The main day of the festival occurs on the 20th day of the 8th lunar month, but from the previous days onward, the festival attract many visitors from all over the country to the Con Son – Kiep Bac cultural and historical site in the northern province of Hai Duong.
The legend behind...
Millions
of people throng Kiep Bac Temple to participate in the festivities. The
festival takes place from the 15th to 20th days of the eighth lunar
month, when autumn is in its full bloom. Kiep Bac Festival is
celebrated every year on the death anniversary of Saint Tran. The place
was one of his hideouts and the temple was built in the memory of the
saint.
Tran
Quoc Tuan was the general who defeated the Chinese Nguyen-Mong invaders
three times. Because of his merits to the nation, he was proclaimed a
saint. General Tran Hung Dao had planned for this; he had spent months
studying the river and embedding the spikes in the riverbed as his
forces of soldiers and peasant conscripts harassed the Mongols. They
fired flaming arrows and attacked the damaged boats on water, destroying
the entire flee and the Mongol army was thus defeated by Tran Hung Dao
for the second time. The only other nation to successfully resist the
Mongols was Japan. The battle of Bach Dang is legendary across the world
and considered a brilliant piece of strategy and its mastermind,
General Tran Hung Dao, is both hero and saint in Vietnam.
Features of the festival
The
festival bears the special characteristics of the traditional national
identity. One of the most interesting activities in the festival is the
boat race on the Luc Dau River, in which hundreds of boats participate.
The boat race is like flying arrows rushing through the air as the
boats are urged along by drumming sounds and the screaming of excited
people. Taking part in the Kiep Bac Temple Festival, participants relive
the atmosphere of when Tran Quoc Tuan placed his troops into a
battle-array. This festival makes the Vietnamese people feel proud of
the glorious traditions of their nation.
The
main ceremony is followed by a great ceremony with elaborate
worshipping procedures. This ceremony is followed next by a procession
where Saint Tran's ancestral tablet is brought on a golden procession
chair, passing three walled gates toward the river bank. The procession
chair is then placed on a royal barge. The procession march lasts for
two hours and then Saint Tran's ancestral tablet is brought back to the
main temple for the last religious service.
After all the processions gather at
the gateway to the temple at a definite time, the ritual of incense
offering takes place. The head of the religious ceremony delivers a
speech to commemorate the efforts of Tran Hung Dao and the history of
the anti-Yuan-Mongolian struggle during the Tran regime. After the
deliverance of the funeral oration by the officiant, people offer
incense sticks. A vibrant ceremony characterized by a palanquin
procession takes place after the completion of the incense-offering
ritual. The blessed tablet of Saint Tran is kept in a red lacquered and
gold gilded palanquin embellished with dragon and lion dancers around.
The procession leaves the dock accompanied by enthusiastic drumbeats,
gong and horn sounds and the zeal of the followers. A major attraction
of the festival is the race of dozens of boats on the Luc Dau River.
The enthusiastic people come from nearby Hanoi and other places beyond.
All gather with the belief that Vietnam is a country that will never
succumb to a foreign power. Notwithstanding the modern elements that
have been incorporated to the festival, it has retained its traditional
fervor.
Tens
of thousands of Vietnamese people make the pilgrimage to celebrate not
only their great general, but their nation’s proud military history.
They are united by a belief and a great notion that Vietnam is a great
country and it has not and will never bow to a foreign power.
Visitors who join Kiep Bac Temple Festival seem to live in the same atmosphere as when Tran Quoc Tuan arrayed his troops in the bank. The Vietnamese are very proud of the glorious traditions of their nation.
Visitors who join Kiep Bac Temple Festival seem to live in the same atmosphere as when Tran Quoc Tuan arrayed his troops in the bank. The Vietnamese are very proud of the glorious traditions of their nation.


No comments:
Post a Comment