Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Vietnamese furnish ancestors with jets, rollers and mansions

-

With an average annual income of around $2,000 most Vietnamese would not consider themselves especially wealthy. But in the afterlife you can be a billionaire thanks to paper offerings made by your scions.

In a Hanoi workshop artisans are putting the finishing touches to a nearly life size cardboard model of a Rolls Royce. Close by is a giant paper aeroplane -- a blue Boeing 787 Dreamliner complete with crew members.

But these are not children toys. They are "hang ma", paper offerings representing real life items that are burned in the belief they will travel as smoke to the afterlife to be used by the dead.

"We believe our dead relatives will receive these assets as soon as we burn them," Nguyen Nam, one of the team members finishing the Rolls Royce, told AFP.

"It takes me about two weeks to finish a car like this, with the help of two more men."

The burning of votive offerings for use in the afterlife is a common practice in China and nearby countries that have Chinese ancestry or communities such as Vietnam and Cambodia.

In Vietnam, hang ma burnings reach their peak during July's mid-lunar festival, which ends on Wednesday.

There was a time when such offerings largely revolved around burning paper clothes, fake money and food items.

The Vietnamese burn paper models of everyday objects and luxury items  like these horses  so their d...
The Vietnamese burn paper models of everyday objects and luxury items, like these horses, so their dead relatives can use them in the afterlife
Hoang Dinh Nam, AFP

Now the hang ma are just as likely to be iPads, laptops, luxury cars and villas with swimming pools.

Dang Xuan Nhi, a 70-year-old maker of votive offerings, says it is vital to provide ancestors with the kind of luxuries and everyday items their offspring either enjoy or hope to have in the future.

"Like this life, like the afterlife," he explained. "What we have here on earth, they have the same there."

It often take days for artisans to hand-make the paper models, which cost anywhere from a few dollars to a few hundred.

But it takes only a few minutes for them to burn.

According to unofficial reports, up to 50,000 tonnes of paper money and genuine belongings worth millions of dollars are burned every year in Vietnam.

Vietnam's communist authorities have tried to encourage people to spend less on the offerings.

But their appeals appear to fall on deaf ears as locals strongly believe that looking after your ancestors will bring real rewards back on earth.

"We burn this for our dead relatives so that they feel happy. And if they are happy, they will bless us with good health, happiness and luck," said Do Mai Hoa, a villager on the outskirts of Hanoi.

With an average annual income of around $2,000 most Vietnamese would not consider themselves especially wealthy. But in the afterlife you can be a billionaire thanks to paper offerings made by your scions.

In a Hanoi workshop artisans are putting the finishing touches to a nearly life size cardboard model of a Rolls Royce. Close by is a giant paper aeroplane — a blue Boeing 787 Dreamliner complete with crew members.

But these are not children toys. They are “hang ma”, paper offerings representing real life items that are burned in the belief they will travel as smoke to the afterlife to be used by the dead.

“We believe our dead relatives will receive these assets as soon as we burn them,” Nguyen Nam, one of the team members finishing the Rolls Royce, told AFP.

“It takes me about two weeks to finish a car like this, with the help of two more men.”

The burning of votive offerings for use in the afterlife is a common practice in China and nearby countries that have Chinese ancestry or communities such as Vietnam and Cambodia.

In Vietnam, hang ma burnings reach their peak during July’s mid-lunar festival, which ends on Wednesday.

There was a time when such offerings largely revolved around burning paper clothes, fake money and food items.

The Vietnamese burn paper models of everyday objects and luxury items  like these horses  so their d...

The Vietnamese burn paper models of everyday objects and luxury items, like these horses, so their dead relatives can use them in the afterlife
Hoang Dinh Nam, AFP

Now the hang ma are just as likely to be iPads, laptops, luxury cars and villas with swimming pools.

Dang Xuan Nhi, a 70-year-old maker of votive offerings, says it is vital to provide ancestors with the kind of luxuries and everyday items their offspring either enjoy or hope to have in the future.

“Like this life, like the afterlife,” he explained. “What we have here on earth, they have the same there.”

It often take days for artisans to hand-make the paper models, which cost anywhere from a few dollars to a few hundred.

But it takes only a few minutes for them to burn.

According to unofficial reports, up to 50,000 tonnes of paper money and genuine belongings worth millions of dollars are burned every year in Vietnam.

Vietnam’s communist authorities have tried to encourage people to spend less on the offerings.

But their appeals appear to fall on deaf ears as locals strongly believe that looking after your ancestors will bring real rewards back on earth.

“We burn this for our dead relatives so that they feel happy. And if they are happy, they will bless us with good health, happiness and luck,” said Do Mai Hoa, a villager on the outskirts of Hanoi.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

Canadian Prime Minister Mark won praise for his speech about a rupture in the US-led global order at the World Economic Forum in Davos,...

Business

As governments commit billions to housing, a new proptech report looks at how technology is shifting into the systems that deliver buildings.

World

Trump is seeking at least $5 billion in damages in a civil suit filed in a Florida state court. 

Social Media

When top US diplomat Marco Rubio criticised European culture on X this week, a team at the French foreign ministry was swift to hit...