Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/06/08

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Subject: [Leica] New photos: Vesaka Puja in Braintree, Massachusetts (non-Leica)
From: Jim at hemenway.com (Jim Hemenway)
Date: Tue Jun 8 07:48:01 2004
References: <BCEKKGNGDPMOIPMEJONBKEHBEOAA.phong@doan-ltd.com>

Phong:

I enjoyed all of them.

Jim




Phong wrote:

> The full moon this past week was the 2548th anniversary
> of the birth of the Buddha (Shakyamuni).  This weekend
> the Vietnamese Buddhist temple in Braintree, just South
> of Boston, celebrated the occasion, known as Vesaka Puja,
> or Phat Dan in Vietnamese, by inviting buddhist delegations
> from different nationalities and lineages (buddhist "denominations",
> so to speak) and have a big bash.  There were Vietnamese, Chinese,
> Khmers, Laotians, Nepalese, Indians, Tibetans, Thai,
> Burmese, people from Sri Lanka, etc., etc.
> 
> I was there for a few hours;  I had to leave early but stayed
> long enough for lunch, the procession in traditional dresses,
> the offerings of gifts to the Buddha, and a bit of folk dance.
> Of course, I took some photos.
> 
> In particular, this one is for B.D.:
> http://www.phongdoan.com/Photography/PhatDan2004/crw_1046.htm
> 
> The small photos on the wall in
> http://www.phongdoan.com/Photography/PhatDan2004/crw_1100.htm
> are of departed ancestors; Vietnamese buddhists often keep an ancestral
> altar at home, as well as photos (used to be name tablets) of the departed
> in the temple so they can pray to and for the ancestor when they visit the
> temple.
> The bigger, framed photo lower, by the woman's hand undoubtedly is one
> of a freshly departed parent.  Once the mourning period is over, the framed
> photo is replaced by a smaller one, on the wall.  [Be careful when visiting
> a Vietnamese home; that photo on the mantel piece, could easily be
> one of the dead, as well the living, and a faux-pas can easily be made
> :-)  ]
> 
> Also in the same photo you can see the round script on the wall; it used to
> be
> a sino-vietnamese round script, similar to what you may find in a 
> restaurant
> in Chinatown.  Now it is a latinized round script, as the Vietnamese have
> adopted the latin alphabet as the national writing, thanks to the colonial
> French in the late 19th century.
> 
> You can see more photos of the day at
>  www.phongdoan.com/Photography/PhatDan2004,
> part of the continuing "You can't go home again" series.
> 
> Photographically, I tried to avoid blocked faces in the main
> subjects in a crowd.   I was not totally successful in my goal.
> A Leica rangefinder with a widish angle lens would be much better
> for this purpose,  the best really;  unfortunately I was not
> using my Leica M.
> 
> Comments, critiques, criticisms, etc. are always welcome and
> always appreciated.  Otherwise, please enjoy the photos.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> - Phong
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
> 


Replies: Reply from phong at doan-ltd.com (Phong) ([Leica] New photos: Vesaka Puja in Braintree, Massachusetts (non-Leica))
In reply to: Message from phong at doan-ltd.com (Phong) ([Leica] New photos: Vesaka Puja in Braintree, Massachusetts (non-Leica))