The Borneo Post

Masked merriment: Sacred Laos ‘ancestors’ honoured for new year

-

LUANG PRABANG, Laos: Barefoot and cloaked in swinging bamboo ropes, two masked performers dressed as Laos’ legendary ‘ancestors’ walk the streets of Luang Prabang on an annual outing for raucous new year celebratio­ns drawing hundreds of worshipper­s to the normally sleepy city.

Revellers splash water on the pair and their gold- studded masked lion cub during the annual procession at the height of the city’s days-long holiday celebratin­g the Buddhist new year.

Some revellers wait all year to catch a glimpse of the procession, which stems from Laos folklore.

As legend goes, Laos’ heavenly king put out a call for earthly volunteers to cut a massive vine which was blocking farmers from growing rice and vegetables.

No one offered until an elderly couple — Pou Nyer (grandfathe­r) and Nyar Nyer (grandmothe­r) — said they would do it, despite knowing such a difficult task would end in their deaths.

After they were killed by the giant vine, the king called on Laotians to forever worship the couple and their lion cub, and they are now believed to be the country’s ancestral protectors.

Today, two male performers represent the sacred duo and two more their lion cub, with the costumes and masks coming out just once a year for a parade that ends with a dance at the glimmering golden Wat Xien Thong temple, one of the country’s oldest and most scared, on the banks of the Mekong River.

When the festivitie­s are over, the costumes are carefully returned to a special chest in a temple across town dubbed the ‘sanctuary of the divinities’, where they will rest for the next 12 months.

The procession is the culminatio­n of days of merrymakin­g in the Unesco-listed city, a tourist hub that drew more than 755,000 visitors last year, according to Laos official data.

For some, the annual celebratio­ns are reason enough to book a trip.

“I planned my trip to see the Laos new year ... it’s my first time,” French tourist Couelle Guillaume told AFP.

“It was unique to see ... different culture and ethnicitie­s.”

 ??  ?? Men dressed as the legendary ancestors ‘Pou Nyer’ and ‘Nyar Nyer’ and their guardian lion ‘Singkheo Singkham’ dancing at the Wat Xiengthong Buddhist temple to mark the Laos New Year or ‘Pi Mai’ celebratio­ns in Luang Prabang. — AFP photo
Men dressed as the legendary ancestors ‘Pou Nyer’ and ‘Nyar Nyer’ and their guardian lion ‘Singkheo Singkham’ dancing at the Wat Xiengthong Buddhist temple to mark the Laos New Year or ‘Pi Mai’ celebratio­ns in Luang Prabang. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia