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Having
Money To Burn
By Patricia
Simone
People in
almost every culture annually take time out to remember their
departed. The Chinese are no exception since they believe filial
piety is the basic virtue from which all the other virtues spring.
A person who manifests filial piety is thought to be obedient
to the parents and thus to the emperor and/or to the president
of the country. As an outward symbol of this piety, residences
no matter how small, always have space to set up an altar as a
tribute to their parents of the residents. Framed pictures, candles,
incense and bowls of fruit will traditionally dominate as a focal
point for praying.
The Ching
Ming Festival or Tomb-Sweeping Festival in Taiwan, is a traditional
festival and a national holiday (as it coincides with the date
of death of the famed President Chiang Kai-shek) and is usually
celebrated on April 5, although the dates may vary from district
to district and even within family heritage. It is a time for
families to gather from afar, to visit the grave sites of their
ancestors, to pay their respects, clean graves, place fresh flowers
and touch up the epitaphs with fresh paint. Offerings of golden
or multicoloured slips of sacrificial paper money are dutifully
laid on the tops of the graves with small stones serving as weights
to prevent the paper from being carried away by the wind. Paper
money is also burned in the belief that the smoke will carry the
essence of the money to the ancestors in the spirit world. Lighting
firecrackers and peeling a duck egg and placing it on the tombstone
will express the meaning of renewal to all. A quantity of meats,
vegetables, wine and often complete dinners are arranged on a
tray and placed in front of the tomb, where the spirits can consume
the essence of the food. These sacrifices are offered to the Earth
God, who is charged with protecting the graves. The food offerings
are then consumed by family members, (minus the essence), for
good luck and reverence. Specially made "grave cakes"
are the sweets shared at the end of the meal. Cemeteries are often
so crowded with respectful family members, in this densely populated
land, that they often look like crowded market places. Usually
fire crews will be on hand at the larger hillside cemeteries in
case flames from the burning paper/ghost money accidentally spread
to other areas.
Taiwan's oldest
district, Junan, is especially noted for its ancient temples.
These temples, like many in Taiwan, provide employment in the
industries manufacturing the paraphernalia for worship. Some shops
specialize in religious statuary, while others sell incense and
candles. Another age-old industry is the production of "spirit
money" for the use of the deceased and for the deities.
The ghosts
of the deceased, according to traditional Chinese wisdom, require
money in the world beyond. However, since "you can't take
it with you", everyone arrives in the afterlife absolutely
broke. The living must "send" great wads of spirit money
to their ancestors in the underworld. This is accomplished by
burning it in a prescribed way. If the departed live well on the
other side, it is believed they will bestow blessings on the living.
Sometimes likenesses of servants, cars, residences and other symbols
of good fortune are burned as well.
Looking
After the Less Fortunate
If the deceased
do not regularly receive offerings of spirit money, they may be
reduced to strained circumstances and turn to malevolent ghosts.
During Ghost Month, which is the seventh lunar month in the Chinese
calendar, most shops and homes will make offerings of spirit money
by burning it in pots or fireplaces outside the front door of
the residence. Offerings of incense, food and wine are also made.
This is done to appease the spirits of the underworld, who are
allowed, during this month, to wander our world. Sometimes, the
spirit money is printed with simple pictures of clothes, toiletry
articles and other items that the dead are thought to require.
Buy
A Blessing
Huge quantities
of spirit money are also offered to the gods, often to thank them
for some favour, such as winning a lottery, or to honour a good
fortune to a family member or to celebrate a success at the workplace.
Giant effigies of the temple gods may be paraded around the grounds
of a particular temple, in ceremonies marking special historically
significant or anniversary dates. Temple officials then will throw
great handfuls of spirit money into the air; the paper notes seem
to dance around the divine images like ticker tape in the old
Macy's Day Parades in New York City! More spirit money is burnt
in huge piles as further offerings to the gods. Worshippers believe
that they and their gods are one in "community" and
that the wealth they offer to the gods will strengthen their community
and thus bring prosperity to everyone.
When driving
along the dangerous mountain highways, one can't help but notice,
what appears as much litter strewn about. People may throw large
bundles of paper money out their car windows as they drive and
at look out points in thanks to the gods for their safe journey
over such treacherous terrain.
The bills
burnt to the gods tend to be larger and more elaborate than those
offered to ancestors. Actually, in Taiwan, there are about 400
kinds of spirit money, all with different symbolic uses. One of
the most basic distinctions is between the gold and silver spirit
monies. The gold is offered to the gods, while the silver is usually
reserved for the spirits of the deceased. Red is also a favourite
and "lucky" colour used on types of spirit money.
Is
This Really Necessary?
Foreigners
and tourists to Taiwan often comment that the burning of spirit
money increases the already very polluted air and contributes
to the pollution on the island's surface. Some find it hard to
understand why this ancient custom is still practiced in the modern
cities and with the younger, less traditional generations. Environmentalists
actually seek out paper without chemical additives trying to ease
the pollution crisis. The custom, however, dates as far back as
AD105 when paper was invented. At the time, bamboo strips were
used both as the writing materials and as the currency, so the
inventor of paper in China struggled to have his product accepted
by the masses. In the later years of his life, when his health
had deteriorated terribly, his wife burned some of his invention
as an offering to the gods to spare his life. Legend says that
the offering worked, for his life was spared and his health returned!
Those who later saw him and heard of the tale, naturally wanted
to avoid an untimely death themselves and so the custom was born!
The inventor had found a market for his product. Later, an important
emperor of that Dynasty publicly confirmed the validity of the
custom, based on a dream that he had! The burning of spirit money
has been an indispensable part of Chinese ancestor worship ever
since!
Production
Techniques
Like many
other industries, the old traditional factories who produced the
spirit money by hand, have coped with changing conditions by buying
paper in bulk from cheaper sources (often from the mainland of
China) and printing it up by machine. The population rates in
Asia have exploded, dramatically increasing the demand for spirit
money as well. The time-consuming, tedious hand creations simply
had to give way to the improved manufacturing methods of modern
society.
Although some
traditions are altered to meet the safety standards expected of
our Canadian funeral homes, these values and reverences are expected
and usually upheld in the persons of Chinese or Asian origin,
whether they are Hakka or Fujian, Buddhist, Tao or Catholic.
Many
thanks for the permission to provide this article from:
Patricia
A. Simone, Cardinal Funeral Home Copyright 2000.
Three years
ago, Pat spent six weeks in Taiwan as a Scholarship Recipient
to the Professional Exchange Program sponsored by the Rotary Club
International. She studied the funeral service practices of that
country and had the fortunate experience of accompanying a friend's
family to their Tomb-Sweeping experiences and festivities.
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