Neak ta
A neak ta (
Neak ta in Khmer translates as the ancestor. A neak ta can be either feminine or masculine, and most often they operate as a couple.[3]
History
Origin: an ancestral worship of nature
Though the origins of the neak ta lose themselves in the night of time, they are believed to originate in a certain worship of nature.[4] The cult of
the neak ta may be regarded as a foundational layer upon which later traditions have been overlaid.
Neak ta at Angkor: the influence of the devaraja
In the
The veneration of neak ta is still present among the ancient Khmer Empire outside of the contemporary borders of Cambodia, as these neak ta rituals have been observed among the
After the fall of Angkor, King Ang Chan I (1510-1560) also known as Preah Baromei is associated with the elevation of the most famous neak ta Khleang Moeung in Pursat.
In his footsteps, King
King Sisowath, land reform and the replacement of the neak ta by the State
Until the XIXth century, insofar as the land belonged to anyone, it belonged to the spirits of the ancestors neak ta.
Khmers Rouges: the replacement of the neak ta by the Angkar as master of water and of the earth
In official or private propaganda under the Khmers Rouges regime, little mention is made of the neak ta — they were ignored, but sometimes also destroyed as in the case of Preah Ang Chek Preah Ang Chorm.[14] Uprooting the belief in the neak ta from the Khmer soul, young Khmers Rouge soldiers did not deny their existence but realized their inefficacy.[15] The message that "Angkar is the master of the water and of the earth" (angkar mchah teuk, mchah dey)[16] demonstrated a great contrast with activities of the earlier Issarak movement, which tried to gain control over villages by "endowing new neak ta".[17]
Kingdom of Cambodia (1991 - present): local identity, diminished power and survival of the neak ta
In the aftermath of the Khmer rouges and with the development of Cambodia, the local neak ta are said to be no longer as demanding or as potent as they used to be, while efforts have been made to restore elements of their cult and worship.
Leaving the neak ta has been a vexing experience for the Khmer diaspora. Despite considering the possibility that the neak ta may relocate, the migration of Khmer diaspora outside of Cambodia has been particularly vexing in terms of territorial spirits who protect a certain place.[21]
Rituals
Neak ta believers try to control what happens to them through the use of rituals, amulets, and offerings. Despite some similarities, the rituals vary from one neak ta to another.[22]
Neak ta Houses
To honour a neak ta, local villagers will usually set up altars near large trees as miniature cabins suspended from a branch or mounted upon a post and in which they are then reputed to reside in the form of roots, stones, fragments of sculpture or without any visible form.[23]
Officiants: achar, kru khmer and boramei
While the achar is the ritual master of ceremonies for rites related to the neak ta, the Buddhist monks will only take part in the recitation of prayers and not as officiants.
The He is able to distinguish which spirit, whether a neak ta or another evil spirit, is causing harm and bring about healing by recommending a course of action to appease the offended spirit.
For more obvious cases affecting the psychosis, mostly female mediums called kru boramei or rup are sought out.[25] Boramei medium are mediums that allow the neak taor boramei spirits to directly interact with the seekers. Unlike kru khmer who train to become an expert, kru boramei is thought to be chosen by the boramei spirits themselves to serve as their mediums.
Rites: promises, prophylactic prayers and annual allegiances
Rituals associated with the neak ta may be simple blessing vows, formal ceremonies, or the monastic recitation of parittas protective verses either a prophylactic supplication or to counteract serious difficulties such as major illnesses, famine and accidents.[26]
The first type of rite is a vow or promise (ban sran) performed to gain a blessing for a minor undertaking or to find a missing object.
The second (bon banchan neak ta) is a more formal prophylactic ceremony designed to counteract more serious difficulties, such as major illnesses, famine, or drought. It involves an officiant (rup) and an orchestra.
The final category (bon banchan neak tà oy sok sabai) is reserved for neak ta with a regional or national significance. Also known as "raising up the ancestors" (leung neak ta) it is a rite associated with ensuring the next harvest. It generally takes place annually as a form of feudal allegiance[27] in January–February and is oriented toward general protection, health, and peace throughout the coming year.[28]
Offerings: from human sacrifice to symbolic vegetal offerings
The primary way in which the neak ta believers worship is to offer food, flowers, incense, and alcohol at the neak ta spirit house. Most often, the offerings will include a pair of sla thor, two bowls of perfumed water, five candles and five
Ritual specialists kru khmer have traditionally used
A number of neak ta were offered wild and domestic animal sacrifices until quite recently.[32] Neak ta Mno of Voat Vihear Suor received both a crocodile and a monkey, while neak ta Tenon of Kandal Stieng had a monkey.[33]
Music
Music is the first and most important offering in any rite involving a neak ta. It is always
Functions of the neak ta
Social function: neak ta as the cement of village unity
With the neak ta being associated with single villages in Cambodia, the neak ta were traditionally a constitutive element of village unity as the annual rite of laeng neak ta would serve to reaffirm loyalty toward one another and reinforce mutual links within the community.[36]
Religious function: protection and blessing
Neak ta are invoked by Khmer villagers to ask for rain at the right time, watch over the rice paddies, protect the village from pandemics and the ills of war. The protection of the neak ta is limited to the srok village. Neak ta are invoked to recover lost objects and animals, recover good health.
