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Don’t you dare do this ghostly taboos during CNY

Don’t you dare do this ghostly taboos during CNY

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Don’t you dare do this ghostly taboos during CNY

Having chopsticks jabbed into your dish of rice not only looks obscenely disrespectful, but it also mimics joss sticks offered to the dead. It’s implicitly cursing your own death while simultaneously informing the ghosts that it’s their dish of rice.

CNY Taboo 1. Don’t Stab Chopsticks on Your Bowl of Rice

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Having chopsticks jabbed into your dish of rice not only looks obscenely disrespectful, but it also mimics joss sticks offered to the dead. It’s implicitly cursing your own death while simultaneously informing the ghosts that it’s their dish of rice.

CNY Taboo 2. Don’t Wear Black

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If your family is superstitious, they will refuse to explain that wearing black during CNY is considered unlucky. They’ll most likely force you to wear a bright red shirt to make you look like a firecracker. Many colours have different meanings throughout Chinese New Year, which is why we always wear bright colours like red or orange to represent prosperity and good fortune. Colors such as black and white are also avoided because they are usually associated with funerals. Nobody (particularly your favourite wealthy relative) will appreciate it if you arrive at their home as if it were a funeral. Confirm no ang pow for you. As a result, black attire is associated with death, depression, and other bad and unfavourable events. Don’t say we didn’t warn you before you try to wear black again and get scolded by your mother!

CNY Taboo 3. Dont Pray Wrongly to the God of Wealth

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Cai Shen (财神) is one of the most commonly mentioned names during the New Year’s celebrations. In the following year, people seek to earn the graces of the deity of wealth but many people don’t know the proper way of praying for this deity’s help. There is a specific way to pray to Cai Shen to ask for his blessings in wealth but if you do not know how to do the offerings better just not do it. Why you may ask? What if you wrongly do the offering to another deity and the one that comes just gives bad omens and negative energy for the year? Wouldn’t that be a bummer?

If you wouldn’t like a ghastly encounter with one of these bad incidents, then maybe actually following the guidelines given for these taboos might save you a lot of trouble. Even if you’re not Chinese, this can be a good conversation starter for you to understand your friends and their culture better.

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Why is Thaipusam celebrated in Batu Caves?

Why is Thaipusam celebrated in Batu Caves?

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Why is Thaipusam celebrated in Batu Caves

Thaipusam is a Tamil holiday that takes place every year in January or February. The name Thaipusam is derived from a combination of two words: the Tamil month of Thai and the star Pusam, which is at its brightest during the festival. Thaipusam is a Hindu festival that commemorates Lord Murugan’s victory over the demon Surapadman with the use of his lance. Thaipusam is also thought to be Lord Murugan’s birthday celebration. The Hindus would make sacrifices and pray for pardon and blessings from the Lord. We can see spiritual pilgrims wearing kavadis symbolic of burdens that entail extensive body piercings.

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Thamboosamy Pillai

Why Batu Caves then?

Many might wonder why do our Hindu friends celebrate Thaipusam in Batu Caves? Why does the temple in Batu Cave look like something from a dream? Maybe because it was inspired by a dream! An influential trader named K. Thamboosamy Pillai had a dream about the Hindu Goddess Shakti asking him to build a shrine of Lord Murugan on top of Bukit Batu which is now known as Batu Caves. When he went to the cave he noticed that the main entrance was shaped like Lord Murugan’s spear (vel).

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Lord Murugan

In the year 1888, The two men named Thamboosamy and his friend Kanthapa Thevar put in a vel to signify the existence of a deity in the cave. The following year Thaipusam was celebrated for the first time in Batu Caves. Shortly after the Temple in the cave was founded they added Lord Murugan as deity in the cave too.

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Batu Caves

Because of the natural beauty and the temple’s dedication to this Hindu deity, It has made Batu Caves the main focus of Malaysia’s Thaipusam festival. Hindu worshippers from all across Malaysia would come to Batu Caves every year to pay respect to Lord Murugan and climb the 272 stairs to pray at his majestic temple.