Phatarawadee Phataranawik The Nation July 27, 2015
Saraburi's unique Tak Bat Dok Mai ceremony, which marks the beginning of the rains retreat, risks being overshadowed by commercialism
THOUSANDS OF BUDDHISTS in the Central province of Saraburi will be up and about before the sun on Wednesday, busying themselves preparing dried foods and rice to offer to 3,000 monks in the annual merit-making ceremony known as Tak Bat Dok Mai.
Wat Phra Phutthabat, about 30 kilometres from Saraburi town, has long been famous for the way it marks the beginning of Vassa, the three-month annual Buddhist lent retreat observed by Theravada monks and nuns. The temple is highly revered in Thailand because it houses a footstep of the Buddha and every year in the late afternoon, as part of the ritual, the monks climb the steps of the temple to pay their respects to the footprint.
For their part, the faithful offer food to the monks early in the morning and
return later in the day to present them with dok khao phansa - yellow and white
flowers that bloom only in the weeks leading up the Buddhist lent - along with
candles and to wash their feet in a gesture symbolic of washing away their
sins. During Vassa, monks and nuns remain inside monasteries and temple
grounds, devoting their time to intensive meditation and study.
The unique Tak Bat Dok Mai and Royal Candle Festival is a firm part of the
cultural heritage of Phra Phutthabat district, and has been practised since the
Ayutthaya period.
Back then, it was a simple and touching rite. Today, though, the merit making,
while undoubtedly sincere, is also a major tourist attraction.
Traditionally held on the day following the full moon in July - the beginning
of Vessa - which this year falls on Friday, the festival is now a three-day
affair, beginning on Wednesday and running through Friday.
"Traditionally, we held Tak Bat Dok Mai on one day, but now the merit
making takes three days and is very much focused on Buddhist business,"
says Saraburi native and devout Buddhist Supot Mahabohisat.
"When I was young, I climbed Suwan Banbhot mountain to collect dok khao
phansa to offer to the monks. We never spent money buying the flowers. Today
it's a business. The villagers here plant them and you can easily buy them in
front of the temple," adds the 65-year-old Phra Phuthabat native.
"Even 40 years ago, the merit making was very basic. We would offer the
dok khao phansa in the late afternoon. Now it's being done twice a day, both in
the morning and afternoon."
Supot is not against business. Indeed, for the last two decades, he has been
one of the dozens of vendors selling amulets and other devotional items within
the temple grounds.
He is not, however, keen on the way the festival has been adapted to benefit
the tourist industry nor on the promotion it receives to draw more visitors, as
manifested in the Tourism Authority of Thailand's call to "witness the
world's largest and Thailand's only Tak Bat Dok Mai and Royal Candle
Festival".
The one-day event evolved into a three-day festival in 2001 to accommodate the
ever-increasing number of devotees making their way to Saraburi to mark Vassa.
Seven years later, the temple introduced a massive merit-making ritual, leading
to criticisms that it was turning Buddhism into a business in much the same way
as Pathum Thani's Dhammakaya Temple, which also supports this event. A notable
difference is that Wat Phra Phuthabat offers the food it receives to needy
monks in the South.
"The massive merit making was initiated by the abbot Phra Dhamabhidok in
2008 when Buddhist monks in the three southernmost provinces were unable to go
on their alms rounds because of the insurgent attacks. The abbot offered all
the food to monks living in 323 temples in the south," Phianjai
Rotjanasinwilai of Buddhist group Saraburi Romyen tells XP.
But the festival is still big business, generating Bt180 million for the
province, according to provincial governor Vichien Putthivinyu.
This year's merit making begins at 6am on Wednesday with the mass alms giving
to 3,000 monks. Phainjai says Saraburi has about 3,600 monks living in 500
temples and in 2008, 2,552 monks joined the event. "The numbers increase
every year," she adds.
The morning continues at 8.30am with the offering of 89 elaborately carved
candles to Phra Phutthabat temple. Then at 3pm, there's a parade featuring
cultural and floral floats. The official opening ceremonies are set to begin at
5pm.
Designed accomodate tourists from around the world, there will be two rounds of
offering flowers to the monks on Asalha Bucha Day (on Thursday) and Buddhist
Lent Day (on Friday) at 9.30am and 3pm.
And in addition to the food, candles and other daily necessities offered to the
monks, a more recent twist is the giving of light bulbs and LED torches to the
monks, instead of candles. It's a modern upgrade that has Supot wearing a
frown.
"Although the festival benefits my business, I do worry that that young
generation will misunderstand our heritage of Tak Bat Dok Mai," he says.