Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Celebration Koan Practice

Adapting Zen koans to festivals through paradoxical questions or scenarios that participants carry beyond the celebration as personal contemplations.

Nas
Why It Matters

While Hodja's tradition differs from Zen, both use paradox as a teaching tool. Celebration Koan Practice creates festival-specific paradoxes that guests carry forward: 'How can we be most alone together?' 'What gathering requires no one to arrive?' 'How do we celebrate what we cannot name?' These aren't riddles seeking solutions but invitations to ongoing contemplation. At the festival's peak, the facilitator poses the koan and holds silence; participants receive it as a gift to carry home, where it continues working in their consciousness. Hodja's donkey—present yet absent, wise yet foolish—functioned this way. Celebration Koans transform the event from a contained experience into an ongoing exploration that ripples through participants' lives. They honor the examined life Hodja exemplified, where the festival doesn't end but deepens. This practice particularly suits modern celebrations seeking significance beyond spectacle.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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