- Source: Kong Tek Chun Ong
Kong Tek Chun Ong (Chinese: 廣澤尊王; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Kóng-te̍k Chun-ông), is the patron deity of Nan'an in Chinese folk religion. He has a unique image of crossing his right leg and dropping his left leg. He is a deified shepherd from Fujian Anxi during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, and was well-known for his filial piety and honesty. The religious movement spread from Nan'an to the entirety of Hoklo people and to Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia with the migration of Hoklo people from there. During the reign of the Guangxu Emperor, a detailed account of his life and following was written.
Biography
His birth name was Kwee Tiong Hok (郭忠福) or Kwee Ang Hok (郭洪福), a native of Quanzhou, Anxi, Fujian Province, born in the year of Tongguang in Later Tang, on the 22nd day of the 2nd lunar month, and his family lived at the foot of Kwee Mountain for many generations. Kwee Tiong Hok was a very pious from childhood. He was working for the Yeoh (楊) family sheep herding in Chheng Khe County (清溪縣, now in Quanzhou Anxi) when he would suddenly miss his parents and run back home to Nan'an to serve them. After his father's death, Kwee Tiong Hok was always very sad when herding sheep because his family was poor and could not afford to buy land for burial. A geomancer felt that he was very filial and pointed out to him a piece of auspicious land. Guo then asked the Yeoh family to bury his father there and returned home to serve his mother.
There is also a folk legend that after Kwee Tiong Hok's father died early, his mother worked as a maid for the Yeoh family while Kwee Tiong Hok herded sheep for the Yeoh family. The Yeoh family hired a geomancer (in one version of the legend said to be named Chhui Un 崔芸) to choose the location of the gravesite, but they accidentally neglected the geomancer. Kwee Tiong Hok's mother treated the geomancer with respect, so the geomancer asked her if her husband had been buried, and after learning that he had not, he asked her whether she wanted her descendants to be the "Emperor of China" or to enjoy "the title of marquis for ten thousand generations. "The mother chose the latter. The geomancer then told her: "Under the sheep pen is the feng shui perfect burial place (sheep shed centipede cave), you crush your husband's bones, and when you bring me breakfast tomorrow morning, you take the opportunity to scatter the ashes in the sheep pen, and then leave with your son, seeing a monk wearing a copper made bucket and bull riding a man, so he stopped. After Kwee Tiong Hok and his mother left Yeoh's house, they saw a monk with a bronze cymbal on his head to keep off the rain, and a shepherd boy hiding under the cow's belly to avoid the rain, so they chose to stay there.
One day, when he was sixteen years old, Kwee Tiong Hok, with a gourd and a Buddhist sutra in his hand, suddenly climbed to the top of Kwee Mountain and sat on an ancient vine tree. When Kwee Tiong Hok's mother arrived, she reached out and pulled his left leg, so people who later made the statue portrayed him with his right leg up and his left leg down.
Some prominent temples in overseas
Hong San See Temple, Singapore
Hong San Si Temple, Sarawak in Malaysia
See also
Poh Seng Tai Tay (patron deity of Tong'an District)
Patriarch Ching Chwee (patron deity of Anxi County)
Mazu (patron deity of Putian)
Tan Goan-kong (patron deity of Zhangzhou)
Chinese folk religion
Taiwanese folk beliefs
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tridharma
- Kwan Im
- Daftar tokoh Tionghoa Indonesia
- Cinta Bernoda Darah
- Suling Emas
- Kong Tek Chun Ong
- North Point
- Hong Kong
- List of Chinese diaspora people
- List of foreign politicians of Chinese descent
- List of Chinese Indonesians
- Manila Chinese Cemetery
- Wang (surname)
- List of Hokkien people
- Bronze Bauhinia Star