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      A Commentary of Khasi Folklore- 19

      HP News Service by HP News Service
      May 7, 2026
      in Writer's Column
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      VIEWS

      By Raphael Warjri

      1. Mortality, human exceptionalism and loss of divine protection

      The second part of the article deals with the “golden age” (Aïom Ksiar) when humans were physically immortal (spiritually & physically) under divine protection. Only after the leader Syiem Nongklung’s act of folly is the protection withdrawn, humans become subject to plague, mortality, and suffering.

      This is a powerful narrative of fall—from divine favour to human vulnerability. In many mythologies this is a pivot: humans lose a special status because of arrogance or disobedience (think of Eden, Pandora, etc.). Here, the impetus is curiosity (of Syiem Nongklung) and a symbolic effigy turned to stone (in the village of Nongkhrah) as a reminder.

      From an anthropological perspective, such narratives often encode social lessons: the need for humility, respect for the divine order, acceptance of suffering as part of life. They also situate human mortality as a consequence of human agency, rather than simply external misfortune.

      In Khasi culture, the notion of matriliny is itself intertwined with ideas of continuity, lineage, ritual debt, and the vulnerability of social order in changing times. One scholar writes:

       “The Khasis, generally, follow the residential pattern known as matrilocal residence … The mother is regarded as the custodian of family rites and religious performances, besides performing the task of keeping the family property …” (CRVP)

      If the golden age narrative emphasises human exceptionality and subsequent vulnerability, this can reflect a deeper cultural awareness of change, of the fragility of social orders—and by extension, of the matrilineal order in transition (see section 4 below).

      Reflection for your project: The motif of a “lost golden age” followed by a fragile present is cinematic and evocative. As you are working on folk-inspired story “U Tiew Langkaphor”, you might parallel this: the “golden age” of Morba and Shibet’s world, followed by rupture because of a human (or supernatural) act, and the ensuing need to re-establish moral/social order.

      1. Ritual, music and folk instruments as markers of identity

      The article’s discussion of the “maryngod” (a Khasi folk violin), its role in mourning (Jamlu), the flute, Jew’s harp and percussion, and especially the tale of the farmer, the vampire-creature and the red-vented bulbul intervening—this section points to how folklore, ritual performance and musical instruments encode cultural memory.

      Music, lament, folklore duel between farmer-musician and vampire, bird-helper, stain on the bulbul’s tail—all of this is a rich narrative terrain. These folk motifs serve social functions: they preserve identity, sanctify mourning, mediate human-supernatural relation.

      In the academic literature, the role of oral tradition and instruments in Khasi culture is emphasised. In a matrilineal society with an oral past, instruments become carriers of memory—as much as myths.

      Reflection: Given your interest in adapting poetic works into voice-over monologue or visual poem formats, this section is ripe. You might explore the maryngod as a metaphor for the voice of the community, the lament as a symbol for loss, the bird-helper as indigenous agency. Also, the motif of “evil spirits no longer dare to dance with humans” can link to the struggle between tradition and modernity.

      1. Matriliny, change and contemporary tensions

      Although the article doesn’t explicitly focus on matriliny, the themes of origin, lineage, pledge to maternal and paternal kinship (“tipkur tipkha”), and the golden era narrative implicitly underscore the centrality of kin-relations. This is especially significant given your stated interest in preserving Khasi matriliny.

      Scholars note that the Khasis are one of the largest remaining matrilineal communities in India:

       “The Khasis, the largest tribal group in Meghalaya, follow a sophisticated matrilineal system … children belong to their mother’s clan, and the youngest daughter inherits the family property.” (Political Science Institute)

      However, contemporary scholarship also flags tensions: patriarchy’s increasing influence, property disputes, erosion of customary law under colonial-legal frameworks. For example:

      Thus, the mythic narrative in the article subtly connects with deeper issues: lineage, inheritance, changing social order, the human condition in the context of matriliny.

      1. Commentary on the article’s strengths and gaps

      Strengths:

      The article provides a compelling mythic framework that is richly symbolic and culturally specific—fitting for the Khasi world.

      It links cosmic themes (divine assembly, creatures, gifts) with social themes (human pledge, kinship, power).

      It includes folk performances: the maryngod, the tale of the farmer, birds, parasites—this grounds the myth in lived cultural practice.

      It offers a narrative arc: a golden age  human act, loss of divine protection, enduring struggle.

      Gaps / Questions:

      The matrilineal dimension: while implied (honour maternal and paternal kin, youngest daughter as heir in Khasi culture) the article could more explicitly engage with how the myth intersects with matriliny: e.g., the pledge to maternal kin, the youngest daughter, the role of women in the ‘golden age’, etc.

      The article does not fully address how these mythic narratives are translated into contemporary social practices or contested in practice—e.g., how matriliny is being challenged, how youth engage with these myths, how Christianisation or modernisation affects them.

      It would benefit from more explicit linkage between myth and ecological or material practices (e.g., land, forest, animals)—since the myth deals with creatures, it invites an ecological reading.

      1. Implications for preserving Khasi heritage and matriliny

      Given your interests (folk-inspired story, dialogue-based concept, public statement on preserving Khasi matriliny), the article offers the following affordances:

      Symbolic resources: The myth gives you powerful symbols—divine assembly, gifts, serpent/tiger envy, the creature Thlen, the protector-role for humans, the stamped stone at Nongkhrah, the maryngod, the bulbul’s red tail. These can serve as motifs or metaphors in your film, monologue or poem.

      Narrative structure: Golden age,  rupture,  consequence, endurance. This lends itself to screenplay structure: Act I (golden era of Morba & Shibet), Act II (incident of folly/curiosity), Act III (vernacular collapse, struggle, re-affirmation).

      Social message: The myth emphasises stewardship (“tipbriew tipblei” – honour mother/father, conscience), right living, the consequences of greed (Thlen), of unchecked curiosity (Syiem Nongklung). You can align this with contemporary issues: the erosion of matriliny, patriarchal encroachment, environmental degradation, cultural forgetting.

      Material heritage: The maryngod and associated folk tales provide a concrete heritage link. You could adapt the mourning-tune narrative into a visual poem or voiceover, showing how music/ritual encodes communal memory.

      Matrilineal preservation: Link the mythic pledge (to maternal/paternal kin) with the matrilineal institution, showing how the human/human-animal divine order mirrors or informs the social order in Khasi society. Perhaps show how forgetting the pledge (or human folly) leads to breakdown—not just of divine protection but of matrilineal values (inheritance, clan continuity, women’s roles).

      The article I shared is both poetic and culturally grounded. It presents the Khasi world as one deeply embedded in mythic imagination, where the divine, the natural, the human and the social converge. But as I am aware (and as the academic literature underscores) matriliny is not simply a cultural relic—it is a living system under pressure. The golden age narrative metaphorically invites reflection on the “age” of cultural harmony, and the human act of curiosity or greed marks the shift to our present, less protected, more vulnerable condition.

      In my work on preserving matriliny and addressing emerging patriarchal aspirations, I might use this mythic frame to argue: that the erosion of matriliny is akin to the withdrawal of divine protection—the social pledge is broken, vulnerability sets in, meaning is lost—but cultural resilience lies in remembering the original pledge, re-asserting the logic of “tipbriew tipblei bad tipkur tipkha”.

      Also Read: https://highlandpost.com/a-commentary-of-khasi-folklore-18/

      HP News Service

      HP News Service

      An English daily newspaper from Shillong published by Readington Marwein, proprietor of Mawphor Khasi Daily Newspaper, who established the first Khasi daily in 1989.

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