Lao


Laos
Is a landlocked country in Southeast Asia with a population of 4 million people. Once a part of the Cambodian Empire, Laos became a part of French Indochina in 1893 and was granted full independence in 1953. After the French departed, a protracted civil war ensued, involving first the French and then the Americans. In 1975, the Communist government took control. Several hundred thousand Lao fled to Thailand, and many were eventually resettled in the United States. When the Lao first came to Iowa, language was the biggest barrier. They feared Americans would neither understand their culture nor permit them to practice their traditions. Despite some prejudice, what they found was freedom - to go anywhere or say anything without fear of persecution.    TOP

Blessing Ceremony
"Baci" or "Sukhun" is a blessing ceremony held on many occasions. People celebrate and wish eachother good luck by tying cotton threads around each other's wrists. A "Mor Pone" or soul caller chants the formula to call lost souls back home to the body. As soon as he is finished with the chanting, someone in the ceremony ties the threads from the tray to his wrist. In return, the ties threads on the wrists of others. Those present continue this reciprocal tying of threads to whish each other good health, happiness, and power. During the "Baci," women decorate a flower bowl with delicacies: cookies, candies, chicken, eggs, sticky rice, fruits, wine, water, a candle, and white cotton threads. They string the threads among the flowers and then place a candle atop the arrangement.    TOP

Festivals or "Boon"
Major holidays, which commemorate stages of Buddha's life, are important community events. The Wat Lao (Lao Buddhist Temple) is packed during worship and the social events that follow. In order to earn merit for the life hereafter, people bring traditional foods as offerings for the monks.    TOP

Music and Dance
Music in Laos accompanies sung poetry, dance, and religious rituals as Buddhist functions and for social events. Like Lao folk and classical dance, Lao music reflects the influence of Asian Indian, Chinese, Khmer, Thai, Hindu, and Buddhist traditions. The dinstruments that accompany dance are plucked, bowed, beated, or blown and include the lanath (curved wooden zylophone), lanath oum (bass xylophone), khongvong (gong circle), khouy (flute), gong (drum), khene (bamboo mouth organ), phin (mandolin), xor-doung and xor-ou (small and large two0stringed violins), and ching (small hand cymbals).

In Laos and all over Southeast Asia, classical dance drama, which depicts events in the life of Buddah, is performed for court and ritual occasions. Today in Iowa, Lao-dance and music accompany all social and ceremonial events.    TOP

Wat Lao Buddhavas
In 1981, the Lao community in Des Moines established the Wat Lao Buddhavas to serve Buddhists throughout Iowa and neighboring states. Since its founding, the Wat has grown from a small house to a complex of buildings that includes a small temple, a community hall, and a house for the monks.    TOP