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Just like the traditional New Year in Vietnam, on Oshogatsu days the Japanese also eat New Year's Eve dinner, write postcards, give lucky money to children and go to pagodas... To celebrate Oshogatsu day, they prepare by cleaning the toilets. Clean houses with the concept of washing away the bad luck of the old year, welcoming the best of the new year. On the last day of the old year, the Japanese will eat a year-end meal together with a large number of family members. Meals are carefully and thoughtfully prepared with traditional dishes made from grains, fish, and seafood. During the meal, everyone will talk and share their plans for the new year in a warm and happy atmosphere. On New Year's Day, Japanese children also receive lucky money from their parents, grandparents, and relatives. That lucky money is called Otoshidama. Otoshidama is given to children by adults with the hope that in the new year, adding new year, that child will grow up quickly, mature, and succeed in school. In addition, in Japan going to the temple at the beginning of the year has become a Japanese custom, and temples have become the places that attract the most visitors. People go to temples and pagodas to pray for happiness and luck in the new year. They often buy charms, and draw hexagrams and use them to contemplate the coming days of the year. Unlike some countries, visiting the homes of relatives and friends is not a common activity for the Japanese because of the concept that Oshogatsu is a reunion, so the Japanese New Year is almost exclusively confined to the family. In Japan, there is no tradition of setting off firecrackers on New Year's Day, so the New Year's atmosphere is relatively calm.