Pchum Ben
Pchum Ben (Khmer: "Ancestors'
Day") is a 15-day Cambodian religious festival, culminating in
celebrations on the 15th day of the tenth month in the Khmer calendar,
at the end of the Buddhist lent, Vassa. In 2019, the
national holiday fell on 27, 28, 29 September in the Gregorian calendar, the 2019 season began
on 14 September and ends on 2019 October.
The day is a time when many Cambodians pay their respects
to deceased relatives of up to 7 generations. Monks chant the suttas in Pali language
overnight (continuously, without sleeping) in prelude to the gates of hell
opening, an event that is presumed to occur once a year, and is linked to the
cosmology of King Yama originating
in the Pali Canon. During this period, the gates of
hell are opened and ghosts of the dead (preta) are presumed to be especially
active. In order to combat this, food-offerings are made to benefit them, some
of these ghosts having the opportunity to end their period of purgation,
whereas others are imagined to leave hell temporarily, to then return to endure
more suffering; without much explanation, relatives who are not in hell (who
are in heaven or otherwise reincarnated) are also generally imagined to benefit
from the ceremonies.
In temples adhering to canonical protocol, the offering
of food itself is made from the laypeople to the (living) Buddhist monks, thus
generating "merit" that indirectly benefits the dead; however,
in many temples, this is either accompanied by or superseded by food offerings
that are imagined to directly transfer from the living to the dead, such as
rice-balls thrown through the air, or rice thrown into an empty field.
Anthropologist Satoru Kobayashi observed that these two models of
merit-offering to the dead are in competition in rural Cambodia, with some
temples preferring the greater canonicity of the former model, and others
embracing the popular (if unorthodox) assumption that mortals can
"feed" ghosts with physical food.
Pchum Ben is considered unique to Cambodia, however,
there are merit-transference ceremonies that can be closely compared to it
in Sri Lanka (i.e.,
offering food to the ghosts of the dead) and in its broad outlines, it even
resembles the Taiwanese Ghost
Festival (i.e., especially in its links to the notion of a
calendrical opening of the gates of hell, King Yama, and so on).
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