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Fil-Chinese cultural showcase in temple

By: Apple Ta-as February 22,2015 - 01:41 AM

Vegetarian food stalls and a program showcasing Filipino-Chinese cultural performances were among the highlights of the Chinese New Year celebration at the Fo Guang Shan Buddhist Light International Association (BLIA)-Chu-Un Temple in Vicente Rama Avenue in  Cebu City last Thursday.

Visitors, including entire families, flocked to the Chu Un Temple in Banawa to watch the traditional dragon and lion dances that were held to attract good health and good fortune while driving away negative energies.

The BLIA Performing Arts, Sinulog Idol winners and School of Rock performers entertained  visitors with songs and dances, both pop and Chinese traditional numbers, as the  crowd waited for the ritual  ringing of the gong and ta fireworks display.

Fortune cookies, chocolate drinks, organic fruits and vegetables, cupcakes shaped like sheep and vegetarian wraps were displayed in a  food fair in  front of the temple that was adorned with red Chinese lanterns and a  life-sized  matryoshka doll in the middle.

Oj Hofer, BLIA president English chapter, said the vegetarian food was in  in line with their Mahayana Buddhism principle of compassion for all living things.

Offerings

Hofer said those who visit the temple can offer  prayers in many ways. Some students donated lanterns as their way of asking Buddha for wisdom.

Some write their prayers on a piece of paper and clip it on the tree inside the temple.  There were also fruit offerings inside the temple.

Activities such as calligraphy writing and tai chi demonstrations were part of the celebration.

A photo exhibit of Cebu City landmarks was also on display.

Accommodate

Dr. Henry Espiritu, political science professor at the University of the Philippines-Cebu (UP-Cebu) said what makes the Chinese New Year celebration in Chu Un Temple different is their welcomeing attitude to  outsiders.

“They try  to put Chinese culture in the context of  Filipino culture. It’s not a one-way relationship. It’s  like the Chinese also learn  from Filipinos.  The idea of acculturation and inculturation, of learning from each other’s culture,” he told Cebu Daily News.

Children and adults took turns posing for photos of a  life-sized image of a white goat in the temple.

A life-sized cut-out image of Venerable  Master Hsing Yun, founder of Fo Guang Shan and BLIA, also stands near an altar of Buddha.

The BLIA is an organization of young and adult lay devotees under the Fo Guang Shan Monastic Orders which emphasizes the teaching of humanistic Buddhism.

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