Mya Nan Nwe

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Mya Nan Nwe
Burma
NationalityBurmese
Other namesMa Nan
Known forAs the dragon guarding the pagoda
Parent(s)Chan Thar (father)
Nann Kham (mother)

Mya Nan Nwe (

Botahtaung Pagoda.[2][3]

Lifetime

Statue of Mya Nan Nwe

Mya Nan Nwe was born on 22 December 1897 in

Saopha, and daughter of Chan Thar and Nann Kham. At 15-years-old, she was educated in India and graduated with B.A. in 1926.[citation needed] From Mogok, dignitaries wanted to marry her, but she refused. She did not eat meat from an early age. In 1942, in her dream, an old man in white robes told her that she should move to Yangon as a missionary. So, she moved to Botataung Pagoda Road, Yangon, and worshiped Botataung Pagoda daily. She had been called Princess of Green as she wore green clothes.[4] She contributed to religious works, including the rebuilding of the Botahtaung Pagoda after its destruction during World War II.[2]

Some believe that she was a daughter of a nāga.[1]

Deification

Shrine to Mya Nan Nwe, opposite Botataung Pagoda

Mya Nan Nwe died in

Botahtaung Pagoda, and from that point on she was worshipped as Mya Nan Nwe Dewi (Goddess), a nat with the power to grant the wishes of those who appealed to her for help. She was known to be a nāga who guards the pagoda. Hundreds of people come to this place to donate offertories and also to ask for blessing of the sister.[5][2]

Shrine

The shrine attracts 700 worshippers per day, and between 1,000 and 3,000 worshippers on weekends, including many Thai devotees.[6][2] She gained popularity in Thailand through a Thai television program featured her biography.[2]

The oppressive dictator Than Shwe had ordered her statue to be handcuffed every night during his rule. It is said that she appeared in the dictator's dream asking him to stop oppressing the citizens of Myanmar. The dictator was notably highly superstitious and saw this as a bad omen, hence ordering her statue in the shrine to be handcuffed at night.[1][7]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c อุ่ยเต็กเค่ง, คมกฤช (2021-10-08). "คมกฤช อุ่ยเต็กเค่ง : เทวดาจะอยู่ข้างไหน?" [Which [Political] Side do the Angels Choose?] (in Thai). Matichon. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  2. ^ a b c d e f May Sitt Paing (22 July 2014). "Thais Find a Spiritual Home in Yangon". The Irrawaddy. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  3. ^ Zon Pann Pwint (29 July 2015). "Living on borrowed time". The Myanmar Times. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  4. ^ "ဝါတွင်းတိုင်းသီလရှင်ဝတ်ပါတယ် ဆိုသောအစ်မတော်မြနန်းနွယ်သမိုင်းကြောင်း". dailyhotnews (in Burmese). Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  5. ^ Ahmagyi Mya Nan Nwe, a devotee to the Botahtaung Pagoda.
  6. ^ "အစ်မတော် မြနန်းနွယ် တကယ်ပဲ ဆုတောင်းပြည့်စေလား" (in Burmese). Kamayut Media. 16 July 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  7. ^ Wai, Kyi (2009-11-19). "Mystery of the Handcuffed Statues". The Irrawaddy. Retrieved 2021-11-20.