Sat Thai
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Sat Thai (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".; also spelled Sart Thai) is a traditional Thai mid-year festival, held on the new moon at the end of the tenth lunar month. It has many features of animism, attributing souls or spirits to animals, plants and other entities.
Etymology
Sat (Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang"., RTGS sat) comes from Pali Script error: No such module "lang"., which means 'autumnal'.[1] It specifically refers to the season "when the grain is in the ear": rice grain panicles droop as seeds reach full size and fills with milky starch in the days before harvest time. Fruits also are in the bud. Sat Thai is known as such to differentiate it from the Ghost Festival, known in Thai as Sat Chin.
Observance
Sat Thai Day occurs at the end of Thai lunar calendar Moon 10, that is, waning day 15, evening (Script error: No such module "Lang".). This is a New Moon and so is a Buddhist Sabbath; but not one of the Special Sabbaths, and not one of the secular public holidays in Thailand. It occurs midway past the traditional Thai New Year and near the autumnal equinox. It an occasion for making merit by honoring (Script error: No such module "Lang". buucha) the spirits of the season, as well as one's deceased relatives, according to local tradition, with various rites and ceremonies.
Beginning of the Vegetarian Festival
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Sat Thai Day usually corresponds with the beginning of the nine-day Vegetarian Festival, which is widely observed by Thai Chinese and some Thais. It appears on calendars as "Begin 9-day vegetarian festival" (roem thet-sa-gan kin-che 9 wan, Script error: No such module "Lang".) — kin-che (Script error: No such module "Lang".) is to vow in the manner of Vietnamese or Chinese Buddhists to eat a strict vegetarian diet.[2]
See also
- Mid-Autumn Festival
- Lughnasadh, a Celtic festival with many similar traditions
- Sat Duan Sip
References
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- ↑ Turner: page 718, śāradá 12402
- ↑ Online Royal Institute Dictionary Template:Webarchive
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