Phi Tah Khohn (ผีตาโขน)
Thai. ‘Ghostly vision masked dance
performance’. Annual festival in Dan Saai (Dahn Saai), in
Loei
Province, in which dancers wearing ghostly masks (fig.)
parade about in the streets. Those masks are made of the
spathe of a
coconut palm and
the top part of a
huad, a basket used for
steaming sticky rice
(fig.).
The masks are then painted elaborately and revelers dress-up in gaudy ‘ghost’
costumes. The festival commemorates a Buddhist legend in which a host of ghosts
appeared to greet the
bodhisattva
Wetsandorn
upon his return to his hometown, after his exile. This unique, three day
festival coincides with
boon luang, an annual
local merit making ceremony which is held on the weekend after the full moon of
the 6th lunar month, usually somewhere between early May and mid-July. It is
said that the name is derived from Phi Tahm Khon (ผีตามคน),
i.e. ‘ghosts that hunt or trail the people’, and refers to ghosts that followed
the people into the temples to prevent them making
tamboon. The
ghost dancers are all male, both boys and men. At the end of the festival the
participants are not allowed to bring their costumes (fig.)
and accessories home, but traditionally throw them away into the local Man
River, as a symbol of discarding sorrow and distress. On the last day of the
event people gather in the temple to listen to a sermon
(thet)
in which all thirteen chapters (kan)
of the
Mahachaat, the story
of the last great incarnation of the Buddha, are recited. In many places in Loei,
souvenirs of the festival, such as dolls and miniature masks (fig.),
can be purchased all year-round, and in Dan Saai there is a Phi Tah Khohn Museum
(map
-
fig.). All over this province, i.e. the
cradle of the Phi Tah Khohn Festival, these ghostly figures are found being used
as decorative items and even as guardians (fig.).
Also transcribed Phi Ta Khon. See also
Phi Boong Tao,
as well as
POSTAGE STAMPS,
THEMATIC STREET LIGHT,
and
TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
(2) and
(3), and
WATCH VIDEO.
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