Obon (お盆) or just Bon (盆) is a fusion of the ancient Japanese belief in ancestral spirits and a Japanese Buddhist custom to honor the spirits of one's ancestors. This Buddhist custom has evolved into a family reunion holiday during which people return to ancestral family places and visit and clean their ancestors' graves when the spirits of ancestors are supposed to revisit the household altars. It has been celebrated in Japan for more than 500 years and traditionally includes a dance, known as Bon Odori.
Obon Festival | |
---|---|
Also called | Bon |
Observed by | Japanese people |
Type | Religious, Cultural |
Significance | Honors the spirits of one's ancestors |
Date |
|
2023 date | 30 August |
2024 date | 18 August |
2025 date | 6 September |
2026 date | 27 August |
Frequency | Annual |
Related to |
|
The festival of Obon lasts for three days; however, its starting date varies within different regions of Japan. When the lunar calendar was changed to the Gregorian calendar at the beginning of the Meiji era, the localities in Japan responded differently, which resulted in three different times of Obon. Traditionally, Obon was celebrated on the 15th day of the seventh month of the lunar calendar.
Obon is now observed during one of the following periods:
- July 15th of the Gregorian calendar (Shichigatsu Bon or "Bon in July"): Observed in Tokyo and some urban areas of the Tōhoku region and Hokuriku region regions where agricultural busy seasons do not overlap with the festival dates. This practice is sometimes referred to as "Tokyo Obon."
- August 15th of the Gregorian calendar (Hachigatsu Bon or "Bon in August"; Tsukiokure Bon or "Month Later Obon"): This is the most commonly celebrated time across Japan.
- 15th day of the seventh lunar month (Kyū Bon or "Old Bon"): Observed in Okinawa and the Amami Islands, this version follows the lunar calendar, so the dates change yearly on the Gregorian calendar, sometimes extending into September.
These days are not listed as public holidays, but it is customary for people to be given leave.
History of Obon matsuri
editThe Japanese Obon Festival is heavily influenced from the Ghost Festival of Buddhism, and the Chinese Taoist Zhongyuan (中元) Festival.
Before Buddhism came to Japan there was already a custom in place to beckon the deceased home to their families twice a year, both in spring and autumn, in the night of the full moon. This custom already had a close connection to the ancestor-veneration characteristic it has in modernity.[1]
The Buddhist tradition originates from the story of Maha Maudgalyayana (Mokuren), a disciple of the Buddha, who used his supernatural powers to look upon his deceased mother only to discover she had fallen into the Realm of Hungry Ghosts and was suffering.[2] Greatly disturbed, he went to the Buddha and asked how he could release his mother from this realm. Buddha instructed him to make offerings to the many Buddhist monks who had just completed their summer retreat on the fifteenth day of the seventh month. Mokuren did this and, thus, saw his mother's release. He also began to see the true nature of her past selflessness and the sacrifices she had made for him during her lifetime. The disciple, happy because of his mother's release from suffering and grateful for her many kindnesses, danced with joy. From this dance of joy comes the Bon Odori or "Bon Dance", a time during which ancestors and their sacrifices are remembered and appreciated. See also: Ullambana Sutra.
In recorded history Obon was practised as a Buddhist tradition first under the reign of Empress Suiko (592—628). By 733 it seems to have been introduced as a customary Buddhist holiday in Japan within the court.[1]
Etymology
editThe Japanese word obon is composed of the honorific prefix o- and the word bon. The bon portion is from the longer Japanese names Urabon (盂蘭盆) or Urabon'e (盂蘭盆会), in turn from the Chinese terms 盂蘭盆 (Yúlánpén) or 盂蘭盆會 (Yúlánpénhuì).