Judicial function: swearing in court
Today, oaths at court are still sworn not to the state or before the image of the Buddha, but in the presence of the neak ta.[37] Defendants are called to swear to tell the truth not to some abstract moral standard against Buddhist scriptures, but before the very real fear of retribution by neak ta that they will not lie – a custom iconized most recently in the commission and erection of a statue of a prominent neak ta, Lok Ta Dambon-daek (Iron Rod) outside the Khmer Rouge Tribunal in 2006.[38]
Travel: neak ta as guardian of the road
Some neak ta are installed close to the road so as to protect travellers who may stop by to venerate them and make offerings. Such is the case of Yey Mau on the National Highway 4 between Phnom Penh and Kampot. Thus, cars driving can be seen throwing money at the neak ta Chomteav Mau.[39]
Typology
Status of the neak ta: neak ta couples and solitary neak ta
The neak ta are often represented as a couple of ancestors, which is also sometimes associated to a Brahmanical deity and its shakti.[40]
Neak ta spirits can also be solitary individuals (cah srok) "the old one of the country," indicating the archaic nature of their cult.[41] A powerful neak tà called Toeuk Lic, for example, dwells in an Angkorian-period Buddha statue now placed at the foot of the cascade on Phnom Kulen.[42]
Hierarchy: a spiritual galaxy
The world of neak ta in Angkor was hierarchical, and a mirror image of Khmer society. A powerful neak ta tends to supervise and order minor neak ta.[43]
Types
Natural phenomenon
Neak ta can be associated with various natural phenomena such as a tree (Neak ta dam), a mountain (Neak ta Phnom) or a river or pond (Neak ta Tuk).
Brahmanical deity
A certain number of neak ta have taken form in statues of Brahmanical divinities.[44]
Reinterpretation of Brahmanical divinities as neak ta by local Khmer villagers often comes with renaming without necessarily keeping trace of their
Neak ta Siddhi-Suost
Neak Ta Siddhi-Suost is the most significant neak ta derived from Brahmanical deities who is sometimes considered as a national protector.[45]
Me Sa, white mother of Ba Phnom
Me Sa, the white mother of Ba Phnom can be traced back to Hindu mythology. Her name is probably a contraction of the Sanskrit
National heroes: Neak ta Khleang Moeung
Some national heroes have been raised to the level of neak ta deities. Khleang Moeung is the most famous neak ta in the country with this heroic origin.[45] The physical representation of Khleang Moeung has evolved. In the 2000s, his statue was that of a man of previous era with square shoulders and a bushy moustache — his representation maybe denoting a trace of Siamese influence. But the more recent statue portrays him as a modern-looking man.
According to tradition, the propitiation of neak ta Khleang Moeung once involved the sacrifice of a male buffalo in each province of the kingdom.[46]
When Cambodia gained independence,
Ethics of neak ta worship
Various religious traditions in Cambodia take various stances as to the ethics of the worship of the neak ta.
Animism: neak ta and the religion of the land
According to Paul Mus' pioneer study of 1933, the neak ta are representative of what he called the "true Asian religion, that of the land".[48] Cults to neak ta have deeply influenced over time the way Hinduism in its various expressions and then Buddhism has been interpreted and practiced in ancient, modern and contemporary Cambodia.[49]
Buddhism: neak ta and the dual organization of Theravada Buddhism
In
Statues of the neak ta are regularly installed inside monastic enclosures. Some have even been discovered and solemnly introduced by the abbots of monasteries.[51] One can often find a neak ta in the northeast corner of the grounds of a pagoda.[52]
Some neak ta rituals transpire the influence of Buddhism especially where offerings of meat and alcohol have been suppressed.[53]
According to Alain Forest, neak ta represent the only figures of pardon in Theravada Buddhism as practiced in Cambodia. Though a neak ta "cannot intervene in the process of final salvation, but they may be induced to bring about significant change in the human and physical realms" and thereby help humans in their daily living.[41]
The growing influence of Chinese rites on the neak ta
Chinese immigration to Cambodia has influenced the worship of the neak ta. While the Chinese and Vietnamese can pay respect to the neak ta in Cambodia, and even contribute to the costs of restructuring their temple huts, the Khmer would never honor a Chinese or Vietnamese spirit.[39]
The Sam Orng Chinese temple along the banks of the
In some places, Chinese deities are even replacing the Khmer neak ta. The most clear example is on Voat Phnom in Phnom Penh. Though for centuries Voat Phnom was a shrine to a Khmer neak ta called 'Preah Chao', it has recently fallen under a Chinese spirit worship. When the Khmer Rouge occupied Phnom Penh in 1975, they gathered all the statues of gods and goddesses in Chinese temples all over the city, and they brought them to the Voat Phnom. In 1982, three years after the collapse of the regime, Chinese descendants returned to collect the statues and bring them back to the temples around the city, but two were left behind – the statues of Xuanzang, the sacred monk from the famous Chinese novel Journey to the West, and Tudigong, the Chinese god of earth.[55]
Islam: the neak ta of the Cham Sot
Traditional Muslims of Cambodia known as
Christianity: from rejection of idolatry to pastoral care and popular piety for the Virgin Mary
Christians in Cambodia consider the neak ta as a form of
Neak ta and modernity
Since the 1960s, it has been observed that the influence of the neak ta on the villagers and the respect shown to them is decreasing.[60] With the development and education of Cambodia, many Khmers have stopped worshipping the neak ta and turned towards future-oriented, pragmatic ideologies that they see as 'modern'.[18]
Environment and the neak ta: from clearing land to deforestation
The cult of the neak ta provides insights about the way people in Cambodia relate to the environment, as well as the notions of development, progress and civilisation that are now driving a certain peril to both culture and biodiversity. The origin of the neak ta was often linked to
See also
References
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- ^ Forest 1992, p. 22.
