Thursday, December 18, 2014

5. Burma - Kengtung, Burma


Kengtung, Burma (Mayanmar)

Ethnic People and Their Life Styles

We Have Found Our Villages



Nuang Tung Lake of Kengtung City
View of Kengtung in Eastern Burma


     

     Kengtung  (city - 50,000 population. district - 170,000), is located in the heart of the Golden Triangle in the far eastern region of Burma touching Thailand.  For centuries it was an important commercial link between China and Siam.  After WW II the Burmese military took control and the region endured strong Burmanization and it became part of Shan State.

     Today, it is still relatively remote, with 2 or 3 traffic lights, limited paved roads, and few people speaking Burmese.  Many speaking Shan or one of the ethnic groups' languages.

     Roadways are filled with  motorcycles and  tuk tuks.





A Rainy Day in Kengtung


Central Kengtung - Near Market
Local Taxi Transport



Central  Market








     Kengtung is surrounded  by many hill towns of different ethnic groups: Wa, Aeng, Shan, Akha, Lahu, Palaung, Padaung, Aku, and others.



Typical Road Surfaces to Villages
Imagine Walking Here on a Rainy Day!





1.  PIN TAUK Village -  Lahu ethnic group.  The village was very well maintained and so clean.  Unfortunately, most of the residents were out in their fields, harvesting rice. 




Home is Built of Teak Wood
and Very Stable on Stilts






Notice the Stilts.  




Harvesting the Rice Crop



Northeast of Kengtung we stop at a Thai Khun rice wine village to see a massive saki (rice whiskey) distillery operation.  We are told that it is a very profitable and deals only in the export market. 

     T
  The Only Resident Left in Village That Day
Working on Embroidery!      
    


     The Lahu people are large rice producers and the women also do embroidery for a neighboring Akha village.  They are Baptists and provide for their own church in the village.





 Panier Village of
Aeng People



   Tropical plants and trees fill the landscape.  Roadways are filled with  motorcycles and  tuk tuks.  After an hour the road ends, and we begin the uphill trek with our guide Sai Win.


View of Panier Village


          In these photos, you see only the children and  older residents.  The others were working in the fields harvesting rice, their main crop.












Part of the Greeting Committee

She Worked Hard to Sell a Metal Bracelet





New Fashion of Earring

The Blackness of Her Teeth Indicates
That She Chews Beetlenut

     The Headman and his wife warmly geeted us with cups of tea and bananas.  Here she is on her porch sharing her village life with us.


Headman's Wife and Grandson




     The headman's wife is a fiine  weaver, indigo dyer, and sewer.  She had made lovely jacket of her own woven, dyed and hand stitching.  She wanted to sell it and I was ready to buy it!  Her name is Ae Eard, age 55, of Panler Village

                                   




A Popular Earring Style





Another Family Member




Good-bye Aeng Villagers
     It was sad to leave these kind and gracious people.  Without any education and with such isolation, their future seems difficult.

Wan Nyat Village
                                         Loi People 

     We climbed to 5000 feet altitude to visit this village of tea and fruit producers.  Their unique style of multiple families living in longhouses made us think of our Native American longhouses.

We visited one occupied by 7 families with total occupancy of 50-60.  Inside each family has its own cooking, sleeping,  and storage area.  There is no outlet for their cooking fires and smoke fills the building. The  construction of teak and fine thatch is beautiful.   Woven mats cover the  floors and are tastefully placed.   Presently, there is no school for children.  It is difficult to find a teacher who will stay in this isolated region.
Interior of the Loi People Long House
7 Families Share this Home

Evergreen Villages on Pine Tree Mountain
Akha People of Ho Kyein

     It was difficult driving up this red clay roadway but worth the views and seeing fields of newly planted apple trees, all managed by a Kengtung monk.

     There are three neighboring Akha villages situated in this area.  Interesting to note that they are of three different religious beliefs: Buddhism,  Animisin, and Catholicism.







Teak, Bamboo House of Akha

Akha Fashion

What a Head Cover.  Vintage Coins are from India and France.
The Women Sleep With Hats

Rear View of Fancy Hat







A Variation of the Hat Back

Weaving Cloth For Her Family
     We were warmly welcomed by those residents not involved in harvesting rice.  We enjoyed tea, peanuts, and sake with the chairman's wife who was quick to show us her display of Akha fabric items for sale.  The Akha women are fairly active fabric marketers.





     My special treat was to see up close the Akha costumes and learn about their colorful hats.  Each village has its own variation and the villagers are known by the hat variation.  Most women are wearing heirloom hats given to them by family members and carry valuable coins and beads.  Thus, continual wearing day and night keeps them secure.   They only take the hats off to wash their hair.