The Chinese terms are often described as deriving from Sanskrit ullambana meaning "hanging upside down", in reference to souls suffering in hell.[3] However, the Sanskrit word was sparsely, if at all, attested;[4] in addition, it would be the present participle of verb Sanskrit ullamb ("to hang", intransitive), with no inherent "upside-down" meaning.[5][6]
Moreover, neither the purported meaning of "hanging upside-down" nor the verifiable meaning of "hanging" match the semantics very well, given that the urabon ceremonies are about helping the dead, closer in meaning to the "helping" sense of the Pali verb ullumpana ("raising, helping"), present participle of ullumpati ("to raise up, to help").[7] This suggests that explanations of the dead hanging upside-down in hell are more likely to be folk etymologies based on a mistaken connection to the Sanskrit verb, rather than a more direct semantic link to the Pali. Alternatively, Takakusu Junjiro[4] propounded that the origin was in fact Pali ullumbana, a colloquial corruption of the Pali ullumpana ("raising up; saving; helping"), and that the etymology was mistakenly attributed to Sanskrit.
Practices
editBon Odori
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2020) |
Bon Odori (盆踊り), meaning simply "Bon dance", is a style of dancing performed during Obon. It is a folk entertainment, which has a history of nearly 600 years.[8] Originally a Nenbutsu folk dance to welcome the spirits of the dead, the style of celebration varies in many aspects from region to region.[1] Each region has a local dance, as well as different music. The music can be songs specifically pertinent to the spiritual message of Obon, or local min'yō folk songs. Consequently, the Bon dance appears different from region to region. Hokkaidō is known for the folk-song "Sōran Bushi". The song "Tokyo Ondo" takes its namesake from the capital of Japan. "Gujo Odori" in Gujō in Gifu Prefecture is famous for all night dancing. "Gōshū Ondo" is a folk song from Shiga Prefecture. Residents of the Kansai area will recognize the famous "Kawachi Ondo". Tokushima in Shikoku is very famous for its "Awa Odori", and in the far south, one can hear the "Ohara Bushi" of Kagoshima.
The way in which the dance is performed is also different in each region, though the typical Bon dance involves people lining up in a circle around a high wooden scaffold made especially for the festival called a yagura. The yagura is usually also the bandstand for the musicians and singers of the Obon music. Some dances proceed clockwise, and some dances proceed counter-clockwise around the yagura. Some dances reverse during the dance, though most do not. At times, people face the yagura and move towards and away from it. Still some dances, such as the Kagoshima Ohara dance, and the Tokushima Awa Odori, simply proceed in a straight line through the streets of the town.
The dance of a region can depict the area's history and specialization. For example, the movements of the dance of the Tankō Bushi (the "coal mining song") of old Miike Mine in Kyushu show the movements of miners, i.e. digging, cart pushing, lantern hanging, etc.; the above-mentioned Soran Bushi mimics the work of fishermen such as hauling in the nets. All dancers perform the same dance sequence in unison.
There are other ways in which a regional Bon dance can vary. Some dances involve the use of different kinds of fans, others involve the use of small towels called tenugui which may have colourful designs. Some require the use of small wooden clappers, or "kachi-kachi", during the dance.
The music that is played during the Bon dance is not limited to Obon music and min'yō; some modern enka hits and kids' tunes written to the beat of the ondo are also used to dance to during Obon season.
The Bon dance tradition is said to have started in the later years of the Muromachi period as a public entertainment. In the course of time, the original religious meaning has faded, and the dance has become associated with summer.
The Bon dance performed in the Okinawa Islands is known as eisā. Similarly, the Yaeyama Islands have Angama.
