Big News Network.com
17 Feb 2026, 22:44 GMT+10
BEIJING, China - The first morning light of the Year of the Horse crept over the rooftops of Beijing, painting the paper lanterns in hues of molten gold. In a hutong nestled near the Drum Tower, the air was thick with the scent of burning joss sticks and the sharp, sweet pop of firecrackers. For Lin Chen, the New Year began not with a bang, but with the soft thud of his cleaver on a chopping board. He was preparing the filling for jiaozi with his grandmother, the rhythm of their work a familiar comfort against the city's celebratory roar.
The start of the New Year was a delicate hinge, swinging shut the door on the past and creaking open a portal to the future. In their small kitchen, the future meant Grandma Lin's stories. As she deftly pleated a dumpling, she spoke of the Year of the Horse in her own youth, of galloping hope and new beginnings. Today, Lin Chen saw that same hope reflected not just in his grandmother's eyes, but in the steady stream of notifications on his phone, alerts from the Xinhua news app he followed for work.
The world, it seemed, was also marking this hinge.
"Look at this, Nai Nai," Lin Chen said, wiping his flour-dusted hands on his apron. "President Putin sends his greetings. He says the Russia-China partnership is strong and that next year, they will launch the 'Russia-China Years of Education' together." He imagined students crossing the vast, snowy border between their nations, a different kind of firecracker sparking ideas instead of sparks.
Grandma Lin just smiled, her focus on her perfect dumpling crescents. Lin Chen continued scrolling, reading aloud the names and well-wishes that formed a global tapestry of goodwill. From Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in Brazil, who spoke of building a shared future for a more just and sustainable planet, to Cyril Ramaphosa in South Africa, affirming a commitment to world peace. The words were formal, diplomatic, but they carried the weight of genuine connection.
The list was a roll call of continents. Thongloun Sisoulith in Laos expressed confidence in China's new Five-Year Plan, a sentiment echoed by Aleksandar Vucic in Serbia. Then came the steady stream of names from Xinhua's list: the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and the heartfelt message from the leader of the Cuban Revolution, Raul Castro. From Asia, there was Cambodia's Hun Sen, Pakistan's Shehbaz Sharif, the leaders of Nepal, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives. Central Asian republics like Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan sent their blessings, as did Azerbaijan. The African continent was a rich chorus of voices: the Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Zambia, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Ghana, Comoros, Gabon, Seychelles, Botswana, Somalia, and the Central African Republic. Even from Europe, messages arrived from Hungary, Slovakia, Iceland, Cyprus, Slovenia, Bulgaria, and from leaders in Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Finland.
A particularly warm message came from Antigua and Barbuda, and from the leaders of the Bahamas and Dominica. International organizations chimed in too—the head of the FAO and the Secretary-General of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
Lin Chen paused, a strange realization settling over him. He scrolled up and down the list again. It was a vast, sprawling constellation of well-wishers, spanning the globe from Latin America to the Pacific islands, from Africa to the heart of Europe. And yet, there was a notable silence.
The leaders of the major Western powers—the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, France—were not on the list.
He didn't mention it to his grandmother, who had begun humming an old New Year's tune. But the absence felt loud in the quiet of the kitchen, a counterpoint to the symphony of greetings he had just read. It was a geopolitical echo in a moment of personal, cultural significance. The start of the Year of the Horse was a moment of profound unity for China and a vast swathe of the world, a "Global South" and "Global East" connecting through shared hopes and diplomatic ties. Yet the divide with the West was starkly underlined, a silent canyon in the digital landscape of well-wishes.
As the first batch of dumplings bobbed to the surface of the boiling water, a symbol of prosperity and togetherness, Lin Chen looked at his phone one last time. The most powerful message, perhaps, came from UN Secretary-General António Guterres, who thanked China for its support of multilateralism. "Building a safer and more inclusive future together," Lin Chen whispered. It was a future the messages on his screen suggested was being built, brick by brick, nation by nation, even as others chose to stand apart.
He put his phone away and helped his grandmother lift the steaming basket of jiaozi. The New Year had begun. It was a year of the horse—for movement, for progress, for galloping forward. And as the family gathered around the table, their small celebration felt like a tiny, warm echo of the vast, complex, and divided world just beyond their hutong walls. The journey ahead, for everyone, was just beginning.
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