In the US, Hmong 'new year' recalls ancestral spirits while teaching traditions to new generations

The three Vue boys, from right ages 6, 4 and 3, look on as their father Sai Vue chooses a pig for slaughter at Hogmasters butcher shop in Hugo, Minn., on Thursday, Nov. 16, 2023. The pig is an offering to pay back Vue's ancestors for answering his request for help, and he brought his boys so they would be more familiar with traditional Hmong spiritual customs that often involve sacrificing animals. (AP Photo/Mark Vancleave)

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — For the annual fall renewal of her shaman spirit, Mee Vang Yang will soon ritually redecorate the tall altar in her living room where she keeps her father’s ring-shaped shaman bells.

She carried them across the Mekong River as the family fled the Communist takeover of her native Laos four decades ago. Today, they facilitate the connection to the spiritual world she needs to help fellow refugees and their American-raised children who seek restoration of lost spirits.

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