The Deity-Welcoming Festivals: Critiques
The ritual and social practices associated with these events drew even greater concern. Accounts of these events frequently contained criticisms of the animal sacrifices, of burning "ghost money" (jinyinzhi), of people wandering the streets with disheveled hair and wearing the cangue (pifa daijia), as well as the large numbers of beggars that congregated at these events. Indeed, colonial authorities and local organizations repeatedly tried to prohibit some of what they described as the more wasteful or backwards practices. Japanese settlers observed these proceedings with a mixture of disdain and interest, whereas some of the most strident critiques came from reform-minded Taiwanese. A public criticism that a Taiwanese organization leveled at a different event, the important summer Ghost Festival (Zhongyuan jie; also known as the pudu or yulanhui), best expresses the challenges that the organizers and supporters of these festivals raised to certain aspects of Taiwanese religious praxis. On August 25, 1926, a local group named the Jilong Customs Assimilation Association published the following words in the Taiwan nichinichi shinpō:
As for our Jilong, during the Ghost Festival ceremonies, each year the organizers compete with each other and it is extravagant in the extreme, no expense is spared. Moreover, each household displays sacrificial animals and fruit offerings, and each is as abundant as they can manage, as a means of presenting gifts [to the ghosts]. Indeed, they do not understand the universal salvation ceremony of the netherworld, it lies not in lavishness, but it is only in a sincere and respectful heart. The people have already forgotten the festival’s roots and pursue the ends.
This critique, couched in Confucian morality with its references to a respectful heart and the dichotomy of roots and ends, highlighted the ways in which Taiwanese elites preserved their key festivals while modifying certain elements that conflicted with their own modernizing sensibilities and protected the core--i.e., the festivals themselves--from greater intrusions by the colonial state.