Anyone who’s been to Bali will remember the small offerings – banten – scattered across doorways, shrines, restaurants, even in the middle of the street. These are intricately crafted parcels of palm leaves, flowers, and colored rice, prepared daily by Balinese women alongside the cooking. They’re offerings to gods, demons, and ancestors alike – a quiet but constant connection to the spiritual world.
Banten range from the elaborate – like those for the festival of Galungan, when the gods are said to visit Earth – to the everyday canang, tiny floral bundles left to welcome house spirits.
This ritual continuity is central to Balinese life. Whether or not it holds the universe together, it certainly anchors one of the island’s most vibrant traditions. If you're seeking a deeper cultural connection during your luxury travel to Indonesia, witnessing – or respectfully participating in – a Balinese offering ritual is one experience that stays with you.
Burning Man, Black Rock Desert, Nevada, USA
In fact it began in 1986, and by 2010 had drawn over 50,000 visitors or "burners". What the whole ritual signifies is open to considerable debate, but cash is virtually banned from the event, self-expression is encouraged in as many ways as possible, and the "leave no trace" principle is fundamental to the whole project; the desert space is to be left better than it was before the burners’ arrival, certainly not worse.
Over the years other aspects of the event have evolved including the celebration of weird and wonderful vehicles and the burning of a separate temple. This remains one of the most eagerly celebrated of modern rituals, though the increasing prevalence of "Burning Man Is Stupid" t-shirts around the west coast may be the real indicator that the burning man has reached the national consciousness.
Prayer at the Western Wall, Jerusalem