Altar
editThe altar in Japanese households, kamidana, are given care by the families with decorations and offerings such as flowers and straw figures of animals and food. They do this not only for their own deceased but for the souls of the households who no longer have relatives within their vicinity. The offerings are placed in front of the tablets with the deceased person's name on it.[9]
Lights
editFamilies who have lost a family member during a current year are known to give special attention to the preparations of Obon. They will light a small fire on the first evening of the festival to guide the souls back home. In the past people would lit a line of lights towards the cemetery to make sure the souls would find their way.[9]
On the third day of the festivities the souls are sent back to the other side with fires to see them off, this is referred to as Okuribi ("sending fire"), or, in a larger scale, the Burning of the Character Big in the mountain. In this practice small lanterns are used that float down a river. This symbolises the way of the souls back to the world of the dead.[1] Both these fires mark the commencement (mukaebi) as well of the closing of the festival.[10]
Shōryō Uma and Ushi Uma
editAnother significant ritual practiced during the Obon festival in Japan is to craft a cucumber horse and eggplant cow, known as shōryō uma (精霊馬, "spirit horse") or ushi uma (牛馬, "cow horse"),[11][12] that act as a vessel for the ancestors to come back home and return, respectively.[13]
Clothing
editAs Obon occurs in the heat of the summer, participants traditionally wear yukata, a kind of light cotton kimono. Many Obon celebrations include a huge carnival with rides, games, and summer festival foods.[14]
Festivals of shared origin
editBuddhism
editKorea
editThe Korean version of the Obon celebration is known as Baekjung. Participants present offerings at Buddhist shrines and temples, and masked dances are performed. It is as much an agricultural festival as a religious one.[15][16]
Vietnam
editHinduism
editPitri Paksha (literally "fortnight of the ancestors") is a 16–lunar day period in Hindu calendar when Hindus pay homage to their ancestors (Pitrs), especially through food offerings. Pitri Paksha is considered by Hindus to be inauspicious, given the death rite known as Śrāddha or Tarpana performed during the ceremony.
Celebrations outside Japan
editPhilippines
editIn the Philippines, Filipinos of Japanese descent, with support from the Philippine Nikkei Jin Kai Inc., Philippine Nikkei Jin Kai International School, Mindanao Kokusai Daigaku, and various other Japanese Filipino-based organizations, hold an Obon festival every year along with other Japanese-based Filipino festivals, to celebrate the ancestors of Filipinos of Japanese descent, and to celebrate the friendship between Japan and the Philippines.[17][18]
Argentina
editIn Argentina, the Obon Festival is celebrated by Japanese communities during the summer of the southern hemisphere. The biggest festival is held in Colonia Urquiza, in La Plata. It takes place on the sports ground of the La Plata Japanese School. The festival also includes taiko shows and typical dances.[19]
Brazil
editObon Festival is celebrated every year in many Japanese communities all over Brazil, as Brazil is home to the largest Japanese population outside Japan. São Paulo is the main city of the Japanese community in Brazil, and also features the major festival in Brazil, with street odori dancing and matsuri dance. It also features taiko and shamisen contests. The festival also features a variety of Japanese food and drink, art and dance. Obon is also celebrated in communities of Japanese immigrants and their descendants and friends throughout South America: Obon festivals can be found in the states of Santa Catarina, São Paulo, Goiás, Amazonas, Pará (Tomé-Açu), Mato Grosso, Mato Grosso do Sul, Pernambuco, Bahia, Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul and Brasília.[20]
Malaysia
editIn Malaysia, Obon Festival is also celebrated every year in Esplanade, Penang, Shah Alam Stadium in Shah Alam, Selangor, and also Universiti Malaysia Sabah at Kota Kinabalu, Sabah. This celebration, which is a major attraction for the state of Selangor, is the brainchild of the Japanese Expatriate & Immigrant's Society in Malaysia. In comparison to the celebrations in Japan, the festival is celebrated on a much smaller scale in Penang, Selangor and Sabah, and is less associated with Buddhism and more with Japanese culture. Held mainly to expose locals to a part of Japanese culture, the festival provides the experience of a variety of Japanese food and drinks, art and dance, with the vast number of Japanese companies in Malaysia taking part to promote their products.
United States and Canada
editObon festivals are also celebrated in North America, particularly by Japanese-Americans or Japanese-Canadians affiliated with Buddhist temples and organizations. Buddhist Churches of America (BCA) temples in the U.S. typically celebrate Obon Festival with both religious Obon observances and traditional Bon Odori dancing around a yagura. Many temples also concurrently hold a cultural and food bazaar providing a variety of cuisine and art, also to display features of Japanese culture and Japanese-American history.[21] Performances of taiko by both amateur and professional groups have recently become a popular feature of Bon Odori festivals.[22][23] Obon festivals are usually scheduled anytime between July and September.
