Posts Tagged ‘diety’

 

Island Festivals

Pulau Ubin Tua Pek Kong festival will be held on 16 May 2011 over the next few days. Vesak day falls on 17 May so it will be a good time to visit Pulau Ubin.

Pulau Ubin island festivals are held in honor of Tua Pek Kong, considered by residents as the guardian of the island. Although Pulau Ubin was invaded by the Japanese Imperial Army in WWII, the populations were spared the massacres and atrocities during the occupation.

young stage actress

Colorful lanterns and bright colored flags adorn the jetty.
Colorful flags at Jetty

The Chinese wayang or opera stage has been around since the early sixties when it was built for community use by a rich timber merchant. Empty most of the time, the stage is lighted up 2 times a year during religious festivals.

Elaborate Chinese street operas are held to honor Chinese dieties housed in the temple opposite the stage. According to local elders, this is a ‘reflection’ temple built for convenient access. The 150 years old original temple is further up on a hill side a few hundred metres away and its dieties carried down ceremoniously to be entertained during festival periods.


wayang stage

Tiger Diety 虎爺
Tiger diety
Different forms of tiger dieties

Backstage
Backstage


backstage

Showtime
Chinese opera

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German Girl Shrine

For visitors to Ubin, perhaps one of the ways to explore Chinese folk religion is to visit the German Girl Shrine (Schrein des deutschen Mädchen) located 4km by road east of Pulau Ubin near Ketam Quarry (Googlemaps link).

Local folklore goes that the girl was the daughter of a coffee plantation manager who lived near the present temple site in the early 20th century.

Being a foreign girl, the shrine was built with a barbie sized doll as the centerpiece with accompanying rosary, perfumed florida water, powder foundation, nail polish and lipstick.

German girl shrine

“Barbie doll shrine” as called by her fans in Brazil.
Barbie doll shrine

Perfumes and face powder offerings for the German goddess
perfumes and face powder offerings

Beside the main object of worship there are other dieties including Tau Pek Kong; Tu Di Gong; Na Tuk Kong. Datuks – or mispronounced as Na Tuks – are considered remnants of pre-Islamic Malay religion and pork or beer are not consumed so as not to offend them. Following her dietification, the deceased German girl is now worshiped as Na Tok Guniang 拿 督 姑 娘. Guniang being a term for maiden.

A small shrine is built at the side to honor Orr Ki, literally black mole, who drowned nearby several years ago. Worshipers believed his death was pre-destined in order to be the German girl helper and guardian.
Another recent addition is offerings of children clothing and shoes next to the shrine which is another form of spirit child worship, also practiced in Thailand (Guman Thong) and Malaysia (Toyol).

Spirit child

The mix of Christian cross, Na Tuks, Malaysian Chinese dieties at this shrine is a fascinating fusion in Chinese folk religion. Offensive it may be to purists, the Chinese never warred over religion and it is common to find households where parents practise folk religion while the rest of the family members are of different faiths including buddhists, catholics or protestants.


Inventing a Goddess In a New Nation
By Sor-Ching Low is an fascinating academic article of this “beautiful German girl”.

Update: June 2010
A new adjacent shrine was erected which we have not seen previously. This time for 2 hell guards brothers (黑白无常) whose job is to drag wandering spirits back to hell. Their addition is apt as Pulau Ubin has been a magnet for ghost hunters and ghost busters dressed in the same garb.

hell guards (黑白无常)

Click link below for a panorama view of the shrine.
(Warning – large file download)
(more…)

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