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Shinbyu

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Ashinbyuceremony atMandalay.

Shinbyu(Burmese:ရှင်ပြု;MLCTS:hrang pru.;pronounced[ʃɪ̀ɰ̃bjṵ],also speltshinpyu) is the Burmese term for anovitiationceremony (pabbajja) in the tradition ofTheravada Buddhism,referring to the celebrations marking thesāmaṇera(novitiate) monastic ordination of a boy under the age of 20.

Shinbyu is considered one of theTwelve Auspicious RitesinBurmese culture.It is deemed the most important duty that parents owe to their son by letting him go forth and embrace the legacy ofGautama Buddha,join thesanghaand become immersed in the teachings of the Buddha, theDhamma,at least for a short while, perhaps longer if not for the rest of his life. A boy may become a novice on more than one occasion, but by the age of twenty there will be another great occasion, theupasampadaordination, in which the boy becomes a fully ordainedbhikkhu(ပဉ္စင်းbazin).[1]Those who are not blessed with a male child will seek for an orphan boy or a boy from very poor families in order to receive this special dispensation by the Buddha and hence gain great merit by the act. Shinbyu may well be regarded as arite of passageorcoming of ageceremony as in other religions. Allowing a son to spend some time however short it may be, in akyaung(Burmese Buddhist monastery) is regarded by most Burmese Buddhists as the best religious gift that his parents can give him and it is believed to have a lasting effect on his life.

History

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A 19th century watercolor depicting ashinbyuprocession.
The royal outfit worn by novitiates-to-be before being samanera ordination, to re-enact Rahula's rejection of a princely life in exchange for a life of self-detachment.

The first shinbyu in history is believed to have taken place in the Buddha's lifetime two and a half millennia ago. It was his own sonRāhulawho approached the prodigal father, at his motherYasodharā's bidding, to ask for his inheritance. "Very well", said the Buddha, "here then is my legacy for you", beckoning one of his disciples to shave the head of the young prince and adorn him with the robe of an ascetic in exchange for his princely dress, and Rahula was then bidden to follow the Buddha to his forest monastery.[1][2][3]

Prelude

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The abbot (ဆရာတော်Sayadaw,lit. royal teacher) of the village monastery will choose an auspicious day for the novitiation; the New Year festival period,Thingyanora-hka dwin(အခါတွင်း), is a favourite time of the year. There may be boys from an extended family or families from the same neighbourhood or village being prepared for it. This usually includes learning how to recite the request for robes calledthingan daung(သင်္ကန်းတောင်း) and theTen Precepts(ဆယ်ပါးသီလseba thila)[4]- they are already familiar with the basicFive Precepts(ငါးပါးသီလngaba thila) - as well as some monastic rules. Parents will chide them if they are caught climbing trees or swimming in the river for fear of accidents or catching a bad cold in the run-up to this great event. Their sisters and older members of the family will call at every house in the village with alacquerwaredish of pickled tea leaves calledlahpet(လက်ဖက်) and invite entire households to theshinbyu a-hlu(ရှင်ပြုအလှူ).[5]And acceptance is indicated by the partaking of the lahpet. Printed invitations however are more common in towns and cities today.

Ceremony

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Novitiate-to-be dressed in traditional prince attire, including asalwe.

Festivals start on the eve of shinbyu calleda-hlu win(အလှူဝင်) with apwè(ပွဲ) an orchestra and dance/drama/comedy ensemble) and tea for the guests. In the middle of a street, a pandal ormandat(မဏ္ဍပ်) constructed from bamboo andpapier-mâchéwith ornately painted gold and silver columns, pediments and finials has sprung up overnight. Sweets such asjaggeryorcane sugarbars anda-hlulahpet(အလှူလက်ဖက်), pickled tea laced with sesame oil encircled by small heaps of fried peas, peanuts and garlic, toasted sesame, crushed dried shrimps and shredded preserved ginger) are served with green tea. In towns and cities, assorted cakes, ice cream and coffee have superseded the traditional sweets butlahpetstill holds centre stage.

