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Tercham: The Naked Dance
  • Manage No, Sortation, Country, Writer ,Date, Copyright
    Manage No EE00002597
    Country Bhutan
    ICH Domain Performing Arts
    Address
    Jamba Lhakhang, Bumthang Dzongkhag (district)
Description It is said that besides the naked dance performed during Jampa Lhakhang Drub, there are also naked dances performed during Nabji Drub in Trongsa and Sakteng Tercham, Trashigang and in Dagana. The naked dance is honorifically referred to as a “tercham” a term usually applied to dances revealed as treasure. Just as any sacred ter (treasure or precious object) is not exposed freely to the public so also our nakedness is never exposed publicly. So the dance performed naked and exposing the genitals is exceptional and hence considered tercham or the “revealed treasure dance”. According to the book Invoking Happiness, the dance has its origins during the construction of Jampa Lhakhang, when local spirits disrupted the process45. The story recounts that King Songtsen Gampo manifested himself in the form of several people dancing naked, which fascinated the troublesome spirits. As they remained preoccupied by the dancers, the temple construction was completed and consecrated. According to Chagkhar Lama Dorje, Dorje Lingpa introduced the dance at Nabji, Trongsa. One oral account maintains that when Dorje Lingpa was constructing Nabji Lhakhang, local spirits were disrupting the process every night. In order to distract the spirits, Dorje Lingpa used his miraculous power to summon naked people from the Treasure Cliff located opposite of Nabji Lhakhang. He made them dance, and antics kept the spirits spellbound enough so that Dorje Lingpa was able to complete the temple and consecrate it. Thus, according to this account, the tercham was first performed at Nabji under the supervision of Dorje Lingpa. When Dorje Lingpa later renovated Jampa Lhakhang, the dance was performed during the initial consecration ceremony and is said to have been enacted every year since. At Jampa Lhakhang Drub, tercham is performed each of the first three nights. The performers are chosen from the five villages of Drub Tsawa: Chagkhar, Jampa Lhakhang, Changwang, Nasphey and Nobgang. After the normal mask dance performances are concluded, a crowd gathers around midnight at the performance ground in the outer courtyard of the western side of Jampa Lhakhang. Shortly after midnight, a group of ten men emerge from the chamkhang (room for dance preparations) and dance to the rhythmic beating of traditional mask dance drums and cymbals. The men are all naked except for their faces, which are covered by a white cloth to conceal their identities. The last man, who is the dance master, wears shorts. The group dances around a bonfire located in the middle of the performance ground, sometimes acting outrageously towards the spectators. The dance lasts for an hour despite the cold, which drops to around one to two degrees Celsius. Photos or any type of recording is strictly prohibited, as is the use of torches. Policemen and village locals guard the integrity of the performance, and deal harshly with anyone who attempts to break the stringent rules. Chagkhar Lama Dorje describes the dance as most sacred and says that spectators should not look at the dancer’s genitals as just male organs. As the male genitals are never exposed publicly, it is one of the world’s precious ter. All sentient beings are brought into the world, in part, by this organ. Local elders explain that though the younger generation may find the dance funny, it was started by the great saint Dorje Lingpa, and therefore one should view events with devotion rather than as entertainment. In the recent past, the dance was banned by the Dzongkhag Administration, who deemed it vulgar and embarrassing. Once banned, there was abnormally heavy rainfall and hail, and the Drub could not be properly conducted. Local astrologers attributed downpours and bad weather to the tercham ban. The local people conducted kangsol rituals to repair the relationship with the protective deities and the Dzongkhag Administration lifted the ban the following year.
Social and cultural significance It is believed that tercham is performed to ward off obstacles and curses, and to bring fertility. Ultimately it reflects the need to recognize that all phenomena are inherently pure in nature, and that it is only our conceptions that lead to those distinctions, which then in turn give rise to shame, to distinctions of good and bad, and so forth. Because our minds impose such concepts and ideas, we lose the ability to see things using the undeluded or unfettered mind. The dance also represents a means of purging the mind of those thoughts and concepts that delude our inherent Buddha nature. Once purged, we can detach from attachments, cut through delusions, and overcome emotions and ignorance, thereby raising awareness of an authentic existential reality.
Transmission method Oral form.
Community As the custodian of Chagkhar Lhakhang, Chagkhar Lama Dorje is responsible for its sacred religious objects. In the future, he will pass these responsibilities to his son Tenzin, who has already begun leading the sacred dances. With Chagkhar Lama as the main coordinator of Drub, the five villages within the vicinity of Jampa Lhakhang are the tsawa. The five villages are Chagkhar, Jampa Lhakhang, Nasphel, Changwang, and Norbugang. Data collected by: Mr. Yonten Dargye (PhD.), NLAB
Keyword
Information source
National Library and Archives of Bhutan
https://www.library.gov.bt/archive/