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Glossary›Ullambana

Glossary

Ullambana

A Mahayana Buddhist festival observed on the 15th day of the seventh lunar month to honor ancestors, relieve suffering of departed souls through merit transfer, and express filial piety.

What is Ullambana?

Ullambana is a Buddhist observance celebrated annually on the 15th day of the seventh lunar month (typically August or September in the Gregorian calendar) throughout East and Southeast Asia. The festival centers on making offerings to the monastic sangha to generate merit that can be transferred to deceased parents, ancestors, and beings suffering in lower realms—particularly hungry ghosts (pretas). While often conflated with the broader Chinese Hungry Ghost Festival, which incorporates Taoist and folk elements, Ullambana specifically refers to the Buddhist ritual of filial devotion through sangha offerings.

Origins & Lineage

The textual foundation for Ullambana is the Ullambana Sutra (Chinese: 盂蘭盆經, Yúlánpén Jīng; Japanese: Urabon-kyō), traditionally attributed to the monk Dharmarakṣa, who translated it from Indic sources into Chinese between 265–311 CE during the Western Jin Dynasty. The sutra recounts how Maudgalyayana (Pali: Moggallāna; Chinese: Mulian), one of the Buddha’s foremost disciples renowned for his psychic abilities, discovered through meditation that his deceased mother had been reborn as a hungry ghost due to her miserliness and karmic offenses.

When Maudgalyayana attempted to bring her food, it burst into flames before she could eat. He sought the Buddha’s guidance, who explained that his mother’s heavy karma required the collective power of the sangha to overcome. The Buddha instructed him to make offerings of food, robes, and medicine to the assembled monks on the 15th day of the seventh month—the final day of the summer rains retreat (Pravarana Day)—when monastics complete their three-month meditation period and their spiritual merit is at its peak.

Scholars debate the sutra’s origins. Some argue it was composed in China to harmonize Buddhist doctrine with Confucian filial piety, while more recent scholarship points to earlier Indian Buddhist sources that mention merit transfer to parents, including the Petavatthu (“Ghost Stories”) from the Khuddaka Nikaya (circa 3rd century BCE) and passages in the Mūlasarvāstivāda Vinaya’s Bhaiṣajyavastu. According to Emperor Wu of Liang (r. 502–549 CE), a devout Buddhist patron, held the first large-scale imperial Ullambana ceremony in China during the 6th century. The practice became officially recognized under the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE) and spread throughout East Asia via Buddhist missionaries and the Silk Road trade routes.

How It’s Practiced

Ullambana observances vary by region but share core elements. The central ritual involves laypeople preparing abundant vegetarian offerings—food, robes, medicine, incense, candles—presented in large bowls or basins (the “pen” in Yulanpen) to the monastic community. Temples hold special ceremonies that may include:

  • Chanting of the Ullambana Sutra and Amitabha Sutra over multiple days
  • Grand puja (ritual offerings) to the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha
  • Recitation of sutras to generate merit
  • Lighting of lamps and candles to guide lost spirits
  • Placement of memorial tablets inscribed with ancestors’ names
  • Filial Piety Dharma Assemblies focused on gratitude toward parents
  • Dedication of merit to deceased relatives “of seven generations past”

In Chinese Buddhist communities, the observance often extends throughout the entire seventh lunar month, considered particularly auspicious for merit-making activities. Japanese Buddhists celebrate a related festival called Obon, which includes bon odori (ancestral dances) and family cemetery visits. Vietnamese, Korean, Thai, and Singaporean communities maintain distinct regional variations while preserving the core emphasis on monastic offerings and ancestral veneration.

Ullambana Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Ullambana primarily through Mahayana Buddhist temples and meditation centers in East Asian communities worldwide. Major temples in Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, China, Japan, and North America hold annual Ullambana ceremonies open to the public. Organizations like Fo Guang Shan, Dharma Drum Mountain, and City of Ten Thousand Buddhas offer multi-day programs combining traditional rituals with Dharma talks on filial piety, karma, and merit transfer.

The festival has also inspired scholarship examining the transmission of Buddhism to East Asia and the synthesis of Indian Buddhist concepts with Chinese cultural values. Modern practitioners may participate through online livestreamed ceremonies, sponsor memorial tablets remotely, or attend local temple events without extensive Buddhist training. The practice remains especially significant in diaspora communities maintaining connections to ancestral heritage.

Common Misconceptions

Ullambana is not simply the “Chinese Halloween” or Ghost Festival, though these observances overlap chronologically. The Hungry Ghost Festival encompasses broader Taoist and folk religious practices focused on appeasing wandering spirits, while Ullambana specifically emphasizes Buddhist merit transfer through sangha offerings.

The festival does not claim that individual practitioners can directly “save” deceased relatives through ritual alone—the Buddha’s teaching to Maudgalyayana emphasized reliance on the collective spiritual power of the monastic community, not individual supernatural ability. It is not about feeding ghosts directly but about generating merit through offerings to monastics, which is then dedicated to benefit deceased relatives.

The etymology remains contested. While commonly translated as “hanging upside down” (referencing hellish suffering), scholar Junjirō Takakusu proposed the term derives from Pali “ullumpana” meaning “raising up, saving, helping”—a linguistic debate that remains unresolved among academics.

How to Begin

Those interested in Ullambana should first contact a local Mahayana Buddhist temple—particularly Chinese, Japanese (Obon), Korean, or Vietnamese temples—to inquire about annual observances, typically held in August or September. Many temples welcome newcomers to participate in offering ceremonies without requiring formal Buddhist vows.

Reading the Ullambana Sutra itself provides essential context; English translations are widely available online through resources like the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas website and Buddhist digital archives. For deeper understanding, explore scholarly works examining filial piety in Buddhist context and the festival’s historical development across East Asia. Participating in related practices like merit dedication, ancestor veneration at home altars, or supporting monastic communities throughout the year can extend the festival’s underlying principles into daily life.

Related terms

merit transferfilial pietysanghapreta hungry ghostancestor venerationmahayana buddhism
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