An odd situation: My Vietnamese wife is a devout Buddhist, as is her mother who lives with us. I'm pretty much a typical American agnostic, so ordinarly I don't pay a lot of attention to the praying and incense-burning in front of the concrete Buddha I managed to pick up at Ace Hardware 6 or so years ago 😛. We have a 3-tier ornamental garden shelf in a "morning room" off the kitchen, with the Buddha & assorted Buddha pictures sitting on the top shelf naturally, each with a glass of fresh water, fruit and an incense holder in front of it. So every evening and on Buddhist holidays (every Tuesday it seems 😛), as well as special occasions (all the other days of the week) there's lots of calendar-consulting and then praying. Apparently these calendars have daily fortunes and other wisdom from the monks printed for each day on them.
Anyway, some years ago my wife found a nice 8 x 10 photo of my Dad in his naval uniform, so she had it framed and now it sits in the formal dining room, again with the fresh water & fruit and incense burner. This I don't mind since I think it's nice, and admittedly if it weren't for my wife, the photo would still be sitting semi-forgotten in a pile of other photos in the basement. My Dad died some 10 years ago, and every anniversary of his death we visit him at the Arlington Nat'l Cemetary due to my wife's insistence primarily.
Anyway, now she wants to do the same for her father, who was a Chinese businessman who went to Vietnam in the '60s, fathered 4 daughters and then abandoned them when he saw that my wife was yet another female (Chinese prefer sons). Apparently he went to Hong Kong and started another family there, never contacting or helping his first family stuck in Vietnam and who, being South Vietnamese, were abused pretty much by the North Vietnamese after the reunification in 1976. So my wife's mom had to depend on her brother and other relatives, living in a wood shack next to their house, selling vegetables at the market every day to earn a subsistence living. The Vietnamese can be pretty cruel to those whose living conditions are beneath theirs. My wife's family was often made to feel 2nd class and unwelcome, even in the provencial farming hamlet that her hometown was.
So IMO this guy was pretty much a bum and I wouldn't honor him to save my life. My wife agrees that what he did was not right too. But now she wants to put an 8 x 10 picture of him next to my Dad in the dining room, and honor his memory the same as my Dad's. While I was not that close to my Dad (he was an aviator in ASW - antisubmarine warfare - and was deployed with his squadron on 6-month tours to remote places such as Argentia while I was growing up). But even so, he never abandoned his family, and I'll never forget that when he got pcs orders and we moved from Brunswick, Maine to Coronado CA, he took 2 months off and the whole family toured Canada and the northern half of the US in a travel trailer, visiting everyplace from Baxter st. park in Maine to Bannf nat'l park in Canada, to Yellowstone and Glacier and many places inbetween. Plus he devoted his career to the Navy, having been a test pilot at NAS Pax River and XO of the Iwo Jima and Rota naval station in Spain, so I'm fairly proud of his accomplishments. Anyway, I'm definitely against my bum father-in-law occupying the same place of honor as my father, but then I also wanna keep peace in the household.
I suspect it is actually my mother-in-law putting my wife up to this, but when I ask my wife she says it is her idea. Anyway, this seems to be a religious issue since ancestor honoring is a fundamental Buddhist belief.
So, whaddya think - follow my standards or keep peace in the household??
Anyway, some years ago my wife found a nice 8 x 10 photo of my Dad in his naval uniform, so she had it framed and now it sits in the formal dining room, again with the fresh water & fruit and incense burner. This I don't mind since I think it's nice, and admittedly if it weren't for my wife, the photo would still be sitting semi-forgotten in a pile of other photos in the basement. My Dad died some 10 years ago, and every anniversary of his death we visit him at the Arlington Nat'l Cemetary due to my wife's insistence primarily.
Anyway, now she wants to do the same for her father, who was a Chinese businessman who went to Vietnam in the '60s, fathered 4 daughters and then abandoned them when he saw that my wife was yet another female (Chinese prefer sons). Apparently he went to Hong Kong and started another family there, never contacting or helping his first family stuck in Vietnam and who, being South Vietnamese, were abused pretty much by the North Vietnamese after the reunification in 1976. So my wife's mom had to depend on her brother and other relatives, living in a wood shack next to their house, selling vegetables at the market every day to earn a subsistence living. The Vietnamese can be pretty cruel to those whose living conditions are beneath theirs. My wife's family was often made to feel 2nd class and unwelcome, even in the provencial farming hamlet that her hometown was.
So IMO this guy was pretty much a bum and I wouldn't honor him to save my life. My wife agrees that what he did was not right too. But now she wants to put an 8 x 10 picture of him next to my Dad in the dining room, and honor his memory the same as my Dad's. While I was not that close to my Dad (he was an aviator in ASW - antisubmarine warfare - and was deployed with his squadron on 6-month tours to remote places such as Argentia while I was growing up). But even so, he never abandoned his family, and I'll never forget that when he got pcs orders and we moved from Brunswick, Maine to Coronado CA, he took 2 months off and the whole family toured Canada and the northern half of the US in a travel trailer, visiting everyplace from Baxter st. park in Maine to Bannf nat'l park in Canada, to Yellowstone and Glacier and many places inbetween. Plus he devoted his career to the Navy, having been a test pilot at NAS Pax River and XO of the Iwo Jima and Rota naval station in Spain, so I'm fairly proud of his accomplishments. Anyway, I'm definitely against my bum father-in-law occupying the same place of honor as my father, but then I also wanna keep peace in the household.
I suspect it is actually my mother-in-law putting my wife up to this, but when I ask my wife she says it is her idea. Anyway, this seems to be a religious issue since ancestor honoring is a fundamental Buddhist belief.
So, whaddya think - follow my standards or keep peace in the household??