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Rachel Mealey in Tokyo: Japanese people believe dolls have souls and cannot be thrown away with the rubbish.

显示标签为“Indonesia”的博文。显示所有博文
显示标签为“Indonesia”的博文。显示所有博文

星期三






Megan Bryson: I'll often explain to my students that cross-cultural encounters produce new understandings and images of gods.

The name Hotei is the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese "budai," which means "cloth bag." Zen texts portray Hotei as a wandering monk who is content to live a humble, simple life. He carries a large sack full of odds and ends and shares his "treasures" with children. Hotei's object is his bag that magically remains full, and his virtue is generosity. Hotei is known for being fond of food and drink, and even serves as the patron deity of bars and restaurants.

Accounts of Christmas in Japan often emphasize Hotei's role as Japanese Santa Claus, and describe Hotei with eyes on the back of his head so that he, like Santa, can constantly observe children to determine whether they truly deserve presents.

Some texts even identify Hotei as a buddha. Buddhism teaches that there were multiple buddhas in the past, and there will be more buddhas to come in the future. The most recent buddha – the buddha most Westerners think of when they hear the word – was called Siddhārtha Gautama or Shakyamuni, and lived about 2,500 years ago. The next buddha will be Maitreya, or Miroku in Japanese. 🎅🎄
Serenity Salon: The mound of salt is called "mori-shio" (盛り塩, heaped salt) and is placed there to bring good luck and to purify the guest. You might also find a small mound of salt placed on one or both sides of an entrance way at a traditional Japanese restaurant. Some say that the origin of mori-shio piles outside restaurants was to encourage the arrival of rich and noble customers such as a "daimyo," who would come on horseback. Since horses love salt the horses would be attracted to that restaurant and the daimyo would then stop and eat there! 🧂

星期日




MARIA ORTUOSTE: Strictly enforcing ambiguous criteria, coupled with the reality that it would probably take decades before Timor-Leste has enough officials to attend all ASEAN meetings, make it all but impossible for Timor-Leste to enter ASEAN.
Anthony Milner and Astanah Abdul Aziz: The fact that the Southeast Asian states (with the partial exception of Indonesia) are small in Asian terms is not a deterrent to ASEAN agency. It helps ASEAN to appear non-threatening; 
As leading Thai analyst Kavi Chongkittavorn has pointed out, the ‘Plus Three’ element was also an ASEAN contribution to bridge-building between the large, mutually hostile states of Northeast Asia (China, Japan, and South Korea). 
Such a shift in Northeast Asian sentiments could be a game-changer across the Asian region. At the least, more relaxed interstate relations in Northeast Asia—fostered, in part, by ASEAN—would provide a more favourable setting for the further development of ASEAN-led rules-based regional building.

星期五

JOLLIBEE MACAU



葉人力: I'm one of the few Macaenses. When I was in grade school, I was pushed to learn English/French/Cantonese/Portuguese/Patua. School was brutal but now I understand why I was push so hard. Living in Macau was a very strange environment. My daddy was from Hong Kong. But he Spoke French/Portuguese. My mommy was Portuguese she spoke English/Cantonese/patua. My godfather and godmother both were Portuguese, but they spoke Cantonese. Come to think of it that is one damn strange childhood. I didn't realize until I moved to the USA. Now I feel a little home sick🙄

MARIAH CAREY








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PETER GENE HERNANDEZ

星期六

星期五

MATT HO: Mainland China has banned imports of pineapples from Taiwan 🍍








CHRISTOPHER BODEEN: The crew are Taiwanese and Indonesian.
SCOTT RITTER: Taiwan's future is certain – it will be rejoined with mainland China on terms determined by mainland China.

ERIC TAN~W: The Philippines should follow soon.




VALERIE M. HUDSON: Taipei must realize that it cannot count on the Americans to undertake any competent post-deterrence planning. And Beijing now knows the same.

SARAH B.: most can't handle your truth.
ERIK KOLACEK: I hope we can still be friends, because your blog is the truth.





John D.: In a Buddhist context, the staff is a pilgrim's staff or a monk's staff, which the deceased will use on his journey. In the folk tradition, the staff may represent fertility (phallic?) or generational continuity (which, after all, depends on fertility), or it may offer a kind of companionship to the deceased in his grave. Sometimes the staff is stuck straight up on top of the grave mound, making it a kind of lightning rod to attract the spirit or gods. The staff then also mimics the chopsticks stuck into the rice.