City
Epaper

​Sikkim celebrates Kagyed dance festival, CM Tamang extends greetings

By IANS | Updated: December 29, 2024 13:05 IST

Gangtok, Dec 29 Sikkim Chief Minister Prem Singh Tamang on Sunday extended greetings on the occasion of the ...

Open in App

Gangtok, Dec 29 Sikkim Chief Minister Prem Singh Tamang on Sunday extended greetings on the occasion of the Kagyed Dance Festival being celebrated across the mountain state.

CM Tamang said, “On this auspicious occasion of the Kagyed Dance Festival, I extend my warmest greetings to the people of Sikkim. May the masked monks’ performances symbolize the victory over negativity and inspire a year of peace and prosperity. Let us honour the cultural heritage of our festivals with mutual respect and unity.”

“Wishing everyone enduring happiness, love, and the dawn of new opportunities in our lives,” he added.

A customary dance festival, it is celebrated annually in Sikkim and falls on the 28th and 29th day of the 10th month of the Tibetan calendar, which as per the English calendar is December. In various monasteries, Lamas dance and sing in honour of eight tantric gods and goddesses known as the Kagyed. The Lamas also pray to these deities, asking them to protect people from evil spirits that torture them and provide them with good health and good fortune.

According to an official release, the festival is celebrated by Buddhists and takes place in monasteries, particularly at the Old Rumtek Monastery, Phodong Monastery and the Tshuklakhang Palace. Kagyed Dance or Chaam is another Buddhist festival unique to Sikkim. The celebrations commence two days before the onset of the Loosong festival, which is another major festival. Monks elaborately dress in traditional attires with ceremonial swords and masks swaying to the rhythm of echoing drums and trumpeting horns swiftly and gracefully in perfect coordination with their fellow dancers depicting narrativized tales from Buddhist mythology, particularly the chronicles of Guru Padmasambhava and his powers.

“Not only is the Chaam a symbol of victory but it is also believed that those who witness it are supposedly blessed with good health and wealth. It eventually comes to a closure with the burning of effigies made with flour, wood and paper. A number of variants are performed on different festivals, with one thing remaining common in all, i.e., the masks representing scores of human, deities and animal faces enacting an interesting story from Buddhist mythology,” the official statement added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraMumbai News: Cops Arrest Trio for Opening Fake Bank Accounts Under ‘Ladki Bahin’ Scheme for Cyber Fraud

NationalKarachi was in line of fire during Operation Sindoor, affirms Indian Navy

InternationalIndia insisted on direct communication between the DGMOs, rejecting any third-party assurances: Sources

NationalOperation Sindoor: Know what India has achieved

Other SportsIndia bags seven medals at Archery World Cup 2025 in Shanghai; Bronze for Deepika Kumari, Parth Salunkhe

National Realted Stories

NationalIndia’s fight against terrorism will continue: Tripura CM Manik Saha

NationalOperation Sindoor: Pakistan punished through military and non-military means

National‘New India’ to eliminate terrorists inside their hideouts: Assam CM

National3rd party intervention to negotiate or settle India’s matters uncalled-for: CPI-M

NationalIndo-Pak tension: Special prayers held in Mizoram in solidarity with armed forces