The Phnom Penh Post

The monk refusing offerings of rice to build a mountain-top temple

- Hong Raksmey

WHILE temples in the Kingdom are welcoming Buddhist laities for food offerings during this year’s annual 15-day Pchum Ben festival, the monk at the Three Rocks pagoda located on the western edge of Phnom Tbeng in Preah Vihear province is passing up offerings from the local community, even during the religious festival.

“No, not at all. During these Pchum Ben days only you [tourists] bring some money to contribute to the pagoda’s constructi­on. As for the local people, they do not even bring me bowls of rice,” said Pen Sorn, head monk at the pagoda.

The Buddhist monk told The Post that this does not mean that locals are not followers of Buddhism, but only that their livelihood­s are hard, as well as the fact that they are working as a community to construct the pagoda’s new temple

Pchum Ben is a 15-day Cambodian religious festival which falls in September or October. Festival celebratio­ns culminate on the 15th day of the tenth month in the Khmer calendar, at the end of the Buddhist lent, Vassa.

During this period, it is said id that the gates of hell are opened pened and ghosts of the dead (preta) reta) are presumed to be especially ecially active.

In order to combat this, Cambodians ambodians make foodofferi­ngs ferings to Buddhist monks who ho perform ritual prayers ayers to benefit the ghosts, giving ving them the e opportunit­y ty to end their eir period of purgation. Other ther ghosts are e imagined to leave hell temporaril­y, orarily, only to then return turn

to endure more suffering.

According to Cambodian culture, it is also believed that deceased relatives of the living, who are not in hell but in heaven or otherwise reincarnat­ed, will generally benefit from the ceremonies.

At the Three Rocks pagoda, visitors are generally surprised to see the ongoing constructi­on of a concrete temple in Chhumvorea­hongsey La’ang Thmor Bei Dom, a hard to access area located in the wilderness at the peak of Phnom Tbeng.

Upon his arrival at the pagoda in 1982, Sorn decided to build a temple at the highest point of PhnomTbeng with the purpose of having a peaceful place for meditation.

Other facilities at the pagoda are the Three Rocks worship shrine, a dining hall and the monk’s house.

But back in the early 1980s, there was only a small wooden hut at the place of worship, named after three rocks which many locals believe to have spiritual and mystical powers.

Three out of four rocks sitting at the edge of the valley have become objects of worship, with believers praying to them for prosperity and rubbing them to cure diseases.

“I don’t k know why the three rocks are powerful, as it is a superstiti­ous b belief dating back to the t beginning of settlement settl on the mountain. mountai I don’t know whe when locals started to have hav this belief,” said Sor Sorn.

The mon monk, who moved from Steung Meanchey pagoda, added: “When I arrived here i in n 1982, the area had almost no nothing and it was not eas easily accessible. I brought with me a h u n d r e d nuns to me d i t a t e in t he pagoda.

“This is t he first p a g o d a and I d e v e l - o p e d t h e p l a c e from a wooden h house for w o r s h i p into what it is today. I s t a r t e d with a t e m p l e next to those t hree rocks and eventually built a dining hall, monk’s house and a main temple. Currently, wit h t he support of a ll Buddhist followers, we are constructi­ng a new temple to insta ll Buddha statues,” said Sorn, who claimed that he is now 99 years old and nine months.

The main temple is a reminder to locals of the hard work put into its constructi­on, with building materials transporte­d by porters who climb 1,345 steps to reach the constructi­on site.

“The constructi­on work is very challengin­g, especially in terms of transporti­ng building materials. We offer villagers 20,000 riel ($5) to carry a bag of cement to the constructi­on site. We also rent a tractor for carrying heavier materials, which costs us another 100,000 riel per load,” said Sorn, who is the only monk permanentl­y residing in the pagoda.

Despite nearing his centenary year, the monk continues to traverse the mountain to buy materials and seek funding.

He said: “The foundation stone laying ceremony for this main temple was carried out in 2015 and the constructi­on is still ongoing because I used some of the donated funds for other purposes.

“I spent some money on building a bridge, a road and concrete stairs for hikers who visit the mountain from Sangkum Thmei district, so that they will no longer have to hang on to plants along the route.”

Taking a breather along the path on his journey to deliver zinc roofing weighing more than 50kg, Nou Thy, 32, shared his experience of carrying materials to the mountain top to earn a living.

“One day I can carry things four or five times, but on certain days when I feel a little lazier, I limit my trips to only three times a day. We usually get 20,000 riel for each trip, but the amount of payment we get depends on the donations which the monk receives,” he said.

Chen Norn, 56, who has been working as a hired labourer for more than 10 years, said the cost of the constructi­on materials is much higher as they need to be transporte­d up the mountain.

Even when transporti­ng a motorbike, it needs to be dismantled into three parts and carried to the peak. Similarly, a tractor needs to be dismantled into many pieces and reassemble­d at the top.

“For instance, I only carry three dozen bottles of drinking water for each trip because I am old. And for that, I make 2,000 riel each trip,” said Norn, who earns from 15,000 to 20,000 riel a day as a porter.

Thy, Norn and other people, mostly hired labourers working as porters, always have their lunch in the Dombouk Khmao and Thmor Bei Dom pagodas, where they also take part in the constructi­on work.

Despite t he high cost of building a pagoda on top of Phnom Tbeng, the monk st i l l tries to accommodat­e worshipper­s with proper facilities and accommodat­ion.

Oum Soun, 60, from Kampong Thom’s Kampong Kdey district, who was visiting with five other women aged between 45 and 60 years, said they came here to pray for prosperity and wish for the Three Rocks to cure their diseases.

One women who struggled to reach the mountain peak spent one night at the Three Rocks pagoda before heading back the next morning.

Sorn does not expect to receive food offerings during the Pchum Ben season from locals in Phnom Tbeng, but he hopes that Buddhist followers and travellers who visit contribute to the temple’s constructi­on fund.

 ?? YOUSOS APDOULRASH­IM ?? Back in 1982, there was only a small wooden hut at the place of worship, where many locals believe in the spiritual and mystical power of the Three Rocks.
YOUSOS APDOULRASH­IM Back in 1982, there was only a small wooden hut at the place of worship, where many locals believe in the spiritual and mystical power of the Three Rocks.
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 ?? HONG MENEA ?? Some visitors to the pagoda say they come here to pray for prosperity and wish that the Three Rocks will cure their diseases.
HONG MENEA Some visitors to the pagoda say they come here to pray for prosperity and wish that the Three Rocks will cure their diseases.
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