Bon Odori melodies are also similar to those in Japan; for example, the dance Tankō Bushi from Kyushu is also performed in the U.S. In California, due to the diffusion of Japanese immigration, Bon Odori dances also differ from Northern to Southern California, and some are influenced by American culture, such as "Baseball Ondo".
The "Obon season" is an important part of the present-day culture and life of Hawaii. It was brought there by the plantation workers from Japan, and now the Bon dance events are held among the five major islands (Kauai, Oahu, Molokai, Maui and Hawaii) on weekend evenings from June to August. They are held usually at Buddhist missions, but sometimes at Shintoist missions or at shopping centres.[24][25] At some Buddhist missions, the dance is preceded by a simple ritual where the families of the deceased in the past year burn incense for remembrance, but otherwise the event is non-religious. The songs played differ among the regions - one or two hour Bon dance in the Western part of the Big Island (in and around Kailua Kona), for example, typically starts with Tankō Bushi, continues with songs such as Kawachi Otoko Bushi (using wooden clappers), Yukata Odori (using tenugui given at the donation desk), Asatoya Yunta and Ashibina from Okinawa Prefecture (reflecting the fact that many Okinawan descendants live in Hawaii), Pokémon Ondo for children, zumba songs for the young, Beautiful Sunday, etc., and ends with Fukushima Ondo, celebrating abundant harvest.[26] The participants, Japanese descendants and the people of all races, dance in a big circle around the yagura, the central tower set up for the dance, from which recorded songs are broadcast and, most of the time, the taiko group accompany the songs playing drums. In larger cities, Bon dance lessons are given by volunteers before the actual events.[27]
Some Japanese museums may also hold Obon festivals, such as the Morikami Museum[28] in Florida.
In St. Louis, Missouri, the Botanical Garden has hosted an Obon festival over Labor Day weekend every year since 1977. Known as the Japanese festival, it is a collaboration with several Japanese-American organizations, and hosts thousands of people over a three-day period. The festival provides authentic Japanese music, art, dance, food, and entertainment including dancing around a yagura, sumo wrestling, taiko drums, bonsai demonstrations, music played on traditional instruments, several bazaars, food courts with authentic Japanese foods, tea ceremonies, candlelit lanterns released on the lake in the gardens Japanese garden and much more.[29]
In Salt Lake City, Utah, the Salt Lake Buddhist Temple holds an Obon festival in mid-July with food, temple tours, taiko performances, and a Japanese goods store.
See also
edit- Awa Dance Festival
- Day of the Dead, a Mexican festival also revolving around the dead
- Ghost Festival, the Chinese counterpart of the Obon Festival.
- Japanese calendar
- Japanese culture
- Parentalia, a festival in ancient Rome to honor ancestors, including bringing offerings to their on the last day, known as Feralia
- Pitru Paksha, a Hindu festival that bears similarities to the Obon festival
- Qingming Festival
- Segaki, the concept of offering food to the hungry ghosts in Japanese Buddhism
- Śrāddha, a Hindu culture celebrated for half moon cycle to give the offerings and honor ancestors. Celebrated in all Indian State.
- Takeda Lullaby, a folk lullaby from the Kyoto region in which the Obon Festival is mentioned
- Veneration of the dead
References
edit- ^ a b c d Iwasaka; Toelken (1994): 28.
- ^ What is Obon, 1998, Shingon Buddhist International Institute, California, http://www.shingon.org/library/archive/Obon.html.
- ^ Chen, K 1968, ‘Filial Piety in Chinese Buddhism’, Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, p88.
- ^ a b Ashikaga, Ensho (1951). "Notes on Urabon ("Yü Lan P'ên, Ullambana")". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 71 (1): 71–75. doi:10.2307/595226. JSTOR 595226.
