The Festival of Lights

Dr. Htin Aung

(From ' Folk Elements in Burmese Buddhism ', 1959)

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     The Burmese Festival of Lights was originally held in the eighth month of the Burmese year, namely Tazaung-mon. The Feast of the Full Moon of Tazaung-mon was celebrated in three ways. First, the villagers danced, dressed as animals, some of which were from native mythology. Second, oil-lamps and wax-candles were lighted along the streets and in the houses of the villagers as offerings to gods in general. Third, at night there was a Feast of Fools, in which young men roamed the village throwing Zipyu fruit at the houses and stealing articles which would cause inconvenience to the owners, or amusement to the onlookers, when they were found displayed at inappropriate places next morning. For example a woman's under-skirt would he flying from a pole in front of the headman's house, or a great number of cooking utensils would be found in a heap in the market-place.

      Like the pre-Buddhist Feast of the New Year, the pre-Buddhist Feast of Tazaung-mon was a boisterous and rowdy one. After the cult of the Lord of the Great Mountain was established, the Festival of Lights was transferred by royal decree to the following month of Nat-Taw. The Festival of Tazaung-mon was no longer celebrated with lights, but it remained an important festival. As Anawrahta discouraged and belittled the worship of the Lord of the Great Mountain, the Full Moon of the seventh month, Thadingyut, became the occasion for the new Festival of Lights. This celebrated the end of the Buddhist Lent and also commemorated an event in the Buddha's life, namely, the return of the Buddha from the abode of the gods, where he had spent the previous Lent preaching to the gods. The lights were no longer offerings to gods in general or to the Lord of the Great Mountain, but to the Buddha. But, in secret, some meant them as offerings to the Lord of the Great Mountain, and as centuries passed there evolved a compromise. In time the festival became lengthened to three days, namely, the day before the Full Moon, the Full Moon day itself, and the day after. On the third day, in addition to the many lights lit in worship of the Buddha, a light each was lit in the inner room of a house, on the stairs and in the kitchen, in honour of the House-Guardian, namely the Lord of the Great Mountain. This is the practice that prevails up to the present day.

     The Full Moon of Tazaung-mon is still celebrated in Upper and Middle Burma with animal dances and rowdyism, merry making and thieving for fun, but since Anawrahta's time, no lights are lit. In Lower Burma however, Tazaung-mon is still celebrated as the Festival of Lights. It is celebrated as a purely Buddhist festival, but no Buddhistic explanation is attached to it. Some scholars have attempted to show that in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the Burmese kings held Palace Festivals of Lights in honour of the Gods of Mount Mayyu (Meru in Pali) on the Full Moon day of Tazaung-mon, and that the people imitated this new Palace custom, which resulted in another Buddhist Festival of Lights in Tazaung mon. It is difficult to accept this theory in view of the fact that no festival of lights in Tazaung-mon is held in Upper Burma, where the kings actually lived. I am of the opinion that Tazaung-mon is celebrated as a Festival of Lights in Lower Burma simply because the regular Festival of Lights one month earlier is usually rained out. Unlike that in Upper Burma, the monsoon here remains strong at the Full Moon of Thadingyut. I may mention that in Lower Burma, Tazaung-mon is also celebrated with rowdyism and 'thieving'.


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