
The Bongeunsa Temple will display
various lanterns to celebrate the coming of Buddha, which falls on May 12 this
year.
Courtesy of Celebration Committee for Buddha's Birthday Festival
The Korea Times met Ven. Hye Kyeong, the
general director of the Celebration Committee for Buddha's Birthday Festival at
Jogyesa Temple and talked about his plans for one of Asia's largest Buddhist
festivals.
We are busy putting the finishing
touches to the festival, but I believe it will be our best one ever, he said.
Lanterns have already been lit ahead of
the official festival that will be held May2-4. They will continue to be lit
through May 12. The streets around City Hall will be decorated with millions of
lanterns which will light up the area to celebrate the coming of Buddha.
Visit Bongeunsa Temple, where you can admire beautiful
lanterns, he said. At the lantern exhibition visitors will be able to enjoy
the unique lanterns made of hanji, or Korean traditional paper. The exhibition
will be held May 2-12 at Bongeunsa Temple, located at Samseong Station on subway
line 2.
For a more energetic experience, join
the festival's eve celebration, which will be at Insa-dong 7-9 p.m. May 3. A
long line of volunteers will be parading lanterns, performing dances and
traditional music. Anybody who wants to participate can simply join in and the
volunteers will give you your own lantern to parade with.
On May 4, the last day of the festival,
pay a visit to Jogyesa Temple at noon and enjoy activities at the Buddhist
Street Festival, from crafting your own lotus lantern, savoring some temple food
to trying out traditional games.
There will be more than 120 booths
prepared by the committee and volunteers all over the country. Some will offer
quick and simple lectures about Buddhism,'' Ven. Hye Kyeong said.
At twilight, move on to Jongno and to
see the parade of brightly lit lanterns along the street.
More than 100,000 individual lanterns
will be paraded to create an ocean of bright orange and yellow lights. There
will also be bigger lanterns that resemble dragons, pagodas, elephants and
phoenixes. At 9:30 p.m., the committee and volunteers will celebrate the last
day of the festival with performances.
On May 12, all temples around the
nation will light up their lanterns at sunset and peacefully pray for the
well-being and happiness of the nation,'' Ven. Hye Kyeong added.
The lotus lantern custom in Korea goes
all the way back to the Silla Kingdom (B.C. 57-A.D. 935), and even further back
in history in other countries like India. The lotus blossoms represents the
purity of Buddha. Unlike other flowers, the lotus normally bloom in dirty swamps
and lakes. No matter how dirty the water and surroundings may be, the blossom
remains clean. This special feature the flower allowed Buddhists to believe that
Buddha himself was like that of a lotus blossom: ever so clean despite the dirty
surroundings.
Another reason is that although the
blossom remains clean it doesn't force its surroundings to get cleaner. Buddha
also teaches that everything has a purpose ? even dirt. If there is no dirt,
there is no need for lotus blossoms as well,'' Ven. Hye Kyeong explained.
Come to the festival, and you will be
able to feel Buddha's spirit with monks and volunteers,'' he added.
For more, visit
www.llf.or.kr.