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Between Science and Religion there's Magic

Can we burn enough boats to end this suffering?

plague boat shrine

Agōng. I built a boat for you. I didn’t know what else to do.  It is just folded paper, nothing like your masterpieces. I am sad and angry. You called me a hot-shot when I came to Taipei after college. I am  a faraway fool longing for my family.   You taught me to make boats from paper, paint,  and wood and you knew everything. Today, you would tell me to burn the boat. Shoo the plague gods. End the sickness. You weren’t supposed to die this way.

 

plague boat

 

“The other side of science is religion and vice versa. It does not matter from which side you start your journey. There is magic in-between.” ~Agōng to his grandson

The burning of the Plague God Boat is one of the folk rituals of the seafaring people in southwestern Taiwan. The original purpose of this ritual was to send the Plague God out to the sea, and diseases along with him; today it is an activity held to pray for peace and good fortune. These celebrations include large-scale temple activities, which climax with the burning of the plague god boat on the last day.

 

plague god boat burning

The contents describing the photo in this blog post is completely fabricated, as is the photo. I use creative works to arrange images to symbolically  represent the lives of our human family who have died from covid-19. We see and hear about them, but our relationship to them is anonymous. Still we feel the loss. So I make the shrines from imagined situations, because, at least for me,  it serves as a way to collectively honor those lives.
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