In China, Ghosts Demand the
Finer Things in Life
Vittoria Traverso October
19, 2017 Atlas Obscura
The Hungry Ghost Festival
provides them with paper effigies of money, food—and
iPhones.
There’s a pretty clear,
well-defined set of traits that make up
a ghost in the Western world—from the mushy green slimers of
Ghostbusters to translucent, pudgy Casper to the myriad diaphanous
denizens of Harry Potter’s Hogwarts. They’re immaterial, legless
floaters that often care little for the material concerns of the
living. It’s mostly a reflection of the Western conception of the
afterlife, as place above (or below) the living world. But ghosts
in other parts of the world can be rather different. In China, for
example, ghosts experience the same desires and, quite literally,
appetites of the living. And it’s in our best interests to give
them what they want.
“The traditional view of
death in China is different from the traditional view of death in
the West,” says Nick Tackett, an historian from University of
California, Berkeley, who studies traditional Chinese death
rituals, especially those from Song and Liao periods. The spirit of
the deceased separates into two parts, which one might call two
souls. One of which resides—and ideally remains—in the tomb, and
one of which resides in the ancestral tablet,” a plaque kept in
shrines in homes or temples. After burial, souls need to be fed
constantly, Tackett explains. “Regular offerings at the ancestral
altar and periodic offerings at the grave helped satiate the souls
of the deceased.”
But if something goes
awry—forgetful relatives who neglect their feeding duties, an
improper burial, or some unfinished business on Earth—a dead
person’s soul can wander out of the tomb, hungry. These ghosts
rarely meddle in the affairs of the living, but starting on the
15th day of the seventh month of the Chinese lunar calendar—roughly
sometime in July/August—the gates of the underworld unlock,
allowing flocks of hungry ghosts to roam freely for a month, the
appropriately titled Ghost Month (鬼月),
also known as the Yulan or Zhongyuan Festival.
The origins of this belief
are thought to go back to a third-century tale about a Buddhist
monk, Mulian, whose deceased mother came back to haunt him as a
thin-throated, huge-stomached, ravenous apparition. Mulian
desperately wanted to satisfy her, but he was unable. The more he
fed her, the hungrier she became. It turns out she had been too
greedy during her lifetime, leaving her insatiable in death. So the
monk turned to Buddha for advice and learned that, on a particular
auspicious day, he could visit the temple with food, money, and all
sort of goodies to fill the ghost’s appetite. It worked, and the
“Hungry Ghost” tradition was born.
Of course, the true origins
of the ghost rituals are a little more complex. They developed out
of a centuries-long process of mixing and matching of local folk
traditions, Taoism, and Buddhism, dating to well before the third
century. “Although the Ghost Festival is found only in East Asia in
medieval times, many of its rituals and mythological components
derive from lands to the West of China, not only India but the many
kingdoms and trading centers of central Asia so crucial in the
dissemination of Indic and Aryan culture to the east,” writes
Stephen S. Teiser, a scholar of Buddhism and religion at Princeton
University, in The Ghost Festival in Medieval China.
But Mulian’s tale is a
significant part of the practice today. “Hungry ghosts are the
spirits of people who always wanted more than they had, were never
grateful for what they were given, and cannot find peace in the
afterlife any more than they could when they lived,” according to
writer Emily Mark in the Ancient History Encyclopedia. “They are
often depicted as people with enormous stomachs but tiny mouths and
necks which no amount of food could ever fill.”
On top of being rather
hangry, these ghosts have some particular preferences during their
month-long wandering on Earth. There is a long list of things that
the living should avoid during Ghost Month. Whistling attracts
ghosts. Leaving clothes out to dry tempts ghosts to try them on.
Staying up late courts possession. Getting married or starting a
relationship is a bad idea, as it is not likely to end well. And
whatever you do, don’t buy a home or apartment during Ghost Month.
It will be haunted forever. These beliefs actually have real life
repercussions, as shown in a 2015 study by Agarwal Sumit and his
colleagues at the National University of Singapore. During Ghost
Month, they found, demand for housing goes down, which opens up
good real estate deals for nonbelievers.
Now that you know what not
to do, here’s what you should do to avoid the ire of hungry ghosts.
