So many things have been happening here in my little house
in Bali. I almost don’t know where to begin.
April 23 is the day of Saraswati, the Goddess of Knowledge
and Learning. A huge day of festival and celebration here. My dear friend Ketut brings special flower offerings she made for the day. She tells me
to gather all of my most important books and place the beautiful offerings on
the books, light incense sticks and do my prayers of thanks.
Later in the day,
I accompany her to first her family temple, her village temple and her village
priest’s home to bring offerings and pray. We are dressed in our finest sarong
and kebaya, her driving the motorbike from place to place, me on the back,
riding side-saddle with the basket of offerings delicately balanced on my head.
Of course I hang on to it with both hands, very afraid that it would fall the
ground spoiling all the precious contents. The women of Bali balance their
whole lives on their heads, it seems with never a mishap.
The next morning my three friends and I meet Ketut at 4:30
so we can go to the beach for purification, along with hundreds of other
Balinese people. Interestingly, this coincides with the Christian Easter Sunday
and is a day of new beginnings.
We get to the beach before sunrise and join the many other
people there. It feels like a fourth of July celebration. Everyone is happy and
cheerful and the mood is light. We decide to do some yogic sun salutations and
get many stares of delight. People are curious and happy about what we are
doing and it feels very right. The glorious volcano, Mt. Agung is silhouetted
against the sky as the sun rises behind it. The ocean waves reach toward us
on the beach.
When the sun is up, we go to the car and collect our sarong
and our flower offering baskets. We sit on the beach and pray while holding
flowers at our forehead as the Balinese do. We pray for peace on the planet and
for the continued sources of knowledge to come to us. Afterwards we go into the
sacred ocean around the island of Bali and splash ourselves and feel clean and
new.
We are back home by 8:30 am, stop for a delicious breakfast
then head to Sunday morning dance class. After a shower and a rest, we meet up
again and Ketut drives us to see a 25 year old woman priest, Ida Resi Alit. She
is the only woman priest in Bali and she has an amazing story of how this
journey has unfolded for her.
We sit on the porch of her remote village home and when she
appears, it nearly takes my breath away. She is so beautiful. So delicate. Like
a china doll. Her English is quite good and we have a wonderful conversation
about her life and about her work. I could write a long story just about her,
and plan to do so in the future.
There are about 20 people in attendance at her home and
after a while she takes her place on a raised alter/platform in her family
temple. She begins to pray and chant in the most beautiful voice. The voice she
uses to pray is completely different than her speaking voice.
Families come forward to stand in front of her and as she
prays and chants over them, she pours holy water on them from many vessels that
are handed to her. The water
contains flowers and smells like I imagine heaven would smell.
When it is our turn, we approach the alter; Ketut, Putu,
Simone and me. Risi begins to pray and chant as the water is poured. And I
begin to cry. Softly at first and then I begin to sob. The more I cry, the more
water she pours on me, and she tells me to just let it all go.
By the time she is finished, I am completely soaked and feel
intensely clean and sparkly and very emotional. My friend Simone from San
Francisco, standing next to me has a rather different experience. As the water
was being poured onto her, she begins to laugh. Then the male priest with the
big belly begins to laugh. As the water is poured, the laughter gets louder and
louder. Like it was coming from way down in their toes. Soon everyone in the
small temple is laughing along with us.
No comments:
Post a Comment