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Hong KongEducation

The blessed buns that helped scare off a plague on Cheung Chau

Delving into the history of Hong Kong’s Cheung Chau bun festival, which concludes on Saturday with the bun scrambling competition

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Workers set up the bun tower for the festival last year. Photo: SCMP Pictures
Sidney Leng

For more than 22,000 residents of Cheung Chau, the fourth month of the lunar calendar sees the annual celebration of the popular carnival, the Cheung Chau Bun Festival.

According to folklore, the carnival began in the late 19th century when a plague besieged the island and took numerous lives.

Locals hired priests to placate the wandering spirits of dead islanders in front of Temple of Pak Tai, the Taoist God of the Sea, while parading the deity’s statue along Cheung Chau’s narrow streets.

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The plague ceased subsequently, and Pak Tai rose to be a spiritual hero that has been worshipped annually on the island ever since.

The week-long festival, which usually takes place in May, attracts tens of thousands of visitors every year.

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A worker at Grand Plaza Cake Shop puts the final touches on buns prepared for the festival last year.
A worker at Grand Plaza Cake Shop puts the final touches on buns prepared for the festival last year.

And many of its traditions still remain in its 21st-century version: hiring Taoist priests to invite deities, serving vegetarian food at restaurants, and setting up bamboo towers stacked with blessed buns for worshipping – which give the event its name.

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