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Nowruz 2019, Google Doodle Celebrating Today

Nowruz 2019, Google Doodle Celebrating Today

Nowruz 2019 Celebrating

Nowruz is a holiday which is celebrated on the day of the vernal equinox. This means that it usually falls on March 20th on the Gregorian calendar. It is known either as the Iranian New Year or the Persian New Year. It is not only celebrated in Iran, and other parts of Asia, but is also celebrated in the Caucasus, the Balkans, and the Black Sea Basin. For most people who celebrate it, it is a secular holiday. However, for the Zoroastrians, it is considered a holy day.

History of Nowruz

Nowruz, also known as Noruz, is believed to have been celebrated as far back as 555 BC but written Persian records of this holiday only go back to the 2nd century A.D. When Ardashir I Pabakan founded the Sasanian Dynasty, he establish consistent records that included details of how and when Nowruz was celebrated. During this time, it was one of the most prominent holidays of its time.



For many years, Iran was the only country which officially observed Nowruz. However, that changed when the Soviet Union collapsed. After that happened, Central Asian and Caucasian countries gained their independence and declared Nowruz as the national holiday. In 2010, the United Nation’s General Assembly officially recognized Nowruz as a holiday. In their report, they listed this holiday as an Iranian spring festival that has been celebrated for three thousand years.

Nowruz Customs & Celebrations

Before the New Year arrives, it is common for Persian households to clean their homes top to bottom. This is usually performed the day before Nowruz. On this day, many Persians also take the time to buy new clothes for the New Year. Buying flowers, especially hyacinths and tulips, is very common on Nowruz Eve as well. In anticipation of the New Year, many people will decorate their homes with prosperous symbols. These can include symbols of fish, birds, butterflies and stars. Gul-i-Surkh is a festival which is celebrated in Afghanistan on Nowruz.

A traditional table setting known as Haft Seen is often practiced in Iran on Nowruz. Family members gather around the table, right before the beginning of the New Year, and wait for the vernal equinox. When it arrives then gifts are exchanged. Haft Seen often includes things on the table such as wheat or lentil sprouts in a dish, Samanu (sweet wheat pudding), Senjed (dried Persian olives), apples, sumac berries, garlic and vinegar. Symbolic items that may or may not be on the table include decorating coins and eggs, a mirror, candles, a bowl of water with a goldfish in it, Divan of Hafez (a book of poetry), the Quran or Avesta and water with rose essence in it.

In Afghanistan, instead of using the Haft Seen table setting, they use the Haft Mewa table setting. This setting often has seven dishes on the table with a big silver tray, candles, and dyed eggs. It also contains a fruit salad that is made from seven dried fruits and nuts. These fruits are raisins, dried apricot, Persian olives, hazelnuts, walnuts, pistachio, and almonds. Also, the people of Afghanistan also participate in the Gul-i-Surkh Festival on Nowruz. Other foods that may be served on Nowruz include Ajil, baklava, Noql, chicken farcha, fried fish, reshte polo, sabzi chalaw, nan berenji and shekerbura.

Google Doodle Celebrating Today

Google Doodle Celebrating Today



At the precise moment the sun crosses the equator, signalling the spring equinox, millions of families all around the world will come together and welcome Nowruz, the Persian New Year.

The 13-day season of festivities that begins on the first day of Farvardin—the first month of the Iranian Hijri calendar—is an ancient celebration that symbolizes nature’s cycle of rebirth and rejuvenation.

Preparations for Nowruz often begin weeks in advance with a thorough house-cleaning, and many children are gifted new clothing or money from older relatives. On the Wednesday before Nowruz you can find people jumping over public bonfires to cleanse for the new year, as well as children going door to door banging on pots with spoons to ask for candy. Families also put together their haftseen table, a household altar holding items symbolizing the spirit of the season. According to tradition, seven items beginning with the number S are arranged on the table, each with its own significance:

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