Ông Táo
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Ông Táo (翁灶) also known as Táo Quân (灶君, Mandarin Táo), Táo Vương (灶王), Thần Bếp (神灶) or the
Kitchen god The Kitchen deity – also known as the Stove God, named Zao Jun, Zao Shen, Zao kimjah, Cokimjah or Zhang Lang – is the most important of a plethora of Chinese domestic gods that protect the hearth and family. The Kitchen God is recognized in C ...
is regarded in Vietnamese culture as the advocate of the Vietnamese family with the gods and the emissary between heaven to earth.


Mythology

A long time ago, there was a couple, Trọng Cao and his wife Thị Nhi who were married for many years but had no children. One day, they quarreled over some trivial matter, and the husband, in a fit of anger, beat and threw his wife out of their home. Although Thị Nhi still loved her husband, she had no choice but to go away. Thị Nhi went far away and met a very kind man called Phạm Lang. He married her and he loved Thị Nhi very much. Their life was happy and peaceful but Thị Nhi could not forget her first love. As for Trọng Cao, he had been filled with remorse from the day he sent his wife away. He waited, and waited hopelessly for his wife’s return. Eventually, he decided to set out from his home to search for Thị Nhi. He traveled far and wide, but he could not find his wife. His food ran out and he had to beg for his meals. One day, starving and thirsty, he knocked on the door of a house to ask for food. He was shocked when he recognized his former wife. The sudden appearance of Trọng Cao deeply moved Thị Nhi, and she invited him inside and gave him a good meal. Suddenly, there was a knock on the door. It was Phạm Lang returning. The thought of being discovered with her former husband sent Thị Nhi into a panic. She hid Trọng Cao under a stack of straw. Unfortunately, Phạm Lang set fire to the straw because he needed ashes to fertilize his field. As the flames spread out, Trọng Cao accepted his fate to be burnt to death to protect Thị Nhi’s virtue. Thị Nhi was distraught because her love for Trong Cao had caused his death. Thị Nhi could neither save Trọng Cao from the fire nor tell her husband. She had no choice but to throw herself into the flames. Phạm Lang could not understand why his wife killed herself. Filled with sorrow, he jumped into the burning fire and died with his loving wife. Ngọc Hoàng in the heavens knew the sad story. He was so moved by their devotion and deep love that he decided to help them to live together forever. Using his magic, he changed them into the three hearthstones around the cooking fire, where they became Kitchen Gods. Since that time, the three Táo Quân have been responsible for taking care of all household affairs. Each year, on the 23rd of the last month of the lunar year, the Táo Quân leave the kitchen, they are seen off by the owner of the house, and ride on a carp to the heavens to give a report on each family’s doings. Then they return on the Eve of the first day of the Lunar year.Nhất Thanh (''Đất Lề Quê Thói'', Saigon 1970, tr. 320) chép huyền thoại này như sau: Ngày xưa có hai vợ chồng nghèo đến nỗi phải bỏ nhau. Sau, người vợ lấy được người chồng khác giàu có. Một hôm cúng, đang đốt vàng mã ngoài sân, vô tình người chồng trước vào xin ăn, vợ nhận ra, động lòng thương cảm, đem cơm gạo tiền bạc ra cho. Người chồng sau biết chuyện, người vợ bèn lao đầu vào đống vàng cháy chết thiêu. Người chồng cũ cảm kích nhảy vào lửa chết theo. Chồng sau vì thương, nên cũng nhảy vào nốt. Cả ba đều chết cháy. Ngọc Hoàng thấy ba người có nghĩa, phong làm vua bếp

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Description

In Culture of Vietnam, Vietnamese culture, the Vietnamese New Year (
Tết Tết (), short for Tết Nguyên Đán ( Chữ Hán: 節元旦), Spring Festival, Lunar New Year, or Vietnamese Lunar New Year is one of the most important celebrations in Vietnamese culture. The colloquial term "Tết" is a shortened form of ...
) is a time to make a new start. Children get red envelopes with money inside, known as "lì xì" (, 利市) in Vietnamese, as gifts for good luck in the coming year. Vietnamese families prepare their houses for the coming of a prosperous new year by cleaning up and polishing their silver. It is during this cultural event that Ông Táo comes in to serve as the Kitchen God for Vietnamese families. As the old year ends, he goes to heaven to discuss the family's situation with the Ngọc Hoàng, the Heavenly lord. Tradition has it that the Kitchen God is too poor to buy new clothes, and so he simply wears a long robe and shorts. Other accounts say that because he was in such a hurry to go back to earth, he forgot to put his trousers over his shorts before leaving heaven. Due to his presence in Vietnamese culture, Ông Táo is a prominent character in many folk plays. Considering his position as a messenger from heaven, the writers often depict the living conditions, problems, and solutions that need to be addressed by a family, to the audience. Vietnamese people regard Ông Táo as a family member, and various prayers and offerings are brought to him at the family altar.


The work

The three people are collectively known as Táo Quân (full name is Định Phúc Táo Quân (定福灶君), but each holds one job: * Phạm Lang is “Thổ Công” (the God of Kitchen who looks after cooking job) * Trọng Cao is “Thổ Địa” (the God of Soil who takes care of family affairs) * Thị Nhi is “Thổ Kỳ” (the God who sees to the matters related to shopping in the market)


In popular culture

Television program *
Gặp nhau cuối năm (), is a Vietnamese annual TV satirical comedy that is broadcast across all channels of the Vietnamese national broadcaster Vietnam Television (VTV) on Lunar New Year's Eve, and produced by the Vietnam Television Film Center (VFC). The sho ...


See also

*
Zàojūn The Kitchen deity – also known as the Stove God, named Zao Jun, Zao Shen, Zao kimjah, Cokimjah or Zhang Lang – is the most important of a plethora of Chinese domestic gods that protect the hearth and family. The Kitchen God is recognized in C ...
, Chinese kitchen god *
Jowangsin Jowangshin (in Hangul, ''조왕신'', in hanja, 竈王神) is the goddess of fire and the hearth in Korean shamanism. As the goddess of the hearth, the rituals dedicated to her were generally kept alive by housewives. She is no longer the subject o ...
, Korean kitchen god * Sanbō-Kōjin, Japanese kitchen god


References


Sources


''Sequence of the Tet Celebration''
at ThingsAsian.com, Retrieved March 2010. {{DEFAULTSORT:Ong Tao Vietnamese culture Vietnamese gods Vietnamese deities