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(Peling) Jug Ging, Ura Yakchoe: 3rd Day of Festival [Close shot]

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(Peling) Jug Ging

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Title
(Peling) Jug Ging, Ura Yakchoe: 3rd Day of Festival [Close shot]
Additional title: Dance of the Ging with Batons (Peling Tradition)
Names
Core of Culture (Organization) (Producer)
Core of Culture (Organization) (Donor)
Collection

Bhutan Dance Project, Core of Culture

Dates / Origin
Date Created: 2005
Library locations
Jerome Robbins Dance Division
Shelf locator: *MGZIDF 842B
Topics
Dance -- Bhutan
Folk dancing -- Bhutan
Dance -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism
Rites & ceremonies -- Bhutan
Masks -- Bhutan
Buddhist demonology -- Bhutan
Spirits (Buddhism)
Dzongs -- Bhutan -- Bumthang (District)
Bumthang (Bhutan : District)
Festivals -- Bhutan
Ritual and ceremonial dancing -- Bhutan
Mask dances -- Bhutan
Animal dances -- Bhutan
Spirit dances -- Bhutan
Genres
Filmed dance
Filmed performances
Notes
Additional physical form: For wide shot version, see: *MGZIDF 842A.
Content: Programme of the Ura Yakchoe: Day Three: April 23, 2005: 3:30 am: Wake up call - The lama and the monks are woken up by the Gathpo clown, by a monk blowing the Jaling (oboe) and by singing girls -- 4:30 am: The morning ritual The lama and the priests assemble to perform the sadhana ceremony of Vajrapani and the invocation of Padmasambhava within the temple -- 8:00 am: Public call & Invocation of War Deity The monks perform monastic music on the temple roof to summon the village to the temple ground. The villagers will begin their breakfast round and at this time the supplication of the war deity by the clowns (To Dala) takes place -- 9:00 am: Fetching of Masks The monks performing mask dance bring the masks needed for the day from the upper shrine room -- 10:00 am: Lunch The priests have their early lunch -- 11:00 am: Beginning of Masked Dances and Folk Dances From 11 am, the monks perform mask dances and the village girls perform folk dances alternately. These Masked dances include: Chungzhi - (The Garuda and Damsi dance), Thowachu - (The dance of the ten Wrathful Deities), Durdag - (The dance of the four guardians of the gates), Ging Tang Tsholing - (The Tsholing and Ging dance), Ju-ging, Dri ging, Nga ging -- 3:00 pm: Tea Offering The public joins the monks in the temple to have tea sponsored by the individual units of the village -- 4:00 pm: Pholey Moley - The Drama of Handsome Men and Pretty Women -- 6:00 pm: Public dances The day ends with folk dances led by the village elders -- 7:00 pm: Evening ceremony and Alcohol Tasting The monks start the evening session of rituals and the village elders assemble to taste singchang in the temple.
Venue: Videotaped in performance at the Ura Lakhang, in Bumthang, Bhutah (ground-level facing north-west), on Apr. 23, 2005.
Acquisition: Gift; Core of Culture. NN-PD
Biographical/historical: The Ura Yakchoe is said to be associated with a visit to Ura by the great 8th Century saint, Padmasambhava or Guru Rinpoche. The story is told how the people of Ura prayed to Padmasambhava to protect them from Leprosy. The Guru answered this call and by appearing in the village disguised as a mendicant and was invited to eat lunch by an old lady who was engaged in spinning wool. She made a lunch of buckwheat pancakes (traditional Bumthang food) but was surprised to find the beggar no longer there when she called him to eat. When she later returned to her spinning she discovered a precious statue of Vajrapani lying within her wool basket. Two different versions exist of the subsequent history of the statue. In the first version, three days later the statue miraculously flies from the old lady s house to the nearby village of Gadan. Another version has it that the statue was presented to the Gadan Lam by agreement amongst all the village people of Ura. It is also said that when the statue of Vajrapani arrived in Gadan, a nine-headed snake was disturbed and slithered out of the Ura Valley. The place is still known as Puguyungdhogo (Place of the nine-headed snake.) Leprosy, a disease thought to be spread by serpents (spirits) was eventually overcome in the Ura Valley by the blessings of Vajrapani.
Biographical/historical: The festival begins on the 12th Day of the Third Month (Lunar Calendar) with the procession of the Vajrapani relic from Gadan to the Ura Lhakhang. It ends five days later, on the 16th Day of the Third Month.
Physical Description
Born digital
Extent: 1 video file (ca. 16 min.) : sound, color
Description
A single Dancer (not the nyulema) followed around by the atsara begins the piece - then he lays down in the centre and the Ging arrive. Prior to this dance the four Garudas (see Chungzhi) have already apprehended the nyulema - so the Ura version of Jug Ging appears to require a different evil spirit whom the Jug Ging will apprehend. The performance was stopped by very heavy rain, and the dancers finished the performance after sheltering from the worst of the downpour. The Peling Ging-Sum (the three dances of the Ging in the Pema Lingpa tradition) are three dances that are performed around the country in a particular sequence. The Ging-Sum comprises three dances: Jug Ging, Dri Ging and Nga Ging which show the forces of good in direct combat with evil spirits who plague living beings with their constant suasions to commit wrong. Jug means baton or wand and the Jug Ging are spirits tasked to search out the prtesence of evil (using their wands as sensitive instruments to find out the direction in which evil lies). The Dri Ging - who carry swords - subjugate evil with their weapons before punishing and slaying (with compassion) any such evil spirits found. The Nga-ging - who each carry a drum - perform a victory dance at having overcome the evil spirits, and also ensure that even those conquered evil spirits are still prayed for and ultimately liberated from their evil ways. These three dances are considered to have been reveled by Terton Pema Lingpa in the 16th Century - and they are thus known as ter-cham or (revealed) treasure dances. They express a coherent choreographic and dramatic intention on the great Saint's part. They are most often performed together with nyulemai cham (Dance of the Evil Spirit) which serves as an active and visible reference to the existence of evil in the world - and the nyulema is often captured and dispatched by the Jug bearing Ging of the first of these dances.
Type of Resource
Moving image
Identifiers
NYPL catalog ID (B-number): b19893445
Universal Unique Identifier (UUID): 42c74fb0-e531-0130-07e7-3c075448cc4b
Copyright Notice
Core of Culture
Rights Statement
This item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).

Item timeline of events

  • 2005: Created
  • 2013: Digitized
  • 2024: Found by you!
  • 2025

MLA Format

Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library. "(Peling) Jug Ging" The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 2005. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/44a3af70-e531-0130-dd6c-3c075448cc4b

Chicago/Turabian Format

Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library. "(Peling) Jug Ging" New York Public Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 23, 2024. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/44a3af70-e531-0130-dd6c-3c075448cc4b

APA Format

Jerome Robbins Dance Division, The New York Public Library. (2005). (Peling) Jug Ging Retrieved from https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/44a3af70-e531-0130-dd6c-3c075448cc4b

Wikipedia Citation

<ref name=NYPL>{{cite web | url=https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/44a3af70-e531-0130-dd6c-3c075448cc4b | title= (moving image) (Peling) Jug Ging, (2005)|author=Digital Collections, The New York Public Library |accessdate=April 23, 2024 |publisher=The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations}}</ref>

(Peling) Jug Ging