     These villages have electricity, a central well, and an elementary school nearby.  Nevertheless, girls still have many children, which seems to carry good fortune for the village.



Young Woman, Different Apparel





Good-bye Akha Villages


Pine Tree Mountain Village 
Pang Pac
Lahu Shi People


     The trek to the mountain top village of Pang Pac to visit Lahu Shi ethnic people will be with me forever.  12 kilometers uphill on slippery muddy clay paths and streams in the rain!

     We departed our hotel in the morning mist at 8 am to purchase lunch items of rice with vegetables, oranges. bananas and water in the Kengtung market.  As mist turned to rain we began our trek across fields of rice with the ever present water buffalo in the fields.  It was tough jumping on rocks  across small streams, maneuvering the wet steep clay trail as we neared the mountain top.  As we passed the Lahu Shi spirit dwelling  areas, I thanked the spirits for their help along the trail.

     Climbing in this muck, I began to wonder how people could endure an entire lifetime in such difficult circumstances, no electricity,  schools, piped water, or telephones.  Finally we arrived at the 3500 feet level altitude with towering pine trees and the Pang Pac village.

    In spite of the downpour, we were met by many children, soaked to the skin and barefoot.  Since few outsiders make it into their village, our arrival was a special event. 



Greeting Us In the Rain

What Are They Thinking?


Rain, Who Cares?

     We were invited by the chief's friend into a village home.  Taking off our wet shoes and climbing a short ladder, we sat around the coimforting fire in the modest living area and learned that the Lahu-shi population is about 100 who live in  22 houses of bamboo.  Their self-subsistence lives are based on rice cultivation and hunting wild game.  We  heard that in former times they were known as the hunters of tigers.


The Fire Feels Great

     Chidren begin working with their parents when very young and being that schools are so distant, nobody can read or write in the village. 

     Village highlights are the festivals of their animist beliefs and paying homage to the special spirits.  The Pang Pac wear a traditional dress consisting of  turquoise blue longyi skirts (sarongs), white blouses, big earrings, and colorful necklaces.  

     After sharing a glass of tea and our mixed nuts and staring at each other for a while, we headed down the steep slippery path for more than three hours to reach the car.  Two walking sticks were a gift of support for managing the treacherous slippery path.   Seven hours of a muddy journey convinced me that Pang Pac life is not for me. 

Wan Si Village
Akher People


     Sliding in mud down the hill to the car,  we traveled to Wan Si, an Aker village with a  welcoming committee of pipe smoking senior women offering us simple strung beaded necklaces for 1,000 kyats each ( $1).  These women have been the most aggressive people we have met in the country so far.   I was delighted to buy one from every woman.  





     Their ethnic wear was comprised of woven black hats and jackets with red stripped longyi.  Their large earrings and beaded necklaces provided the color. 

     It seems that most of the able village people were in the paddies harvesting the rice.

     There are so many more stories to tell: the Silver Padaung People, Kala People, Wa People, Aeng Holoung People......but, I'm sure that you have an idea of the diverse life styles, and challenges they all encounter.  

5 comments:

  1. omg, Sally - how fascinating! The photos and captions are fabulous, with just enough (not too much) narrative to give us some context. How did you communicate and learn all the background info? Did you have a guide with you who translated? Loved the intricate, colorful, beaded hats, but they looked heavy and gave me a head ache just looking at them. Are these women required to wear the hats, or is it optional. Are they a marker of status, age, wealth? You said their history originated as a way to carry coins - kind of a walking bank! Is that true today? Do they actually use the coins? Do they trade with other villages? These villages seem soooo remote and isolated. It's amazing you were able to access them. Looooved the colorful, striped fabrics. Did you carry your own water with you at all times? Did you get enough to eat? What a marvelous trip and experience. I'm learning from you that the photos tell the story, embellished with short captions that inform and enhance. Thanks for the model.

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    Replies
    1. Peggy, great questions....Before the journey to Burma, we tried to research as much as possible, especially the ethnic groups. When we trekked in Kentung, Sei Wein, multi-lingual, guided us and translated for us.
      Head pieces are not really uncomfortable. I found after wearinge then awhile, that I needed to use the best of postures. The headpieces represent the net worth of a woman, thus the need to wear constantly. They do not use the coins, but if life deals serious financial stress, they can see the hats for considerable cash, but normally, these hats are passed down through the generations.
      We carry food and drink with us -- rice with vegetables and lots of water......Thanks, Peggy

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  2. Wow! You manage to reach some of the most fascinating and remotest spots in your explorations! Loved the photos and the descriptions of the folks you meet along the way. Beautiful Blog. Thanks for sharing.

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