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"Ying-san notes": an auspicious way
to greet the new year
Using good-as-new notes
for lai see money helps protect the environment and is an auspicious
way to welcome the new year.
Just before last Lunar New
Year, I wrote in this column asking readers to use good-as-new notes
instead of brand-new notes for lai see money. We understand
that it is difficult to change the tradition overnight and therefore
asked the note-issuing banks to offer both good-as-new notes and
brand-new notes for their customers to choose. Our call was
welcomed by the community and attracted broad press coverage. The
public also responded positively: about 20% of the notes
issued in the run-up to Lunar New Year – some 53 million notes –
were good-as-new notes. The note-issuing banks will again
offer both good-as-new and brand-new notes for the coming Lunar New
Year.
Within the HKMA, we often
call good-as-new notes "fit notes", by which we mean that they are
fit for circulation and fit for use as lai see. But Chinese
speakers would probably agree that it is not easy to think of a
Chinese name for these notes. Some people have called them "old
notes"(舊鈔), when
actually they are still very new.
To find a memorable and
appropriate Chinese name for these good-as-new notes, we tapped into
the creativity and talent of primary school students by holding a
Chinese Naming and Slogan Competition last October. After all,
children are the end-users of the great majority of lai see
given out at Lunar New Year, and it makes sense to start
environmental education with the young. A total of 182 students
from 65 primary schools submitted their ideas. The 13 winners demonstrated a thorough understanding of what good-as-new
notes are and the importance of protecting the environment.
The Chinese name –
"ying-san note"(迎新鈔票) –
provided by the champion is an ingenious pun: The Chinese
characters for "ying-san note" literally mean "a note to welcome the
new year" and, when spoken, they also sound like a phrase meaning "a
note that is still new". This is best manifested in the winning
slogan (迎新鈔票仍然新,喜氣盈盈迎新年), which carries
the message that using good-as-new notes for lai see money
helps protect the environment and is an auspicious way to welcome
the new year.
In appreciation of the
students' good work, representatives of the note-issuing banks and I
presented the winners with prizes in the presence of their parents
and teachers in a ceremony yesterday. I would like to congratulate
the students again publicly for their wonderful achievement and
support for the campaign. And there is more – the note-issuing
banks will be using the winning "ying-san note" and slogan in their
posters to promote the use of good-as-new notes for lai see
this Lunar New Year. I hope this publicity will help make people
more aware of environmental protection, not just during traditional
festivals, but for the whole of the new year.
If you used "ying-san
notes" last year, please continue to do so and spread this
auspicious and environmentally friendly message to your relatives
and friends; if you didn't, I encourage you to begin using them
this year. I especially hope that those of us who are parents or
grandparents will recognise that, by taking part in this campaign,
children - the recipients of lai see - have shown that they
want us to follow suit. Future generations will thank us if we can
help protect the environment.
Joseph Yam
11 January 2007
Attachments:
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List of
winners.
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Press photograph of
the prize presentation ceremony
Click here
for previous articles in this column.
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