Item details
Item ID
CCLD02-104
Title Offering to Tshong Tshongma
Description Tshong Tshongma is a very important deity in eastern Bhutan, especially to the people in its vicinity. To appease Tshong Tshongma Dorji Ligpa, first, people used to prostrate themselves three times, offering whatever things they had. If someone was made seriously ill by Tshong Tshongma, they used to sacrifice an ox as an offering to him. Tashi Tshewang made this recording.

Speaker(s)/Participant(s)
Name(s) Karma Wangdi
Age(s) 71
Village(s) of origin (if known) Chema
Origination date 2022-06-18
Origination date free form
Archive link https://catalog.paradisec.org.au/repository/CCLD02/104
URL
Collector
Tashi Tshewang
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Dialect
Region / village Chema
Originating university University of Sydney
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DOI
Cite as Tashi Tshewang (collector), 2022. Offering to Tshong Tshongma. MPEG/VND.WAV. CCLD02-104 at catalog.paradisec.org.au. http://catalog.paradisec.org.au/collections/CCLD02/items/104
Content Files (2)
Filename Type File size Duration File access
CCLD02-104-01.mp3 audio/mpeg 6.3 MB 00:06:52.891
CCLD02-104-01.wav audio/vnd.wav 227 MB 00:06:52.851
2 files -- 233 MB -- --

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Collection Information
Collection ID CCLD02
Collection title Bönism, Environment and Healing in Far Northeastern Bhutan
Description Bönism, Environment and Healing in Far Northeastern Bhutan

Indigenous practices of Bönism are unofficially banned in Bhutan, and appear to be destined for extinction. Yet for now, at least, people in at least some parts of Bhutan continue to retain knowledge of traditional Bön practices. In this project, Tashi Tshewang – a native speaker of Dakpa language – spent 3 months audio-visually documenting traditional Bön healing practices and learning about their relationship with the local environment. In addition, he has collected a number of vernacular autobiographical stories of village people, and has made use of incidental opportunities to audio-visually document traditional preparations of wild mushrooms and lichens for consumption as food, as well as traditional hillside grain cultivation. Images of local religious sites and practices complement Tashi Tshewang’s collection, which includes texts in both Dakpa and Tshangla languages.

This project was mentored by Yankee Modi, and funded by a 2022 FLICR Fellowship awarded to the collector by the Centre for Cultural-Linguistic Diversity (Eastern Himalaya) (Co-Directors Mark W. Post and Yankee Modi, Associate Directors Kellen Parker Van Dam and Zilpha Modi). Financial support for the 2022 FLICR Fellowship program was provided by the Firebird Foundation for Anthropological Research, through a grant administered by the University of Sydney.
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Access Information
Edit access Nick Ward
Yankee Modi
Mark Post
View/Download access
Data access conditions Open (subject to agreeing to PDSC access conditions)
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