Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - What's the matter with jumping into the gods? Which national culture does it belong to?

What's the matter with jumping into the gods? Which national culture does it belong to?

Dancing the Great God is a kind of sacrificial activity that the Tu people like. At the beginning, this kind of activity was originally a small-scale activity and a national habit, far from rising to the point of feudal superstition. But later, many people who didn't know this thing deceived those who didn't know this thing, so it gradually became something that people didn't want to accept.

Every nation has its own habits, and on some special festivals, there will naturally be corresponding unique activities. For example, on February 2nd, March 3rd and April 8th every year, the Tu people will have corresponding skipping activities, which generally last for 2-3 days. They have their own set of fixed procedures. If you are interested in these things, you can find a lot of information by just searching. It seems that this kind of activity is also popular among other ethnic groups within the scope of the Turkish people.

As long as this activity is normal, does not involve too many adverse effects, and does not hinder the maintenance of moral and legal order, it is a national habit and deserves respect. It's just that many people make money through poor information. For example, many people who call themselves wizards jump rope, don't know which nationality they are from or how they came from, and then lie to those who don't know much, and then ask others how much it costs to do a ceremony. This is actually a fraud using the information gap, not a national activity that Turks like.

Every nation has its own unique culture, and the culture of the Han nationality is indeed the most extensive and complicated, because the distribution of the Han nationality is too wide, and nearly 80%~90% of the 56 ethnic groups are Han nationality, so there is no way to distinguish our customs in detail, because each place is different according to its own living habits and environment.