- ^ Souyris-Rolland, André (1951). "Contribution a l'étude du culte des génies tutélaires ou 'Neak Ta' chez les Cambodgiens du Sud" [Contribution to the study of the cult of tutelary geniuses or 'Neak Ta' among the Cambodians of the South]. Bulletin de la Société des études indochinoises (in French). 26 (2): 161–174.
- ^ Harris 2008, p. 79.
- ^ Country Survey Series: Cambodia. HRAF Press. 1957. p. 303.
- ^ Claude, Jacques (1985). "The kamrateṅ jagat in ancient Cambodia". In Karashima, Noboru (ed.). Indus Valley to Mekong Delta : Exploration in Epigraphy. Madras: New Era Publications. pp. 269–286.
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- ^ a b Kent & Chandler 2008, p. 203.
- ^ Harris 2008, p. 176.
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- ^ Forest 1992, p. 63.
- ^ Leroi-Gourhan, André; Poirier, Jean (1962). Ethnology of Indochina. U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Technical Services, Joint Publications Research Service. p. 93.
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- ^ Forest 1992, p. 39.
- ^ Harris 2008, p. 55.
- ^ Porée-Maspéro, Éveline (1958). Cérémonies des douze mois : fêtes annuelles cambodgiennes. Paris: Commission des mœurs et coutumes du Cambodge. p. 12.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 55.
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- ^ Sam, Sam-Ang (2002). Musical Instruments of Cambodia. National Museum of Ethnology. p. 26.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 120.
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- ^ Kent & Chandler 2008, p. 220.
- ^ a b Forest 1992, p. 48.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 29.
- ^ a b Harris 2008, p. 52.
- ^ Bizot, François (1994). La consécration des statues et la culte des morts. Recherches nouvelles sur le Cambodge. Paris: École française d'Extrême-Orient. p. 121.
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- ^ a b c Harris 2008, p. 53.
- ^ Harris 2008, p. 257.
- ^ Vachon, Michelle (2016-05-28). "Warrior Spirit". The Cambodia Daily. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
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- ^ "Irasec - Neak ta (land guardian spirits) in Cambodia". www.irasec.com. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
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- ^ Kent & Chandler 2008, p. 21.
- ^ Choulean, Ang (1986). Les êtres surnaturels dans la religion populaire khmère (in French). Paris: Cedoreck. p. 218.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 27.
- ^ "Hei neak ta sees communities come together for a parade of spirits, spikes". www.phnompenhpost.com. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- ^ "Where a spirit can get a 'facelift' - Khmer Times". 2019-11-21. Retrieved 2021-07-02.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 49.
- ^ Féo, Agnès De. "The syncretic world of the 'pure Cham'". www.phnompenhpost.com. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
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- ^ Forest 1992, p. 78.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 51.
- ^ Forest 1992, p. 31.
- ^ Lamug-Nawaja SJ, Lamug (2013-07-15). "Seeking Neak Ta Krohom Kor, the Spirit with a Red Neck". Ecology and Jesuits in Communication. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- ^ Kent, Alexandra (2020-11-09). "The desertion of Cambodia's spirits". New Mandala. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
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- Choulean, Ang (2002). People and Earth. Art Media Resources Limited. ISBN 978-1-58886-040-8.
- Work, Courtney (January 2019). "Chthonic Sovereigns? 'Neak Ta' in a Cambodian Village". The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology. 20 (1): 74–95. S2CID 150961902.
- Harris, Ian (2008). Cambodian Buddhism: History and Practice. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-6176-6.
- Forest, Alain (1992). Le culte des génies protecteurs au Cambodge: analyse et traduction d'un corpus de textes sur les neak ta [The cult of protective geniuses in Cambodia: analysis and translation of a body of texts on neak ta] (in French). L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-7384-1317-8.
- Kent, Alexandra; Chandler, David Porter (2008). People of Virtue: Reconfiguring Religion, Power and Moral Order in Cambodia Today. NIAS Press. ISBN 978-87-7694-037-9.