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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Makha Bucha day

Makha Bucha day

There are several Buddhist days that are of importance in the Thai year. Makha Bucha Day is one of these which occurs in February or March. This year (2014) it is on February 14th.
The Buddhist calendar is a lunar one, and the third lunar month is known in the Thai as Makha (from the Pali word Māgha); Bucha is also a Thai word (from the Pali word Pūjā), meaning “to venerate” or “to honor”. As such, Makha Bucha Day is to honor the Buddha and his teachings which he delivered on the full moon day of the third lunar month.

So why is Makha Bucha day celebrated?

45 years before the Buddhist era, on the full moon day of the 3rd lunar month, and exactly 9 full months after Lord Buddha achieved Enlightenment, 4 special things happened:
Makha Bucha day commemorates Buddha teaching his followers.
1) 1,250 Sangha followers, came to see the Lord Buddha at Wat Veḷuvana in Northern India, without any schedule.
2) All of them were “Arhantas’, the Enlightened One, and all of them were ordained by the Buddha himself.
3) The Buddha gave an important teaching to the followers on the principles of the Buddhism, called “The Ovadhapatimokha”. Those principles are: To cease from all evil; to do what is good; to cleanse one’s mind.
4) It was a full moon day which made it as special day to start with.
On the same day 44 years later another important event happened. It was this day that the Buddha decided to ‘Parinibbhana’, nirvana, leave the mind from the body (or die) which he did 3 months after that day on the full moon day of the six lunar month (This day is known as ‘Visakha Bucha Day’).
As a Buddhist country Makha Bucha days is an important day in the Thai calendar and is respected in a number of ways.

How is Makha Bucha Day Celebrated?

In Thailand people observe the following activities if Makha Bucha day:
1) Make merit by going to temples for special observances and join in the other Buddhist activities.
2) Keeping the five precepts, including abstinence from alcoholic drinks (this is why most bars are closed) and all kinds of immoral acts.
3) Offer food to the monks and novices (in the alm bowl).
4) Observe the eight precepts, practice of meditation and mental discipline, stay in the temple, wearing white robes, for a number of days.
5) Attend an evening Candle Light Procession around the Ubosot (Ordination Hall). Most temples will be holding this.

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