Burning Joss paper, Ban Bueng vegetarian festival

Golden Mountain for the deaths: the merit making in the ninth Chinese Lunar month

The first week or so in October, when the first day of the ninth Chinese lunar month has descended, many Thais with Chinese roots nationwide would start refraining from consuming meat and other animal products as a means to observe the precepts and make a merit.

Among famous venues for this Chinese Vegetarian Festival is Phuket where there is a long-time tradition of a spectacular street procession of body piercing and fire walking as a means to worship Gods.

Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)
Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)

But in Ban Bueng district in Chonburi province, a number of Chinese descendants gathered quietly at their aged Shrine and Vegetarian House, Buan Hok Tua, to make a merit to their predecessors as well as family members who passed away.

Since the first day of the ninth Chinese Lunar month, Ban Bueng Chinese descendants dressed in white like other Chinese and observed the precepts by refraining from meat and animal products consumption.

Food shops in the district were decorated with yellow flags suggesting that vetgetarian food was available. People also went to the Shrine to worship Gods and make a merit.

Chinese Opera, Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)
Golden Mount for the deaths, Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)

Normally Chinese descendants would burn joss papers or the “ghost or spirit money” in front of their houses as part of their worshipping to Gods or their predecessors. However during the Vegetarian Festival, Ban Bueng Chinese descendants brought their joss papers to the Shrine, piled them up together to build the “Golden Mountain for the deaths”, and burnt it together at once, suggesting their joint intention and community ties to send the orange flames to the sky as if trying to communicate with Gods and ghosts that the Vegetarian Festival has been observed with merit making for them by their decendants here once again.

Burning Joss paper, Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)
Burning Joss paper, Ban Bueng vegetarian festival
(Photo: Nakares Teerakhamsri)