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The Month of Hungry Ghosts


Article # : 16775 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 9 / 1989  3,354 Words
Author : Margaret Sullivan
Margaret Sullivan, currently a Washington-based writer, has spent nearly 30 years living in and writing about Southeast Asia, specializing in the Malay world that includes Indonesia.

       Ghosts stalk the canyons created by Singapore's modern high-rise offices and apartments. They also wander the remaining byways of the Southeast Asian island city-state's older, "traditional" Chinese areas of narrow streets and turn-of-the-century shophouses. This is especially true during the Month of Hungry Ghosts, the seventh month of the Chinese lunar calendar (usually August or early September), according to the many Singaporean Chinese (and Chinese elsewhere) who observe traditional religious practice.
       
        During the seventh month, Chinese belief has it, gui (ghosts or ancestral spirits) leave purgatory and roam the earth in search of ritual nourishment. Such wanderers can be dangerous, particularly the spirits of people who have died violent deaths and forgotten ghosts who have been neglected during the year. Hence individuals, families, and--most often--business associations conduct rituals to placate and propitiate the gui, thereby warding off the ghosts' capricious maliciousness and ensuring the luck and prosperity of the propitiators. The ceremonies are always held outside to prevent the ghosts from entering homes and shops and causing disturbances. The fifteenth day of the month is the actual Festival of the Hungry Ghosts; however, ceremonies take place throughout the month. Because the rites take time and Singaporeans are practical people, the ceremonies often are held on the weekend.
       
        Although substantial minorities of the country's 2.5 million people are Malays (approximately 14 percent) and Indians (8 percent), Chinese predominate (76 percent). They came primarily from the Hokkien-, Teo Chew- and Cantonese-speaking regions of south China. Starting in the early nineteenth century when Singapore was a colonial British ... (1994 of 20500 Characters)
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