- ^ ullamb-related entries at SpokenSanskrit.org website
- ^ ullamb entry at Sanskrit Dictionary website
- ^ ulllumpana entry at The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary website[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Guide, Japan Hoppers Travel. "Bon Odori | Cultural traditions | Japan Travel Guide - Japan Hoppers". Japan Hoppers - Free Japan Travel Guide. Archived from the original on 2020-07-27. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
- ^ a b Michiko Iwasaka, Barre, Toelken (1994): Death Customs in Contemporary Japan. In: Ghosts and the Japanese: Cultural Experience in Japanese Death Legends. Denver: University Press of Colorado. p. 26.
- ^ HUR, Nam-Lin (2007). Death and Social Order in Tokugawa Japan: Buddhism, Anti-Christianity, and the Danka System. Harvard University Asia Center, 2007. p. 192. ISBN 9780674025035.
- ^ Nihon Kokugo Daijiten, available online via the Kotobank entry for shōryō uma here (in Japanese)
- ^ Nihon Kokugo Daijiten, available online via the Kotobank entry for ushi uma here (in Japanese)
- ^ Sato, Ava. "What is Obon? | Guide to Japanese Halloween 2021 - Japan Truly". japantruly.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
- ^ Obon: Japanese festival of the dead, 2000, Asia Society, http://www.asiasource.org/news/at_mp_02.cfm?newsid=27391 Archived 2008-03-02 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ MobileReference (2007). Encyclopedia of Observances, Holidays and Celebrations from MobileReference. MobileReference. p. 490. ISBN 978-1-60501-177-6. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
- ^ Dong-Il Cho (2005). Korean Mask Dance. Ewha Womans University Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-89-7300-641-0. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
- ^ Cabiluna, Pearl (August 1, 2016). "Bon Odori Festival 2016 Fever Hits Cebu!". Everything Cebu. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ "Philippine-Japan Festival 2017". SunStar Cebu. October 27, 2017. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
- ^ "Una tradición que se afirma en la Ciudad", El Día, Sunday, January 9, 2010.
- ^ "Londrina Matsuri 2019 será no início de setembro". LondrinaTur, portal de Londrina e norte do Paraná (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-06-26.
- ^ Nakao, Annie, "Japanese Americans keeping Obon tradition alive", San Francisco Chronicle, Friday, July 8, 2005
- ^ Schulze, Margaret, "Obon Story: Honoring ancestors, connecting to our community" Archived 2007-08-07 at the Wayback Machine, in the NikkeiWest newspaper, San Jose, California, Vol. 10, No. 14, July 25th, 2002
- ^ "Obon Basics" - San Jose Taiko, California Archived August 8, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Hawai'i Summer 2016 Bon Dance Schedule". honolulumagazine.com. 6 June 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ "2016 Obon season calendar". staradvertiser.com. 29 May 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ warubozu047 (23 December 2010). "Fukushima Ondo (福島音頭)". Retrieved 18 March 2018 – via YouTube.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Bon Dance Overseas --- Hawaii (in ten web pages) Archived 2016-08-29 at the Wayback Machine (in Japanese)
- ^ "Lantern Festival: In The Spirit Of Obon – Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens". morikami.org. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
- ^ "Japanese Festival | Labor Day Weekend | Sept. 3–5 | Missouri Botanical Garden". Sumo is back! Labor Day Weekend at MoBot!. Retrieved 2023-05-24.
Bibliography
edit- Marinus Willem de Visser: Ancient Buddhism in Japan – Sutras and Ceremonies in Use in the 7th and 8th centuries A.D. and their History in Later Times. 2 volumes, Paul Geuthner, Paris 1928–1931; Brill, Leiden 1935, pp 58–115
- Robert J. Smith: Ancestor Worship in Contemporary Japan, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California 1974. ISBN 0-8047-0873-8
- Ensho Ashikaga (1950), The Festival for the Spirits of the Dead in Japan, Western Folklore 9 (3), 217-228 – via JSTOR (subscription required)
External links
edit- List All Japanese Obon Festivals & Bon Odori Practices – Schedule
- Bon Dance: Description of various Bon Dance styles and resources. (archived 17 December 2009)
- Obon Festival in Japan Archived 2012-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Photo Gallery of Bon Odori 2007 in Penang, Malaysia
- El Bon Odori de La Plata en Argentina