| Where
do we go after death? Do we go west to the bliss land where the Buddhists
strive to be? Do we go under to the fiery world to purge our sins? Or do
we simply decay, blending in with the earth, feeding the worms, as nature
recycles us into the bottom of the food chain? Do our spirits linger
for unfinished business, watching over loved ones, retracing our footsteps,
haunting old dwellings? Do our souls get another chance in another life
or life form? We do not know but what our imagination conjured up was quite
similar from culture to culture that there is a yonder world where the
bygones dwell in forms of ghosts and spirits who'd visit us from time to
time.
The Seventh Full Moon
of the Lunar Year
The Chinese
Festival For the Dead falls on the full moon of the seventh month in the
Chinese lunar-solar calendar. Actually the whole month of the seventh moon
in that calendar is dedicated as the "ghost month". It is said that the
underworld opens its gate on the first day of that month and closes on
the last day of that month. In the meantime, dwellings of the underworld
are free to roam our world. It is believed that in this month, major accidents
that cause many lives are more likely to happen due to the doings of the
underworld beings.
On the
day of full moon of the seventh month, every household prepares a feast
and offers a prayer for the ghosts roaming among us. The feast especially
is for ancestors, relatives and loved ones that passed on before us to
enjoy when they pay us a visit and also to appeal to malevolent ghosts
with the intention to harm to bypass this household.
Each region
and trade celebrates this festival a little different from another but
all with elaborated and colorful details. Fishermen are know to put lantern
boats on water to make peace with those that died at sea or in rivers.
Temples often take on the responsibility to pray for those who died without
proper burial rituals. Alongside the dangerous roadways, travelers burn
paper moneys as peace offerings to those died in traffic accidents.
It is
interesting that in the heat of summer when the vitality of life is at
its strongest would there be a festival for the dead. The underworld and
the dead have extreme element of Yin while the element of Yang, represented
by the Sun, the heat and the growth, all can be associated with summer.
Perhaps it is exactly because of its strong presence of Yang that summer
is chosen as the season for the dead to come back as we need it to counterbalance
all the harms the Yin could bring us.
Obon Festival
The Japanese
have the Obon Festival, also a festival for the dead, in the July and August
time frame. During the festival, bonfires are set outside of homes and
lanterns hung everywhere during nighttime to guide spirits back from yonder.
Meals are set out in shrines to feed the visiting spirits. On the last
day of the festival, paper boats are set on fire on bodies of water, along
the coast, on rivers, to carry and guild the visiting spirits back to their
yonder world dwellings.
Halloween
At the
end of summer, Celtics observed Samhein (end of summer) and Catholics,
the Eve of the Feast of All Saints, two possible precursors to the popular
secular celebration of Halloween. The Celtics especially believed that
on Samhein, the other world became visible to mere mortals and that sacrifices
were needed to appease gods who might play tricks on humans. The souls
of the dead were said to be visiting their previous homes on this day,
too. Thus Halloween acquired its dark overtone, dressing-up as witches,
fairies and demons, roaming the streets.
The exact
date of the Halloween, though now fixed on Oct 30, could have happened
earlier in October or later in late November in ancient cultures when the
lunar calendars were used. It is also said to be the beginning of winter
in some other cultures, which brings about winter more than a month earlier
than the current onset of winter on the Winter Solstice.
Nowadays
Halloween is associated more with the decoration of pumpkins, scarecrows
and goblins out on the yards, and a big sack of candies for the little
trick-or-treaters. Most trick-or-treaters opt for roles of princesses,
cartoon characters or cute animals. The scary and spooky part of ghosts
and spirits were played out with a playful tone in forms of haunted houses
and costume parties for teens and grown-ups. None of the fear for the unknown
is left on this once dark holyday.
|