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08 October 2024

Devotees jump into harbour for good luck

Locals swim with an idol of a Taoist god during a lunar festival event at the Yehliu harbour in New Taipei City on February 5, 2015. More than 130 townspeople and tourists, plus a dog, threw themselves into Taiwan's northern Yehliu harbour carrying idols of a Taoist god in a centuries old tradition to pray for luck and prosperity for the year to come. (AFP)

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By AFP

Worshippers in a port village in northern Taiwan carried statues of a Taoist god as they threw themselves into the cold harbour waters on Thursday in a good luck ritual.

The century-old festival in Yehliu, held to mark the end of the lunar new year holiday, is the only one of its kind in Taiwan and aims to bring peace and prosperity to the fishing village.

But what for decades was a small local festival now attracts visitors from around the island and abroad to complete the 500-metre ritual swim.

This year 130 people took part, including over 30 from around the world, from Russia and India to Brazil.

Local residents carried sedan chairs with bright miniature statues of the Taoist god Kai Chang perched on top as they ran and jumped from the pier into the waters below, swimming with them to the far shore.

"I love being a sedan chair carrier -- the ritual has always brought us peace the whole year," local resident Fang Ze-hung, 20, told AFP.

"So many people wanted to do it this year that we had to register with the temple authorities three weeks in advance."

The chair carriers danced around a square outside the village's ‘Paoan Kung’ (Peace Blessing Temple) with thundering firecrackers attached to the statues creating a haze of smoke as gongs and horns played traditional music.

The local fishing fleet then sailed around the harbour carrying the statues to ‘cleanse’ the port and bring a good catch for the year ahead, before a 50-tonne boat unloaded nets full of fish onto the shore.

The final harbour jump saw the eight sedan chair teams take a leap before walking across burning coals on the harbourside to finish the ritual.

American Michael Regraff said he had come along because he loved ‘traditional things’ -- local authorities say the ritual is over 100 years old.

For others, plunging into the freezing water was an investment in the year ahead.

"This is my fifth year in a row," said Chu Chin-tsan, who had travelled more than 100km from northern Taoyuan City and jumped in with his dog ‘Champion’, a seven-year-old beagle.

"I feel that joining this kind of ritual will bring me peace and prosperity," he said.