In Spain, if you can manage to stuff 12 grapes in your mouth at midnight you’ve achieved good luck for the next year.
Today, Italians let their church bells peal, the Swiss beat drums, and the North Americans sound sirens and party horns to bid the old year farewell.
In Scotland, the custom of first-footing is an important part of the celebration of Hogmanay, or New Year’s Eve Day. This practice holds that the first foot to cross a threshold after midnight will predict the next year’s fortune.
Not all New Year’s celebrations take place on December 31. The Jewish New Year, called Rosh Hashanah, is in September. During this two-day holiday, families celebrate tradition through food and prayer services. A traditional celebration will almost always include slices of apple dipped in honey, a symbol of a sweet new year. This is the first of the High Holy Days.
New Year on the island of Bali is celebrated in March, coinciding with their lunar New Year. If you’re looking for a place to relax and unwind, join in on the 12-hour dedicated silence and meditation that sweeps across the island.
Romanian Farmers try to communicate with their animals on New Year’s Eve, they belive it will bring good luck.
In England people used to kiss each other. After midninght people join their hands in a circle and say a poem written by Scottish poet Robert Burns <<Auld Lang Sync>>
In Greece an onion is hang from the front door of the house, as a symbol of rebirth. Parents then wake thier children by tapping them on heads with the onion.
Russians write down a wish nurn it and throw it into a champange glass. Then they must drink it before 12.00.