By Roth Meas
Tuesday, 08 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
At the beginning of each rainy season, which normally arrives in
May, Cambodians stay tuned to hear the outcome of the country’s yearly
harvest prediction event, known as the Royal Ploughing Ceremony.
This year the festival will take place tomorrow morning, May 9, at Veal Preah Mein, the square in front of the National Museum.
The
ploughing field and tents have already been set up for the occasion,
which will be attanded by members of the royal family, government
officials and lay people.
“The Ploughing Ceremony was brought
from India by the Indian King Kordin who married the Cambodian queen
Sorma in the first century BC,” said Miech Ponn, the adviser on mores
and customs at the Phnom Penh-based Buddhist Institute. “We have hosted
the Ploughing Ceremony at the beginning of each rainy season since
then.”
The oxen ploughing ceremony is preceded over by a couple chosen to represent the King and Queen.
The
husband, called the Sdach Meak, sits on a royal litter carried by six
men and covered by an elegant umbrella, while his wife, who is called
Preah Mehua, sits on a covered hammock carried by two men.
They
are both escorted from the Royal Palace to the artificial “ploughing
field” made for the occasion from beach sand, where three pairs of
waiting oxen are already rigged with wooden ploughs.
Sdach Meak
pushes the plough from the middle of the herd, while the rest of his
entourage plough at the front and behind him. His wife follows by laying
seeds behind him.
The Ploughing Ceremony only lasts three rounds.
“The
oxen are raised to be used for this Ploughing Ceremony only, and they
call them the royal oxen,” Miech Ponn said. “After they finish, they are
offered various foods to eat, such as rice grains, corn, freshly cut
grass, sesame seeds, green beans, water and even rice wine.”
Depending on how much food the royal oxen eat, predictions about the year’s harvest are made, he explained.
For
example, if the oxen eat a lot of rice grain, corn or sesame seeds,
they predict that the farmers will harvest bountiful rice, corn and
sesame crops in the season.
But bad omens can also be a part of the predictions.
If the oxen drink too much water, for example, it may be a signal of flooding.
The
Royal Ploughing Ceremony will begin at 7am tomorrow morning in front of
the National Museum in Phnom Penh, and the predictions will be
broadcast on national TV to farmers anxiously awaiting the results.
To contact the reporter on this story: Roth Meas at meas.roth@phnompenhpost.com
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