CHINESE New Year has never belonged only to the Chinese community.
It may be rooted in ancient Chinese civilisation — in lunar calendars, zodiac cycles, family reunions, and the symbolism of prosperity, longevity, and renewal — but its spirit transcends ethnicity. Its message belongs to all of us, perhaps now more than ever, in a world searching for reconnection.
Because at its heart, the Chinese New Year is not about race.
It is about return.
Return to family.
Return to gratitude.
Return to hope.
Return to the belief that tomorrow can be kinder than yesterday.
In Malaysia, we understand this better than most nations on earth. We do not experience festivals as observers — we experience them as participants in each other’s joy. We sit at one another’s tables. We share meals, stories, laughter, and traditions that may not have originated from our ancestry, but have long become part of our national soul.
In my own home, this truth lives and breathes.
My children are half Indian, half Chinese — fully Malaysian — but beyond all labels, they are part of the universal race called humanity.
They celebrate Chinese New Year not as “one side” of their heritage, but as a celebration of wholeness. They wear cheongsams and kurtas with equal comfort. They receive ang pows and light Deepavali lamps with the same excitement. They do not see contradiction — only continuity.
And perhaps that is the lesson we, as adults, must relearn from our children.
That identity is not diminished by sharing.
It is expanded by it.
The reunion dinner table is a powerful metaphor for the world we must build. Different dishes. Different flavours. Different origins. Yet all part of one meal — nourishing the same gathering.

Prosperity, as symbolised in Chinese New Year, was never meant to be hoarded wealth. In its truest philosophical form, prosperity meant collective wellbeing — that families thrived, communities were uplifted, and harmony prevailed.
In today’s fractured global climate — where geopolitics divides, economies compete, and societies polarise — the symbolism of Chinese New Year feels profoundly relevant.
The colour red, so dominant during this season, is not merely festive. It represents protection, vitality, and life force. It reminds us that optimism is a choice — one we must consciously renew each year.
The lion dance, often seen as a spectacle, is in fact a ritual — a warding off of negativity, a clearing of energy, a call for courage entering the year ahead.
And the act of giving — through ang pows — is a subtle but powerful teaching: that blessings grow when circulated.
Imagine if nations practised that philosophy.
Imagine if leadership embraced that ethic.
Imagine if humanity understood that shared prosperity is more sustainable than isolated success.
Chinese New Year, therefore, becomes more than a cultural observance.
It becomes a civilisational reminder.
A reminder that renewal is always possible — whether for families, nations, or the human spirit.
As we step into a new lunar cycle, I reflect not just as a Malaysian, nor as someone connected by family to this beautiful heritage — but as a citizen of humanity who believes deeply that our diversity is not an obstacle to unity, but its foundation.
My children embody that future.
So do millions like them across the world — born of blended cultures, raised in shared spaces, unburdened by the divisions that preoccupied previous generations.
They are not confused about who they are.
They are clear:
There are many things, and therefore stronger. They are Singularly Plural.
So this Chinese New Year, whether you celebrate it by tradition or by friendship, remember what it truly signifies:
Renewal over resentment.
Family over fragmentation.
Hope over fear.
Humanity over hierarchy.
Because in the end, the lunar calendar does not measure time alone.
It measures our willingness to begin again — together.
Gong Xi Fa Cai.
May prosperity, health, and peace flow not just to one community, but to our universal race called Humanity.
Datuk Dr Vinod Sekhar is the publisher of The Vibes and Chairman of the Petra Group
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