གནས་སྡུད།

ཡིག་ཆ།

Dharshey-Oral narration text

ཁྱབ་བསྒྲགས་ལོ། :
2015
འགྲེལ་བཤད། :
Darshey is a traditional practice where a man holding a khadar (auspicious white scarf ) in his outstretched hands faces the seated crowd, and makes auspicious speeches at a ceremonial function, usually during religious and social occasions. (The origin of the tradition is attributed to Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal (1594-1651) when he introduced this practice during the consecration ceremony of Punakha Dzong in 1639.)
The tradition, however, may vary slightly from village to village in the use of language and presentation such as making speeches decked with maxims or simply narratives. The worldly tradition of Darshey does not require to be sung like Gurma (Religious songs), Lu or Tsammo (Songs without choreographies) but is expressed more or less like a recitation.
མིང་ཚིག་གཙོ་ཅན། :
narration recitation white scarf buddhist culture
བརྡ་དོན་འབྱུང་ཁུངས། :