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Buddhist festivals are centered more or less around events
connected to the Buddha and the Bodhisattvas, the compassionate Buddhas who stay
on the earth until everyone has been liberated.
It is also said that these festivals were started by lord Buddha himself. As, he
advised his followers that for keeping in touch and staying in a bond among
themselves they should 'meet together regularly in large numbers'. keeping this
as a basis for the festivals several festivals are organized by the spiritual
Buddhist leaders.
The public face of festivals is not too often seen, especially in India; that
has much to do with the present state of the religion, but, if history is to be
believed, little to do with what celebrations were like during the days when
Buddhism flourished.
Historical writings tell of the days when the pomp surrounding Buddhist
festivals was similar to that of the greatest of Hindu festivals now. Chinese
traveller Fa Hien talks of the 400-foot tower in Peshawar, which had the
Buddha's alms bowl. There were also shrines throughout India which housed relics
of the Buddha or his disciples, and hosted festivals on a grand scale. Shades of
that scale are now restricted to a few events like the Festival of the Tooth in
Kandy, Sri Lanka, where a tooth of the Buddha, encased in a casket, is taken out
in procession on the full moon in August. The veneration and worship of relics
on a large is unique to Buddhism.
Festivals nowadays are more spiritual and religious than social in nature; where
social, they are more or less restricted to service to the community. They are
more an occasion for the Buddhists to remind themselves of the spiritual path
they have to follow.
Buddhist festivals are part of the long and hard life that this small but ever
growing community have been through. Every festival have a particular legend
attached to it and have a great story that follows it. |