Revellers pack Hong Kong island for bun festival, a century-old tradition

Hong Kongs iconic bun festival drew throngs of revellers to the densely populated citys outlying island, Cheung Chau, to celebrate a century-old tradition that is rooted in prayers for peace and blessings.Residents and tourists braved the heat to watch children in costumes take part in a parade, called Piu Sik, which translates as floating colours. Children dressed as legendary deities, historic characters or local politicians were carried on stands above the crowds, moving through the islands narrow lanes.The festival highlight is the bun-scrambling competition around midnight, where participants climb a tower covered with plastic buns.

Revellers pack Hong Kong island for bun festival, a century-old tradition

Hong Kong's iconic bun festival drew throngs of revellers to the densely populated city's outlying island, Cheung Chau, to celebrate a century-old tradition that is rooted in prayers for peace and blessings.

Residents and tourists braved the heat to watch children in costumes take part in a parade, called ''Piu Sik,'' which translates as ''floating colours.'' Children dressed as legendary deities, historic characters or local politicians were carried on stands above the crowds, moving through the island's narrow lanes.

The festival highlight is the ''bun-scrambling'' competition around midnight, where participants climb a tower covered with plastic buns. They have to collect buns, which carry different scores depending on their locations, within a time limit. The one who earns the highest total score wins. But the participant who gets the greatest number of buns in the time allotted will receive the ''Full Pockets of Lucky Buns'' award.

The race was suspended for decades after the Bun Towers collapsed in 1978, injuring dozens of people. The tradition resumed in 2005.

According to Hong Kong's Intangible Cultural Heritage Office, legends say Cheung Chau was once devastated by a plague, and some residents then invited monks and Taoist priests to set up a sacrificial altar near a temple to pray to deities. They also paraded deity statues along village lanes. After the ritual, the plague ceased, and Cheung Chau residents have since been organising the event, also known as the Cheung Chau Jiao Festival, to dispel disaster and pray for blessings for peace and safety, the office said.

The festival has become one of the most popular events for tourists in Hong Kong in recent years. Many people like to buy steamed buns carrying the Chinese characters for ''peace'' and ''safety'', or souvenirs modelled on the buns.

TRENDING

OPINION / BLOG / INTERVIEW

Renewable power’s reliability problem may have an AI solution

How FinTech is changing SME growth and financial inclusion

Quantum-era risks force rethink of AI model provenance and attestation

Firms using AI see stronger environmental and governance performance

DevShots

Latest News

Connect us on

LinkedIn Quora Youtube RSS
Give Feedback