Prachum Benda
"Ancestors' Day"
Cambodians believe that although most living creatures are reincarnated at
death, due to bad karma, some souls are not reincarnated but rather remain
trapped in the spirit world. Each year, for fifteen days, these souls are
released from the spirit world to search for their living relatives, meditate
and repent. The fifteen-day observance of Prachum Benda, or Ancestors'
Day, is a time for living relatives to remember their ancestors and offer food
to those unfortunate enough to have become trapped in the spirit world.
Furthermore, it is an important opportunity for living relatives to meditate and
pray to help reduce the bad karma of their ancestors, thus enabling the
ancestors to become reincarnated and leave the torment and misery of the spirit
world.
Prachum Benda, better known colloquially as Pchum Ben, may be
translated as "gathering together to make offerings" (prachum
meaning "gathering together" and benda meaning
"offering"). The observance usually begins in mid-September and lasts
an entire lunar cycle, constituting the fifteen days that ancestral spirits are
given to visit their living relatives. In the year 2003, the specific dates for
its commencement and conclusion are September 11th and September 25th,
respectively.
Pchum Ben is the fifteenth and final day of the observance and
consists of a large gathering of laity for festivities at the local Buddhist
temple. Each day leading up to the fifteenth, however, is also important and
special. Different families host services at the temple on each of the fourteen
days prior to the final celebration. The days leading up to Pchum Ben are
known as Kann Ben (kann meaning "hosting or holding")
and are numbered one through fourteen accordingly.
Prior to the day a family or families are scheduled to host a Kann Ben,
relatives and close family friends will go to the temple to make preparations.
During the preparations, urns of ancestors, traditionally kept on temple
grounds, are polished and brought to the viheara (the main chanting
room). Also, the names of ancestors are recorded onto an invitation list. This
is important because spirits cannot receive offerings unless they are first
invited to do so by living relatives. In the evening, the host family and other
participants will join the monks in the viheara for meditation and
chanting. The monks will then pass on the Buddha's teachings, as well as offer
blessings and guidance to those present.
Before sunrise on the morning of the Kann Ben, special food is
prepared for the ancestral spirits to enjoy. Favorite dishes of various flavors
and colors are offered. They range from the simple and traditional nom ansom (sticky
rice wrapped in banana leaves with assorted fillings) to the more elaborate and
rich amok (steamed fish fillet marinated in a complex mix of spices and
herbs). As a gesture of kindness, the hosts also prepare bai ben (steamed
sticky rice mixed with sesame seeds and then formed into balls) to be thrown
into shaded areas about the temple grounds. This mixture is an offering to the
hungry souls who have been forgotten or no longer have living relatives to make
them offerings.
Before noon on Kann Ben, candles and incense are lit and the various
dishes are offered to the monks. The prepared list of names is then recited and
burned. The reading and burning of the list is a ritual performed to alert and
direct the wandering souls to the location of their families. It is an
invitation for the ancestral spirits to join their living relatives as they
commemorate life. After consuming the proffered meal, the monks continue to
chant blessings, sprinkling (or showering) holy water onto the families and
their visiting ancestral spirits. The Kann Ben is a time of remembrance
and an opportunity to accumulate good karma on behalf of one's ancestors.
The rituals of Kann Ben continue for fourteen days. On the fifteenth
day, the traditionally observed Pchum Ben, families in the local area
gather to perform the same ritual of ancestral remembrance and offer an immense
communal feast. This day is especially important because if any ancestors are
unfortunate enough to have become Priad spirits, it is the only day that
they may receive offerings of food and benefit from the good karma earned by
their relatives. Priads are the most miserable of all souls due to their
exceptional bad karma. Unlike other spirits, Priads fear light and can
only receive prayers, food and be reunited with their living relatives during
the darkest day of this lunar cycle, the day of Pchum Ben.
Participating in the Pchum Ben, whether as a host or participant, is a
very important aspect of Cambodian culture. It is a time of reunion and
commemoration. It is a time to express love and appreciation for one's
ancestors. By offering food and good karma to those possibly trapped in the
spirit world, living relatives help assuage their misery and guide them back
into the cycle of reincarnation. After the ancestors are reincarnated, they have
the opportunity to accumulate good karma on their own and look forward to
attaining a peaceful inner spirit, which is the best blessing a living relative
can wish for their ancestors.
researched and written by Vathany Say
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