The big day starts early with a procession called theshinlaung hlè pwe(ရှင်လောင်းလှည့်ပွဲ) to the monastery, the young boy dressed in resplendent silks embroidered with gold as a royal prince or king, shielded from the sun by a gold umbrella and led on horseback by an orchestral band headed by a clown with a moustache calledU Shwe Yoeholding a parasol and dancing merrily. This ritual symbolises Prince Siddhartha's departure from the royal palace with its sensuous pleasures and luxuries at the age of twenty nine, leaving his wife and newborn son in search of theFour Noble Truths.Behind his horse follows the family, his proud parents carrying the monastic robes and other eight requisites, calledpareihkara shippa(ပရိက္ခရာရှစ်ပါး)[5]and his sisters or young village maidens carrying ceremonial boxes ofpaan(ကွမ်းတောင်ကိုင်kundaunggaing) and lotus blossoms (ပန်းတောင်ကိုင်pandaung gaing) all in their best silks with the rest of the joyous party completing the procession. TheShwedagon Pagodais invariably a shinbyu procession's first port of call inYangon.The novice-to-be (ရှင်လောင်းshinlaung) may be the centre of attention, but his sister may at the same ceremony have an ear-piercing (နားထွင်းna htwin) with a gold needle, dressed up as a royal princess herself.

A boy donning white monastic robes before being ordained as a samanera (shin thamane)

At the monastery, the monks are assembled to preside over the ceremony and to receive their young charge as well as various alms and offerings. A feast has been prepared for all with low round tables set on fine bamboo mats and rugs or in a marquee with long bamboo tables and benches. It will have been declared a "smokeless day" (မီးခိုးတိတ်migo deik) for the village as no cooking fires will be lit and everyone including their dogs are welcome to the feast which includes meat and poultry dishes, soup or broth, curried salted fish with vegetables on the side, fermented green mango or bean sprouts followed by dessert, again with lahpet.

Hsan cha,shaving of the head.

Abrahminmay be specially hired to act as master of ceremonies especially for ana htwin,but monks will supervise and perform the shaving of the head, calledhsan cha(ဆံချ). The hair is received in a white cloth by the parents who kneel together with the youngshinlaung(ရှင်လောင်း), while the boy recites reflects on bodily defilements inPali,to increase self-detachment from his hair. The boy, now having exchanged his princely garb with white robes, kneels before the Sayadaw and recites the Ten Precepts, followed by thethingan daung(သင်္ကန်းတောင်း). He receives the saffron robe and is helped into this by a monk. Next, he is given his alms bowl (သပိတ်thabeik) and palm-leaf fan (ယပ်yat) from his parents with smiles of joy and tears of sorrow, his mother at the thought of parting with her dear son for the first time.

New novice

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Ashinbyuceremony atShwedagon Pagoda.

Even the mightiest of Buddhist kings in history would kneel before a young sāmaṇera because he wore the Buddha's mantle, so the parents pay obeisance (ရှိခိုးshihko) to their young son, now held on a higher echelon, as well as to the venerable monks. No physical display of affection can now be considered appropriate until he leaves the monastery. He gains a newDhamma name(ဘွဲ့bwe) inPali,traditionally based on anastrology-based naming system,such asShin Ponnyaif Thursday-born orShin Tayzafor a Saturday-born.[5]A special form of language for monks will be used by the layfolk when they talk to him.[5]He will be addressed askoyin(ကိုရင်) by everyone including his parents and they in turn addressed by him asdaga gyi(ဒကာကြီး) anddagama gyi(ဒကာမကြီး). Back in the village, celebrations can resume with the promise of a goodpwèfor the evening, another free show for the entire neighbourhood or village calledaung bwè(a show to celebrate success).

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"Shinpyu - a fulfilment of parenthood".Archived fromthe originalon 2006-06-23.
  2. ^Lin Htain (1983)."Rahula, the first samanera in history".Department of Religious Affairs, Rangoon.
  3. ^Nibbana.com
  4. ^"The Ten Precepts".
  5. ^abcdShway Yoe (Sir James George Scott)1882.The Burman - His Life and Notions.New York: The Norton Library 1963. pp. 23, 112, 22, 407–408.{{cite book}}:CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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