Just like Buddha’s recommendations to Mulian, most of these rituals
revolve around the provision of material goods. “There were
numerous ways in which the dead seem to have benefited from a sort
of ‘virtual reality,’” says Tackett. “Within the tomb, the soul of
the deceased could enjoy an afterlife banquet represented in tomb
murals. Similarly, fake paper money was as useful as real
money.”
Archeological evidence
suggests that paper offerings, known as zhizha, or “hell money,”
date as far back as 1000 B.C. The idea is that through the act of
burning, this fake money is transported to the underworld, where
ghosts can squander it as they see fit. “It is implicitly agreed
that if a person received proper burial and sacrifice, the ghost of
this person will not come back to harm people,” writes Mu-chou Poo,
a historian at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, in Rethinking
Ghosts in World Religions. During the Song Dynasty (960–1279) other
goods started to be made into a form of zhizha for ghost rituals.
Paper effigies of clothes, houses, horses, and even servants were
burned to send these items to the underworld’s lavish
economy.
The desires of hungry
ghosts have evolved with the times. “The festival, and the wider
act of burning items to send to one’s ancestors in the underworld,
reveals the cultural flows of globalization, and the consumption
habits of individuals,” says Terence Hang, a sociologist at
Singapore Institute of Technology who studies the festival’s visual
culture. “Individuals now purchase and burn whatever is fashionable
to consume in a contemporary, globalized society. One can get hold
of paper iPads, paper credit cards, paper Rolls Royces, and
more.”
“The idea is that you try to
update their lifestyle to match your modern comfort,” says Xiaoxia
Zhou from China Institute in America, a nonprofit organization that
promotes Chinese culture. “Your ancestors should have the same
things you have, read the same things you read. So people now burn
paper TVs, paper fridges, [and] in some cases—taking female
objectification to its extreme—even a beautiful mistress or a
secretary.”
There was a moment when
this centuries-long tradition seemed to be on its way out. It has
long been tied the Chinese concept of filial piety
(孝, xiao), which asserts that
sons and daughters should take care of their parents the best they
can. The 1911 revolution sought to do away with such ideas and
practices. “Ghost Festival rituals or other manifestations of xiao
were seens as backward folklore that was preventing China from
modernizing,” says Zhou. Decades later, Mao Zedong, then a
librarian, integrated this sentiment into his Cultural
Revolution.
But the Ghost Festival was
entrenched in Chinese culture. Not only has it survived, but now
the Chinese government considers it part of the country’s
intangible cultural heritage. Zhou explains that the tradition is
strong in rural areas and southern provinces, but less so in
China’s burgeoning urban centers. Some urban communities are now
trying to make the centuries-old festival more relevant to young,
Western-influenced city dwellers. In 2015 a community in Hong Kong
launched the first Ghost Festival costume contest. “It can be just
like Halloween,” Anven Wu Yim-chung, director at the Federation of
Hong Kong Chiu Chow Community Organizations, told the South China
Morning Post. The competition welcomed both traditional Chinese
ghost options and anime characters. The 2016 edition added a ghost
grappling competition and ghost opera.
And as the Hungry Ghost
Festival loses some ground among the young, so does the
centuries-long craft of making traditional zhizha paper effigies,
which have been replaced by cheap, mass-produced versions available
online rather than in traditional shops. But the ancient craft does
endure. After graduating from design school in the early 1990s, Au
Yeung Ping-chi decided to follow in his father’s footsteps and
learn how to twist and turn thin sheets of bamboo paper to make
evocative ghost effigies.
Ping-chi, who runs his
workshop in Hong Kong’s Sham Shui Po district, made a name of
himself as an “unconventional” effigy maker after he crafted a
ghost guitar for the spirit of Koma Wong Ka-kui of renowned
Hong-Kong rock band Beyond, who died after falling from a stage in
Japan in 1993.
Since then he’s taken on a
variety of commissions for unusual effigies, according to Zolima
magazine: an Xbox, a skateboard, a nail clipper, a tamagotchi.
Ghost food is another popular option. Ping-chi makes great ghost
chicken wings and ghost dumplings. And the largest effigy he ever
made was a full-scale fishing pole.
His father Wai-kin worries
a bit about the direction the practice has taken. “The appearance
of our effigies … have to be equivalent to what the living used, so
the underworld can experience progress too,” he told the South
China Post. “But some popular products now deviate from that
principle.” One has to wonder what a hungry ghost would need an
iPhone for anyway.