Monday, June 1, 2009

Korean Geomancy (풍수지리)


Some years ago some of the Catholics seeing the position of my bed which was facing North-South recommended that I change the position. Having the head of the bed facing north was not propitious. I have forgotten what they answered when I asked, "Why?"

There are many off handed remarks that one hears over the years and some of them register and some do not, but the interest that many of the Koreans have with grave sites is something which one hears too often not to take serious.

In Korea there is “Wind Rain Earth Theory” (풍수지리) which in English is often translated as Geomancy. It was and probably is a way of divining but for many it is a way of selecting a site for a house or a place for a grave. If the sites are not pick appropriately then the fear of misfortune for the family is not an uncommon concern of many.

In our times when ecology is a very important part of our interest the Koreans' interest in the relationship that the natural surrounding have on us was always an important part of there thinking. "If you have a mountain range facing you with gentle rolling hills than those who live in that ambient will be gentle and meek those who live in the proximity of steep and pointed mountains will be quick of temperament and lack smoothness." There are areas of this thinking that for me are superstitious and for a Christian of no help for a follower of Christ. Much of the thinking that follows from the relationship that we have with nature is healthy but the fear that it sometimes begets, and has no basis in reason, is not healthy for either the body or spirit. However, how much of the tradition is based on just good common sense is an area that might be interesting to study.

2 comments:

  1. I think the reason for not having the head of the bed facing north is that that is the way bodies are laid in the grave.

    I once heard that St Maximilian Kolbe, when he was in Japan, decided to go agaisnt the advice of Shintoist geomancers and build his monastery on the "wrong" side of the mountain, facing away from the city of Nagasaki, which turned out to be very fortunate on August 9, 1945.

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  2. Many thanks for the words of wisdom. It does make a lot of sense. The more I hear about some of these issues the more I begin to see the "why" of the "what".

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