Hotels.com lists the world's most unique welcome greetings and traditions
From rubbing noses to sniffing cheeks, travellers will encounter all sorts of wonderful and unique welcoming customs when exploring the world. To avoid any awkward or embarrassing moments it's wise to familiarise yourself with the traditional customs of your destination and especially, how to greet someone.
To celebrate the recent launch of Hotels.com's Welcome Rewards customer loyalty program, Hotels.com has roamed the world to find the most unique, and in some cases peculiar, welcoming customs.
With Hotels.com's Welcome Rewards program, when travellers stay 10 nights at any one of the 65,000 eligible hotels around the world, Hotels.com welcomes them to a free night*.
Hotels.com lists the 10 most unique welcome customs around the world:
New Zealand
Travellers visiting our Pacific neighbours in New Zealand are sure to come across the traditional Maori welcoming custom know as the hongi. The hongi is a centuries-old tradition which involves the rubbing or touching of noses when two people meet. The rubbing of noses is a symbolic act referred to as the ha or the 'the breath of life', which is considered to come directly from the gods. Once you have taken part in this exchange, you are no longer considered a manuhiri or 'visitor', and can now consider yourself a tangata whenua, or one of the people of the land.
Hotels.com tip: Keep your eyes open to avoid misjudging the distance or you could be in for a rather awkward moment, not to mention a very sore nose.
Tibet
It might be bad manners anywhere else in the world, but in Tibet poking out one's tongue is the customary way to welcome people. The tradition dates back to the 9th century during the time of a vicious Tibetan king known as Lang Darma, who had a black tongue. The Tibetan people feared that King Darma would be reincarnated so they began greeting each other by sticking out their tongue to prove that they weren't evil. The tradition continues today and is often accompanied by the person placing their palms down in front of their chest.
Hotels.com tip: Refrain from greeting Tibetans in the traditional way if you've been chewing liquorice.
Tuvalu
Travellers heading to Tuvulu, an island nation in Polynesia, should be prepared to get up close and personal when being welcomed by locals. The traditional Tuvaluan welcome involves pressing one's face to the other person's cheek and then taking a deep sniff.
Hotels.com tip: Follow a local's lead and avoid eating onions before arriving on the island.
Mongolia
Travellers exploring the countryside of Mongolia will have the opportunity to witness the ancient greetings still practised in rural areas. When welcoming an unfamiliar guest into their home, a Mongol will present the guest with a hada, a strip of silk or cotton, which is generally white in colour but can also be light blue or light yellow. If you are lucky enough to be presented with a hada, you should grasp it gently in both hands while bowing slightly. The giving or receiving of hada, as well as the act of bowing to each other, is an outward sign of mutual respect, something that is very important in Mongolian culture.
Hotels.com tip: Depending on what region of Mongolia you visit, the trading of pipes for smoking and the exchange of snuffboxes is also quite common.
Japan
Welcoming people is considered to be very important in Japan and bowing is the traditional way the Japanese welcome guests. The traditional bow can range from a small nod of the head to a long complete ninety degree bend at the waist. If the welcoming takes place on a tatami floor, a traditional type of Japanese flooring, people are required to get on their knees in order to bow. The longer and deeper the bow, the more respect you are showing. Small head bows are common among younger people in Japan as a more casual and informal welcome.
Hotels.com tip: Most Japanese don't expect foreigners to know proper bowing rules. So a slight nod of the head is acceptable.
Kenya
Travellers visiting Kenya will no doubt come across the distinctive Maasai tribe, the most well-known tribe in Kenya. Travellers lucky enough to witness the unique customs and traditions of the tribe will enjoy the vibrant welcoming dance that the Maasai people perform. The Maasai dance is called adamu, the jumping dance, and is performed by the warriors of the tribe. Traditionally the dance begins by telling a story and concludes with dancers forming a circle and competing to jump the highest, demonstrating to visitors the strength and bravery of the tribe.
Hotels.com tip: Be prepared, often a blend of cow's milk and blood can be offered to visitors as an addition to the welcoming dance.
Greenland
In many parts of the Arctic, including Greenland, the traditional greeting by the Inuit people, or Eskimos, is known as a kunik. The kunik is an affectionate greeting mainly used among family members and loved ones. The traditional kunik involves one person pressing their nose and upper lip against the other person's skin and breathing. Westerns have adopted the tradition of the Eskimo kiss in which two people rub their noses together.
Hotels.com tip: Make sure you don't have a runny nose when doing the kunik in freezing temperatures or you might just find yourself getting stuck to the person you are greeting.
China
The traditional welcome in China is referred to as the kowtow, a custom which involves folding hands, bowing, and if you're a female making a wanfu, which involves the folding and moving of hands down by the side of the body. The kowtow can be traced back as early as the legendary Emperor Xuan Yuan. Originally, Chinese people performed the kowtow before the emperor or during a ceremony such as a wedding.
Hotels.com tip: Although the kowtow custom is not commonly practised these days, folding of the hands is still widely used and respected.
Thailand
The Thai greeting referred to as the wai is a graceful tradition and requires one to take a slight bow of the body and head with palms pressed together in a prayer-like fashion and say 'Sawaddee'. Travellers visiting Thailand will notice that hand positions can change: the higher the hands in relationship to the face the more respect the giver of the wai is showing. This custom originally was used to indicate the absence of weapons, considered the ultimate show of respect and is still used extensively throughout Thailand today.
Hotels.com tip: Performing the wai might feel strange at first, but you'll soon start to embrace the tradition and come to enjoy greeting people in the traditional Thai way.
Philippines
Travellers visiting the Philippines will have the opportunity to witness one of the more unique welcoming customs. When a younger person greets an older person they must bow a little, grab the elderly person's right hand with their right hand, allowing their knuckles to touch the elder person's forehead. As this gesture is being made, the younger person will say 'Mano Po', Mano meaning hand, po meaning respect.
Hotels.com tip: Be gentle when touching the older person's head with your knuckles, you don't want to give them a 'knuckle head'!
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