Photo Gallery

Waisak A circle of life

Mindfulness: Monks stand around Mendut Temple ahead of the Waisak celebrations. The monks and ordinary Buddhists were to undertake a 5-kilometer procession to the Borobudur monument.
Mindfulness: Monks stand around Mendut Temple ahead of the Waisak celebrations. The monks and ordinary Buddhists were to undertake a 5-kilometer procession to the Borobudur monument. 
Patience And Humility: Monk line up in preparation for the pindapata session on Jl. Sudirman in Magelang, Central Java. More than 50 monks from different strains of Buddhism took part in the practice on Thursday ahead of the Waisak day on Saturday. 
Looking Up: Buddhists release small hot air balloons into the evening sky, representing their individual wishes for peace in recognition of Waisak, at the Borobudur historic Buddhist monument in Central Java on Saturday.
Sacred Flame: Monks and Buddhists ignite their torches from a fire in Marapen, Central Java, last Thursday. The fire was taken in a procession to Mendut temple and the Borobudur monument. 
From The Heart: An elderly woman in a wheelchair donates to monks who are collecting alms (pindapata) on Jl. Ahmad Yani in Magelang, Central Java, last Thursday ahead of Waisak. Traditionally, pindapata was undertaken once a day before noon for monks living in forests, to accept food from residents who supported their quest for enlightenment. Nowadays, many monks live in temples and donations are often in cash.

Waisak fell on May 9 this year, commemorating three important events in the life of Siddharta Gautama, namely his birth, his enlightenment after which he became Buddha (literally “the enlightened one”), and his death.

In Indonesia, the largest historical Buddhist monument, Borobudur, and its neighboring Mendut, as usual, became centers for Waisak commemorations. Buddhists use this day to remind themselves of Buddha’s teachings.

Born the prince of a small kingdom in India, Siddharta was showered with riches and shielded from the poor, the sick, monks, and death, through to his adulthood. But when he eventually met people who went through sickness, dying, poverty, and monks, he realized that his life was temporary.
Buddha released his riches and left his wife and young son to follow the path of monk and to find an end to suffering.

Eventually, after a string of self-depriving acts and meditation practices, he reached enlightenment and chose to be called Buddha Gautama. The teachings of Buddha focus on ways to escape the cycle of wants and desires, to end suffering (Nirvana).

Photos by J. Adiguna
Text by Mariani Dewi

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