Chinese Madrid
Talking about China in Madrid is talking about Usera, the neighbourhood with the largest concentration of the Chinese community in Spain. Since the 1970s, a large contingent of Chinese citizens has come to Madrid in search of a better world than the one in their country of origin. The Chinese community in the region of Madrid continues to grow, increasing from 33,489 registered inhabitants in 2008 to 63,549 in 2021, according to official figures from the National Statistics Institute.
In Madrid capital alone, there are 35,985 Chinese residents according to the City Council register (Municipal Register of Inhabitants, revised on 1 July 2022) and a quarter of them live in Usera, where they maintain their customs and thousand-year old traditions. It is a kind of “Chinatown” integrated in a popular neighbourhood in the south of Madrid. It is easy to see due to the large number of Chinese shops and if you go to the Chinese Pensioners Centre in Usera, you can see how its members usually meet in the afternoons to play table-tennis or to play traditional music.
However, the Chinese Cultural Centre in Madrid is not in Usera, but it can be found in the Salamanca neighbourhood, more specifically at Number 73, Calle del General Pardiñas.
It is the best place to enter into the Chinese culture. Here, you can receive Chinese, kung fu, tai chi, oil painting, oriental painting, cooking, Chinese protocol courses, etc. They are usually in high demand, so it is necessary to be alert in order to get a place. It is easier to get into the library, the exhibition hall or the auditorium where films are screened in original version or talks and conferences are given.
The building where the Chinese Cultural Centre in Madrid is located, a public institution attached to the Government of the People's Republic of China, has a surface area of 3,000 square metres and is divided into two blocks (A and B ), connected by a central courtyard. The first one is home to the exhibition hall, the gallery, the tea room, the library, the conference room and the classrooms, whilst the auditorium, Kung fu and dance room, the music hall and the kitchen are located in the second block.
It was the fifth centre that the Chinese government opened in Europe, after the one in Paris. It opened its doors in October 2012 to mark the 40th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Spain and China. It is the largest of the cultural centres yet to be opened in Europe.
Finally, it must be remembered that the Casa Asia cultural centre also devotes part of its programme to China, among other cultures belonging to the Asian region.
Each tear, the arrival of the Chinese New Year is celebrated with numerous activities whose epicentre is the Usera neighbourhood.
Celebration of the Chinese New Year, which dates back more than 4,000 years, coincides with the beginning of the crop cycle, bids farewell to winter and welcomes a new season, so it is also known as the “Spring Festival” (2023 marks the Year of the Rabbit, which begins on 22 January).
Dance, film, gastronomy, music, sport or literature are some of the ingredients that see in the Chinese New Year each year, with a programme made up of around one hundred cultural events, where the most traditional proposals, such as the age-old martial arts exhibition or the procession of giant dragons and lions, are combined with the performances of alternative rock bands, literary installations or talks that show the vitality of the Chinese community in Madrid.
The two most popular events are the spectacular light ceremony and the street parade that goes through the streets of Usera in a lively parade (with the traditional giant dragons and lions and lanterns) in which Cantonese, Macao and Hong Kong associations are present to enjoy traditional music and raise awareness amongst the people of Madrid of the secrets of the Chinese culture and the Han ethnic group, to which most of the Chinese population resident in Madrid belongs.
In Madrid, there are many Chinese restaurants where you can savour the rich Chinese gastronomy throughout the year. However, each year, coinciding with the start of the Chinese New Year (January - February), China Taste is organised in Madrid, a festival of traditional Chinese gastronomy.
For a month, fans of Chinese haute cuisine can savour traditional dishes that enable them to travel to Chinese kitchens without leaving the city, on a route of the best restaurants in this speciality. Furthermore, it is affordable for all, as each restaurant participating in this charity event, serves a menu consisting of a starter, first course, second course and a dessert whereby the price ranges between 23 and 65 euros.
In Madrid, Hong Kong cuisine can be savoured by visiting the Hong Kong 70 restaurant, close to the Plaza Mayor. Its menu consists of home-made dishes in which vegetables, dim sum and Cantonese roast meat prevail, without forgetting desserts. The chefs, originally from Hong Kong, prepare dishes from traditional Cantonese cuisine without adapting it to western tastes.
Dawei Ding, journalist, philologist and expert in international relations, he is the founder and director of China FM, the first radio station in Europe that broadcasts 24 hours in Mandarin Chinese, on low frequency in the Community of Madrid (FM97.4) and via Internet worldwide.
Part of the Radio International Group, it is a generalist radio station with informative and opinion programming that was created with the aim of serving as a communication platform for the more than 187,988 inhabitants of Chinese nationality living in Spain (INE data updated in 2022).
Chinese New Year 2024
The celebration of the Chinese New Year, which dates back more than 4,000 years, coincides with the beginning of the crop cycle, bids farewell to winter and welcomes a new season, so it is also known as the “Spring Festival”. In 2024, the Year of the Dragon (beginning on 10 February) will be celebrated, and like in previous years, there will be a full programme of activities to celebrate it.
Each year, Madrid City Council joins in the Chinese New Year celebrations with an extensive programme of activities for all tastes and ages, to see in the New Year.
This programme, organised by the Department for Culture, Tourism and Sport and Usera District Council, with the collaboration of the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China, Chinese associations in Usera, artistic groups, neighbourhood associations, Casa Asia and the Confucio Institute in Madrid.
The two most awaited moments are the Light Festival, with music in the small temple in Pradolongo Park and the traditional illuminated lanterns ceremony followed by a firework display and the Chinese New Year Multi-cultural Parade, which fills the Usera neighbourhood with magic, outfits brought from China, gigantic dragons and lions, iconographic elements of this country, lanterns made by children and live music.
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China Taste
To celebrate the Chinese New Year, which begins on 22 January, the 6th edition of “China Taste” is back from 11 January until 12 February. It is a pioneering gastronomic event promoted by the Embassy of the People’s Republic of China, the Cultural Centre of China in Madrid, Madrid City Council and the Community of Madrid, to celebrate 2023, the Year of the Rabbit.
In order to portray and raise awareness of all of the wealth and variety of Chinese cuisine, these gastronomic workshops are being organised in which more than a dozen restaurants, known for the high quality of their ingredients, the authenticity of their dishes and the professional service offered to clients, are taking part.
The haute cuisine Chinese restaurants that are participating in these gastronomic workshops offer delicious special festive menus from 11 January until 12 February to raise awareness of typical dishes from China.
China Taste also works with the Red Cross and a donation of the funds raised for each menu tasted will go to the children’s projects run by this organisation.
€28-90
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