BALI. I was just finishing my lunch when I saw Ibu Kadek, one of the staff members at Munduk Moding Plantation Nature Resort and Spa (MMP) in Buleleng, Bali, weaving and plaiting palm leaves near the property's swimming pool. She smiled sheepishly when I approached her. It turned out that Ibu Kadek was in the middle of making canang sari, a daily offering made by Balinese Hindus to thank the Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa (God Almighty) in praise and prayer, which is believed to create a mutual relationship between humans and spirits. It is a familiar sight in puras (temples), shops, small shrines in local houses and even on the sidewalks and steps. The term canang sari is said to derive from Balinese words: sari (essence) and canang (small palm-leaf basket).
Balinese offerings cast a spell of harmony
BALI. I was just finishing my lunch when I saw Ibu Kadek, one of the staff members at Munduk Moding Plantation Nature Resort and Spa (MMP) in Buleleng, Bali, weaving and plaiting palm leaves near the property's swimming pool. She smiled sheepishly when I approached her. It turned out that Ibu Kadek was in the middle of making canang sari, a daily offering made by Balinese Hindus to thank the Sang Hyang Widhi Wasa (God Almighty) in praise and prayer, which is believed to create a mutual relationship between humans and spirits. It is a familiar sight in puras (temples), shops, small shrines in local houses and even on the sidewalks and steps. The term canang sari is said to derive from Balinese words: sari (essence) and canang (small palm-leaf basket).