Kyaukse Sain Pwe (ကျောက်ဆည်ဆင်ပွဲ)
Burmese. ‘Kyaukse Elephant
Festival’.
Name of a
traditional
festival that originated in
Kyaukse, a district in
Myanmar's
Mandalay Region, and
in
which participants dress in elephant costumes and perform
various traditional dances. It is held
from the full moon (fig.)
of October to that of November, i.e. near the end of the
rainy season, and street dances with
elephants,
as well as with other mock animals,
such as
horses (fig.)
and
buffaloes (fig.),
are organized. Besides dancing contests the mock animals also go from home to
home to collect monetary gifts, usually for Buddhist
religious purposes.
It is said that the festival is held to commemorate that King
Anawrahta
(fig.)
of
Pagan
used
a
White Elephant
to determine an auspicious spot for
Buddhist relics to be enshrined in a
pagoda.
As legend has
it, the relics were put on the back of a White Elephant that was
tracked and which halted at four different locations. The King
thus had a
stupa
built at each of those locations (fig.),
resulting in the construction of
Shwezigon Phaya
(fig.),
Tantkyitaung Zedi
(fig.),
Lawkananda Zedi
(fig.),
and
Tuyintaung Zedi
(fig.).
See also
sain.
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