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A Galungan 'Penjor' ready to be erected. |
The past few days have been the lead-up to a Hindu festival in Bali called Galungan. This happens every 210 days and is one of the more important religious ceremonies here. It is the time when spirits of relatives who have been cremated return for a visit. People living in the homes where the spirits once lived must be hospitable and give offerings and prayers to the spirits. After 10 days, the spirits return to wherever they currently live, on the day known here as Kuningan. I suspect there will be another ceremony then.
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Roadside stores are full of the makings for the Penjor poles. |
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This wasn't even a store. Just a homeowner cashing in on the penjor sales |
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Entrance to a temple we passed. Too bad about the finger in the corner of the photo. :-) |
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The stores get dressed up too |
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Entrance to a local restaurant - all done up for Galungan |
Galungan seems to be a good reason to clean up your home, and the entrance to your home so we saw a lot of garbage being cleaned out of the gutters and the streets. That was a good thing. People decorate the entrances to their homes with "penjor", which are very tall bamboo poles that are decorated and have offerings suspended from the tips. All the decorations and offering boxes outside the home gates are cleaned up and beautified for the occasion. Many of these are normally wrapped in a 'skirt' of fabric, so new fabrics are put up for the holiday.
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This man is decorating his Penjor pole. For the most part, it seems to be the men who are in charge of the decorating. Note the rice hanging off this one. |
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A new fabric skirt for the offering box, in addition to the extra decorations. The entrances to many homes have these little boxes set up for daily offerings. |
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Another Penjor pole almost ready to be raised. Not sure what the hanging things are on this one, but I did see many with similar decorations. |
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Penjor poles on a street in Ubud. One in front of every home |
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Many of the Penjor poles have quite an elaborate bouquet of leaves set just above head level. |
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Setting the penjor pole into the side of the driveway |
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Love how the offerings at the end catch the breezes. |
On the day before Galungan, there is a slaughtering of pigs (and apparently turtles). We live in a little country village, and unfortunately the acoustics of the pig slaughter were horrible. We weren't sure what it was at first, but it became abundantly clear that an animal was in distress. Didn't enjoy that part of it so much as it made for lousy dinner music. Also, on the day before Galungan, the children of the village gather musical instruments and a dragon-type costume and go from house to house playing music and gathering coins from their neighbours. It was really sweet to witness. Reminded me of my little gang of girls who went Christmas carolling at Christmas back in Winnipeg.
Unfortunately, I lost most of my pictures of the local kids in a computer crash, but these two were salvaged from a procession I saw in town.
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The boy in front is carrying a collection box for people to donate money. There are a number of children playing various instruments, and the child at the front of this 'horse' carries a mask that he waves around as the face of the animal. |
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One of the larger instruments being carried and played by the kids |
The day of Galungan, everyone goes to the temple. Kadek, who is one of the staff at the villa, is one of the most charming young people I've ever met . He is so eager to please and give guests here a great experience of Bali. He invited us to the temple ceremony several days in advance, told us what to wear and picked me up promptly at 8:30 am along with two neighbours, Sadie and Avril, from England who were going as well. We were required to wear traditional sarongs, and Glen wouldn't go because he would have had to wear a hat like Kadek's and that freaked him out.
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Glen with Kadek. He looks like he's about ten, but he's in his early twenties. One of our favourite people here in Bali |
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Kadek has all the stuff we'll need for the ceremony. Incense and a basket of flower petals. |
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Kadek is explaining the procedures to Sadie and Avril |
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Myself, Avril and Sadie after the ceremony. Yes, we know there is rice on our foreheads. And on our necks. And in our hair. |
The temples here, like most of the homes, are an open-air affair. They are an outdoor area surrounded by partial walls that you can look into from the road There are small platforms with roofs, but most of it is open to the sky, and therefore very HOT from the overhead sun. We sit down amongst all the beautifully-dressed women and men. Kadek has a basket of flower petals, and a handful of incense sticks. First step is to light the incense and put a stick in front of each of us. Then we waft our hands through the smoke, and pick up a two little flower petals, waft those through the smoke, then place between our two middle fingers and raise our hands to our foreheads to pray. The flower petals are then placed at the top of the ear. This is repeated three times. Then a man or woman comes along and has a pot of water that he dips a brush into and then sprays at us! After that comes a person with a little silver teapot of water - a small amount is poured into our hands and we are to drink that. That is repeated three times. Then along comes someone with a bowl of cooked rice. We are to stick a few grains on our forehead, some at the base of our neck, and some in our hair. In between all these motions, there is more raising your hands to your forehead to pray.
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We're sitting inside the temple, on the brick pavement. So colourful. |
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The entrance to one of the homes on our lane |
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Walking to the temple - it's about a 5 minute walk down this little lane to the temple from our house |
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Probably the most elaborate penjor on our street. |
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Back to the temple! |
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The guy with the brush and pail is spraying us with holy water. |
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Well, I had to do a selfie in a temple . . . |
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Avril all riced up. We're moving to the second section of the temple now |
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The women have a very specific uniform here. Sarong for a skirt and a pretty lace jacket up top with a brightly-coloured scarf for a belt. Without exception. |
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The men have their own uniform. A white jacket a white or coloured hat-type affair (some are decorated, some not) and a sarong-type skirt. The mens skirts are generally much more muted colours than the womens. |
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Kadek with his basket of flower petals and holding one of our sticks of incense. Note all the girls with flowers in their ponytails. |
After all that is done, we get up and move to another section of the temple where the entire ritual is repeated. There is no 'service' as you would find in a typical western church. People arrive, do their ritual, and leave at their own convenience. So it seems to go on most of the day. There are huge tables of offerings in the temple - most of the little baskets are handmade by the women. The flies seem quite happy at the banquet that is laid out for them. Kadek actually offered me a satay stick from one of the offerings . . . number one, I wasn't going to piss off the ancestors by eating an offering, and number two, I had no idea how many flies had already eaten off it. I politely declined! Avril and Sadie used being vegetarian as an excuse to turn him down.
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One of the many offering tables. I loved this woman's outfit |
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These baskets are used to transport the offerings to the temple. |
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I finally figured out the head-carrying thing. They have a little ring they place on their head before the basket goes on. You can just see it here. |
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An offering table with one of the skirted shrines behind it. Not sure about the umbrellas. They don't seem to serve any purpose other than decoration. |
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Lots of colourful umbrellas and offerings |
We asked Kadek if his parents were there, but he said his mom could not attend temple today because she's menstruating. I had two reactions - one was surprise at the complete matter-of-factness. I was never that open with my kids about that, and so I liked that it's treated as day-to-day normal here. The other was judgment about how a woman is forbidden to do something because of a normal body function, and that got my back up I don't know if men are not allowed to attend because of any biological reasons, but somehow I doubt it.
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Detail on the temple wall |
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A little offering on one of the gargoyles. Probably not a gargoyle, but maybe a god. I have no idea |
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A family shrine filled right up with offerings and completely decked out for the holiday! The pole at the right is a penjor pole. |
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Glen looking down our road |
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Even the scooters get dressed up! |
We walked home and carried on with our day, but there was a sound of musical instruments going in the village for most of the day. Super interesting day.
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This is Wayan, our driver. He made us some special Galungan food and brought it over for our lunch. All wrapped up in a banana leaf and a plastic bag. Delicious! |
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The local statuary gets gussied up for the holidays as well |
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Offerings are placed on our doorstep daily. This offering on the day of Galungan was quite elaborate. |