 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray during the Chinese Lunar New Year Day at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing February 9, 2005. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the Year of the Rooster. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray during the Chinese Lunar New Year Day at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing February 9, 2005. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the Year of the Rooster. click to open  |
 | Chinese burn incense sticks in an urn at Beijing's White Cloud Temple on Chinese New Year's Day Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2005. Police later banned the burning of incense after winds rose, increasing the fire danger. The move followed a series of fire disasters in the past year which left hundreds dead in China. The Year of the Rooster began Wednesday, kicking off a week-long Spring Festival holiday, the most important in the Chinese calendar. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray during the Chinese Lunar New Year Day at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing February 9, 2005. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the Year of the Rooster. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray during the Chinese Lunar New Year Day at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing February 9, 2005. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the Year of the Rooster. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing on Chinese Lunar New Year's Day, January 22, 2004. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the New Year of the Monkey and to pray for happiness and prosperity. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing on Chinese Lunar New Year's Day, January 22, 2004. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the New Year of the Monkey and to pray for happiness and prosperity. click to open  |
 | Chinese worshippers offer incense and pray at the Baiyun Temple in Beijing on Chinese Lunar New Year's Day, January 22, 2004. Tens of thousands of worshippers visited the ancient Taoist temple in China's capital to ring in the New Year of the Monkey and to pray for happiness and prosperity. click to open  |
 | People burn incense and pray at the Baiyunguan (White Cloud) taoist temple in Beijing, on the first day of the Lunar New Year. Chinese ushered in the Year of the Monkey -- year 4071 in the Chinese lunar calender. click to open  |
 | Beijing Baiyun Guan (the Temple of White Cloud) click to open  |