One Day a Year, Pilgrims Crowd Remote Taiwan Temple to Dream of Divine Answers

BEIGAN, Taiwan, March 27 (Reuters) – One day a year, pilgrims ⁠make ⁠their way to a small temple ⁠on a remote Taiwanese island near the Chinese coast to do one ​simple thing: Sleep.

Wrapped in blankets, the faithful spend the night on the floor at the Wuwei Ling Temple on ‌Beigan island, hoping the deities it ‌honours will send them a dream that might offer answers that the waking life cannot.

According to ⁠local folk ⁠beliefs, the Nine Immortals of Jiuli, the sibling deities who preside over dream-seeking, ​leave their home temple in China’s Fujian province on the 29th day of the Lunar New Year to visit an uncle at Wuwei Ling Temple.

A severe storm forced the deities to remain on the island for an extra ​day before returning to Fujian. Because of this tale, people in Fujian can seek dreams at ⁠the ⁠deities’ home temple on any ⁠of the other ​364 days of the year, while worshippers in Beigan can do so only on this one ​particular day.

Restaurant owner Yang Jui-yun ⁠first sought guidance at the temple more than a decade ago, when she was worried about her daughter leaving for the U.S. to study.

“I heard someone saying ‘hello, hello’ in English. And then I saw an image of a couple holding hands with children,” said Yang, 60.

Years later, her daughter gave birth to ⁠twin girls in the U.S. When her granddaughters visited Matsu for the first time, Yang ⁠saw the very image that she had dreamt at the Wuwei Ling Temple: Her daughter and son-in-law holding hands with the twins as they walked toward a Matsu beach.

Beigan is in the Matsu archipelago, geographically part of China’s Fujian province and which has been controlled by Taipei since 1949 when the defeated Republic of China government fled to Taiwan after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong’s Communists.

Regularly shelled by China during the height of the Cold War, today Matsu is a popular tourist destination, attracting people to experience its stark ⁠natural beauty, bird-watch and explore old underground bunkers.

Previously only a niche belief for Matsu residents, the temple has begun attracting a bigger crowd after the county government started promoting it to tourists.

“Most people ask about marriage,” said the temple’s honorary chairman, Chen Shih-tien. “Some ask about their ​careers; work-related questions are the most common.”

(Reporting by Yi-Chin Lee and Ann Wang; ​Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – March 2026

A Kurdish woman in traditional dress holds a lit torch during Nowruz, the Persian New Year, on a hill overlooking the town of Akra in the autonomous Kurdistan Region of Iraq, Friday, March 20, 2026. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

Leave a Comment