Showing posts with label gongs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gongs. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2011

Largest collector of gongs in Central Highlands

Y Thim Byă has become the largest collector of gongs and jars and the
first person to open a private cultural museum in the Central Highlands
province of Dak Lak.


After 20 years of
collecting, Y Thim Byă now owns 30 Tuk and Tang jars, 18 sets of ancient
gongs with over 300 gongs from the ethnic minority groups of Gia Rai, E
De and M’Nong, dozens of Kpan chairs (chair of master of the house) and
hundreds of artifacts such as bowls, cups and bracelets.


“The number of his ancient gongs is more than that of the people in Ea
Bong village”, said Y Than Nie K’, the village’s patriarch.


Inspired by a set of ancient gongs thrown away by a local, Y Thim Byă
felt sad and decided to buy them back. Since then, he has travelled many
places to buy back Kpan and Jhong chairs, gongs, jars and other old
musical instruments.


At present, his house in Ea
Bong village, Buon Ma Thuot city has become a popular destination for
tourists who want to explore the Central Highlands region’s culture.


Y Thim Byă added that he is continuing to build
another house, with a total investment of 300 million VND to finish off
his cultural museum.


He has also set up a gongs team
to perform at traditional festivals and community cultural activities
such as buffalo sacrificing festival and new rice festivals.


Apart from collecting ancient objects, Y Thim Byă has also made many
kinds of traditional musical instruments such as Kram gongs, T’rung,
Pah, Buot, Tak Tar, horn. He has also taught young people how to use
these instruments, thereby helping to maintain and develop the special
cultural values unique to the Central Highlands people./.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Dak Lak hangs on to vanishing heritage

Dak Lak hangs on to vanishing heritage

The Central Highlands province of Dak Lak is being stripped of its
cultural heritage as gongs, drums and many ancient hunting knives and
tools are used to feed the thriving trade in ethnic antiques, officials
warn.


Buon Trap town in Krong Ana district boasts an all-woman team playing
the Jo, a gong designed exclusively for women of the E De ethnic group.


"The team play on two ten-gong sets which are owned by a local family.
Six gongs were sold to antique collectors in recent years and two others
were broken," said Tran Viet Du, an official with the district's
Culture Office said.


"When the team play the Jo, we have to rent gongs from a nearby town for the performers," Du said.


"Buon Trap is one of many locations in the province where gongs have
been sold to traders that can never be replaced again," said Y Wai Bya,
director of Dac Lac's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.


"That is due largely to the poverty of the local people. Many people do
not hesitate to sell antique gongs to collectors to get large sums of
money," he said.


Du and Bya are among many officials who have expressed growing alarm about the antique trade in Central Highlands provinces.


"Researchers specialising in the Central Highlands' culture and history
need to come up with long-term strategies for the preservation of
gongs, drums and other old items relating to ethnic culture," Bya said.


Bya admitted that the province still lacked policies to
preserve gongs and train officials to gain a profound understanding of
traditional music and the culture of ethnic people.


Bya said the provincial People's Committee recently approved a policy to assist gong owners.


"Each family that owns an antique gong will receive an annual stipend
of 500,000 VND (25 USD) from the province," he said, giving no
further details.


The committee is also working on a
project to build in each village a museum to display traditional musical
instruments and items used in the daily lives of the ethnic people.


"More festivals will be organised in Dak Lak's villages and districts
where ethnic people can perform gongs, drums and introduce their folk
music to outside audiences," Bya said.


The centuries-old
gong music is a precious cultural heritage of Vietnam's ethnic people.
They play the gong to commemorate a good harvest, during festivals, and
to mark occasions like the birth of children, weddings, and funerals.


The Central Highlands gong culture was recognised as a Masterpiece of
Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2006.


Cultural researcher Y Duong, grandson of Y Jut Nie K'Dam, author of the
first Vietnamese – E De Dictionary, said he had spent many years working
on a project to protect gongs and would submit it soon to the Dak Lak
People's Committee for consideration.


Apart from ancient
gongs and drums, K'pan long benches used by gong performers and tools
used by hunters of elephants and wild animals are much sought after by
antique traders.


Ama Pet, a well-known elephant hunter in
Buon Don town, said he was among few people who still kept the leather
ropes used in elephant hunting.


Pet caught and
domesticated 15 elephants using his rope which is more than 10m in
length. Elephant hunting is now banned in Dak Lak. He said he intends to
sell his rope to have money to spend for the family.


He
said he has priced the rope at 15 million VND (750 USD) including a
piece of buffalo leather used to cover the back of the elephant./.

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