Korean War

The Korean War broke out at 3:00 a.m. on Sunday, June 25, 1950, when the North Korean military invaded the Republic of Korea across the 38th parallel line.

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