26 April 2011

Big Odalan - Little Odalan

~ Namaste dear friends!

~
My husband and I have just returned from a wonderful trip to Bali and Java, and I'm here to share a little of it with you. We had the very great fortune and honor to be invited to a small Odalan at the temple complex of our hotel, Taman Harum, as well as to a very massive Odalan at Pura Batur with a beautiful family from the village of Mas.
 
~ An Odalan is the birthday or anniversary of a temple's consecration which occurs every 210 days. Little Odalans for home and local temples can last 1 to 3 days, whereas big Odalans for regional temples can go on for weeks. What we experienced at the people-packed mountain temple of Pura Batur was a blessing ceremony, where the churning crowd prayed together with incense and small offerings of fruit and other foodstuff, followed by blessings of holy water and rice pressed to the third eye and heart chakra. Our hosts kindly dressed us up in traditional dress, but it obviously didn't hide the fact that we were very foreign and completely out of place. Regardless of this, the people made us feel welcome. Yes there were curious stares, giggles behind cupped hands, a few untrusting scowls, but no one seemed to mind as I snapped a few candid pics (with permission from our hosts, of course!).
Waiting to enter inner courtyard of temple. Recipe for a stampede? Intimidating, to say the least.

My husband (gussied up) with our host, Wayan, and daughter, Dinda, in background.






Wayan's sister-in-law, balancing basket of sacred offerings. I almost offered to take over, then thought better of it.





Volcanic Ganung Batur (1717m) overlooking temple.


Baby Dinda! Oh so cute!

Volcanic Ganung Abang (2152m) overlooking Danau Batur (Lake and crater).

~*~


~ As for the little Odalan at our hotel's temple complex, it was definitely more manageable. Though I didn't actually attend the ceremony (out of respect), I did witness the flurry of offering preparations and the rehearsal of the Gamelon orchestra. And what a delight! The music was so moving in that lush jungle setting, resonating on the breeze, bouncing softly off the stone walls, I could feel the magical sounds all the way to my soul. Simply breathtaking! The men in the orchestra let me know that I was free to take as many pics as I wanted, so I indulged. Here are just a few of what I came away with. Enjoy!