Thursday, March 6, 2014

Mis see veel on?

Mingi hetk ilmus selline asi korterelamu ette...

Hiljem märkasin mitmel pool sarnast võrgust konstruktsiooni või siis tünni tuhahunnikuga. 


Vastus - rahamasin!

 Need ahjud on Hiina traditsiooni jaoks, et mänguraha põletada. Lühidalt siis raha põletamine toob  rikkuse majja.

See kõige suurem ahi ilmus just uusaasta kandis välja -  uueks aastaks oli vaja kõvasti head ja paremat soovida. Teised väiksemad on alati korterelamu ees olemas.

Täna just nägin kuidas tööriistapoe ees naine ohtralt rahalehti tulle viskas:)


Mänguraha on siis joss paper selgituseks ütleb hea sõber wiki:

Joss paper (simplified Chinese: 金纸; traditional Chinese: 金紙; pinyin: jīnzhǐ; literally "gold paper", Chinese: 陰司紙; pinyin: yīnsīzhǐ, Chinese: 紙錢; pinyin: zhǐqián, or simplified Chinese: 冥币; traditional Chinese: 冥幣; pinyin: míng bì; literally "shade/dark money" / Vietnamese: vàng mã in the North or giấy tiền vàng bạc in the South), also known as ghost money, are sheets of paper and/or paper-crafts made into burnt offerings which are common in traditional Chinese religious practices including the veneration of the deceased on holidays and special occasions. Joss paper, as well as other papier-mâché items, are also burned in traditional Chinese funerals, to ensure that the spirit of the deceased has lots of good things in the afterlife.

No comments:

Post a Comment