Chinese Buddhist
Communities Celebrate Laba Festival
BD Dipananda Buddhistdoor
Global | 2018-01-26 |
Chinese people across the
world gathered at their local Buddhist temples on Wednesday to
celebrate the Laba festival by eating specially prepared congee.
The festival falls on the eighth day of the 12th month of the lunar
calendar—24 January this year—which, according to the Mahayana
tradition, is the day the Buddha attained enlightenment.
The word Laba comes from
the Chinese name for the 12th lunar month “La” (臘)
and “ba” (八), the Chinese word for
“eight.” On this day, Chinese people traditionally worship their
ancestors, and pray for a bountiful harvest, good health, and
fortune, although it was only later in its history that the
festival was attributed Buddhist significance.
The festival is also known
as Laba Zhu, where zhu has a similar pronunciation to zhou, which
means rice porridge. However, this is not the reason why the
festival is celebrated by eating congee; just before attaining
enlightenment, the Buddha, who was on his last legs in terms of
health, was given some curd by a shepherd girl. As Buddhism spread
from India to China, the curd was replaced with rice porridge
(congee) common in China.
Eight-treasure congee
usually consists of at least eight different types of rice, beans,
fruits, and nuts. Some of these ingredients have to soak for a day
before they can be cooked. From sbs.com.au
Eight-treasure congee
usually consists of at least eight different types of rice, beans,
fruits, and nuts. Some of these ingredients have to soak for a day
before they can be cooked. From sbs.com.au
The special rice porridge
eaten on this day is known as eight-treasure congee, and usually
consists of at least eight different vegetarian ingredients,
including rice, beans, fruits, and nuts. The exact ingredients
depend on what is grown locally or what is locally available, and
therefore ties in closely with the old tradition of praying for a
good harvest during the festival. Along with the glutinous rice
that makes up the staple ingredient of the congee, a local
community might add lotus seeds, black-eyed beans, chickpeas,
Chinese mushrooms, carrots, red dates, peanuts, and
yams.
The Laba festival is
celebrated across China, and everyone eats Laba congee. Buddhist
temples cook the congee in bulk and many make the journey to
temples to collect their bowl of rice porridge. The temples also
distribute free congee at construction sites, communities,
hospitals, nursing homes, and welfare houses.
The festival grew in
popularity during the Qing dynasty (1636–1912), when the emperor,
empress, and princes would offer Laba congee to ministers, or
imperial maids. As for the common people, families would get
together and cook Laba congee to worship their
ancestors.
The Laba festival is also
considered to be part of the preparation for Chinese New Year,
which follows soon afterwards. Laba therefore serves as a reminder
to begin preparations for the lunar new year celebrations and for
travelers to return home to reunite with their families.
The festival is also
popular with overseas Chinese communities. At Nan Tien Temple in
Wollongong, Australia—the largest Buddhist temple in the Southern
Hemisphere—Venerable Miaoyou observes that the festival is
celebrated by the entire Chinese community and has, to some extent,
surpassed its religious intent. Such is its popularity that those
who are not religious also join in the festival, in the much the
same way that many non-Christians like to celebrate Christmas. This
year, devotees at Nan Tien Temple cooked more than 1,000 bowls of
porridge, which were offered to the public for free.