Cao Dai is a 'home-grown'
religion based mostly in the South of Vietnam. Its
centre of operations is the Cao Dai Holy See, in Tay
Ninh, about 100km from Ho Chi Minh City. It is a large
complex containing a school, an agricultu ral
co-operative, a hospital and other useful buildings, all
dominated by a big and highly ornate temple.
The founding father of
Caodaism
The sect was based by Ngo
Van Chieu, a minor civil servant from Phu Quoc Island,
who skilled a series of visions revealing the ‘Supreme
Being’s’ wishes, the centerpiece of which was the
creation of an all-embracing faith incorporating
elements of Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism, Christianity
and Islam.
The Structure of Cao Dai
The construction was
primarily based upon that of the Catholic Church, with
Ngo Van Chieu as the first Cao Dai Pope, and the rituals
upon those of Buddhism and Taoism.
Cao Dai additionally has
an attention-grabbing vary of ‘saints’, together with
Victor Hugo, William Shakespeare, Louis Pasteur,
Napoleon Bonaparte, Joan of Arc, Winston Churchill,
Lenin, and Chun Yet Sen, the pioneer of the Chinese
Revolution, along with several Vietnamese figures akin
to Tran Hung Dao and Le Loi.
Cao Dai beliefs
The Supreme Being of Cao
Dai has made three manifestations in human form. The
first was in historic times when it appeared within the
particular person of assorted
Figures from the
traditional texts of Christianity, Buddhism and Taoism.
On the second event, it manifested itself as Jesus
Christ, Mohammed, Confucius and different divine
figures. The newest manifestation involved communication
with
Ngo Van Chieu as the divine light, symbolized
because the all-seeing eye.
The development of
Caodaism
Caodaism grew rapidly,
and was formally recognised by the French in 1926. It
continued to grow in numbers and affect, and by the
fifties, the Holy See had turn into semi-autonomous,
with a whole bunch of temples all through the south of
Vietnam. Its large paramilitary pressure and political
affect alarmed both the French and the Viet Cong.
Upon gaining power, the
President of the Saigon regime, the pro-Catholic Ngo
Dinh Diem, moved swiftly to disband the Cao Dai military
and exile its leaders. When the communists took over in
1975, they closed the temples, confiscated the land and
dispatched the priests for‘re-schooling’.
However, the religion
survived and the temples had been returned by the
federal government within the late eighties and allowed
to re-open. Since then, the numbers of
Cao Dai followers have
grown, and its temples are functioning more or less
freely, but underneath tight authority’s control.
The temples
Cao Dai temples are
widespread everywhere in the south, but significantly in
the Mekong Delta. For visitors, the place to go to is
the primary temple at the Holy See. Its architecture is
as motley as its credo and liturgy, a riot of Colour and
symbols. The all-seeing eye is the centerpiece of every
of the stained glass windows, and, behind the altar and
mounted on an enormous duplicate of the earth, dominates
the interior.
The ceremony
The each day noon
ceremony of worship is a mix of Christian and Buddhist
ritual, lasting about half an hour. During companies,
the clergymen, acolytes and worshippers type up in rows
in one of three branches distinguished by the Colour of
the robes, yellow for Buddhists, blue for Taoists and
purple for the Confucian branch. Other devotees put on
white.
The rites are advanced,
however very fascinating, and the constructing is an
attraction in its personal right. However, to keep away
from falling foul of the authorities Cao Dai followers
will not be forthcoming about their exceptional faith,
and no explanatory materials is available. |