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QUESTION:
Traditional festivals around the world often
have much in common. Although there will always
be cultural differences and twists, the underlying
festival can often be found to have the same
foundation based on similar beliefs.
One particular Chinese festival has much in
common with Halloween celebrated in the USA
and Canada. It is celebrated on the 15th day
of the seventh month on the Chinese lunar calendar.
The Chinese believe that the entire month is
a very dangerous time, as the gates of the underworld
are opened and ghosts wander the earth freely.
All through the month, people offer gifts of
incense and food in an effort to appease these
abandoned spirits. The festivities climax on
the fifteenth day, with Buddhist priests chanting
prayers and people attending huge banquets and
festival dinners.
What is the name of this traditional festival:
A. Angry Ghost Festival;
B. Festival of the Underworld;
C. Chinese Halloween;
D. The Hungry Ghost Festival.
ANSWERS:
D is correct. Celebrated through China
and Southeast Asia, (in Japan it is called Obon
Festival) it is the counterpart to Spring's
Ching Ming Festival. However, the mood is very
different as the purpose of the Ching Ming Festival
is to honor departed relatives, and thus the
ghosts are considered gentle and even protective.
By contrast, the ghosts that inhabit the earth
during the Hungry Ghost Festival are those who
were not given a proper burial - perhaps they
were murdered or committed suicide - and thus
are not allowed into heaven. These ghosts are
to be feared, as they may invade the home, cause
natural disasters, and generally wreak havoc
upon the earth.
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