DABA1
The religious life of the
Na is guided by two types of coexistent beliefs: their own religion,
whose priests are called daba, and Tibetan buddhism.
The majority of daba
are men; before the l940s, there were a few women daba. In
general, they work on the land. They proceed individually with their
rituals, without any formal organization, and at the request of
the villagers. When a daba is asked to carry out a ritual, he is
paid, in money and in kind, according to the means of the household
which has engaged him. The daba are respected members of the community
but have no political power over others.
As the Na language has no
written form, when they practise their rites they only use recitations,
the words of which are often unintelligible even to themselves.
What they know with certainty is the function of these recitations.2
The villagers told me an anecdote about daba writing: "Long
ago, the daba had their canons written on parchment [pigskin].
One day, when they were on a journey, their masters got hungry.
As they had no food, they cooked their books. That was when they
lost their writing."
Also, the interpretations
of these recitations differ from one daba to another. With
the result that two daba from different villages never appear
together for the same ritual. For example, a young daba had
been invited to take a funeral and I asked my friend daba
Dafa to come with me to discuss the ritual with him on the spot.
His "live" explanations and commentaries would help me
to understand the meaning of what happened at a funeral, during
which several complex rituals are carried out simultaneously. But
Dafa refused outright, because, he said, his presence would be an
inconvenience to the young daba. However two daba
from the same village can participate together in a given ritual.
The instruments which the
daba use during the rituals are: a hat; a cymbal from which
hangs a bunch of the teeth of boar, tiger, deer, and elephant with
eagle's and owl's claws; a drum; and one or two batons, 30cm. long
and 2.5cm. square in section. On the four long surfaces are engraved
the following designs; a man, a woman, an ox, a horse, a goat, a
pig, a dog, a tiger, a leopard, a lion, a deer, a fish, a flower,
grasses, a tree and benevolent spirits.
The daba's most important
instrument is called dgo. It is a wooden sculpture about
l5cm. long and 5cm. in diameter. The dgo of different daba
come in different forms, but the symbolism is always the same: the
power of the shaman.
Only a daba who possesses
such a statuette may accept three disciples, who first learn to
recite the prayers and who act as assistants to their master during
rites. When the master becomes too old, he carries out a ritual
during which, sitting with their eyes closed, the disciples must
recite the prayers. The one who sees the dgo during his hallucination
inherits all the competence of his master.
The master hands over the
dgo and a leather armour. Thenceforth, the new daba
can carry out rites and instruct disciples. After this rite, the
other disciples can also preside over rites, but they are not allowed
to train disciples. However they may pass on their knowledge to
their maternal nephew or their maternal niece (extremely rare).
It sometimes happens that if a daba is married he hands down
his learning to his son.
According to the daba
in the village of Dapo, in the Yongning basin, on the day that the
disciple acquires the dgo, his master orders the disciple's
brother to kill a russet bull and a black hen, with a view to a
ceremony including a feast to which representatives of each lhe
[unit of kinship consisting of brothers and sisters of the same
generation] from the surrounding villages are invited.
In another version, according
to a daba also living in the Yongning basin, a white cockerel
is killed because the dgo descends from a white eagle.
A daba from Labai
provides a third version. On the day when the master hands down
his power to his disciple, he asks him to carry out a complex rite
before the elders of the villages and before the daba. After
this examination, a black bull is sacrificed. After this, the master
takes his disciple up to the snow-covered mountains and secretly
hands over his power. This is how knowledge is passed down from
one generation to the next.
In the Yongning basin, at
the present time, the lhe of the daba (who died in
l995) of Dapo village possesses a dgo. At Waru, Luzo Dafa
holds one. At Labo there is also a daba who has one.
It should be mentioned here
that during my fieldwork I never saw or heard of a daba instructing
three disciples, but only of such and such a daba teaching
his nephew (or his son).
Events in China since l949
have had a important influence on the Na. In l956, land was distributed
to each household. In l958, as in the whole of China, the Na of
Yongning came under the system of popular communes. During this
period of more than twenty years, the production brigade, as the
local administrative unit, managed the villagers' work and distributed
grain at the end of the year.
Placing the land under the
control of this administrative organization strengthened the hold
of the government over the peasants. From then on, religions were
viewed with more and more suspicion. Later, during the Cultural
Revolution they were completely forbidden. During this period, daba
were considered to be demons who lived by exploiting others, comparable
with landowners and rich farmers and were reproached at meetings
organized in the villages by the production brigade. At the request
of the villagers, the daba sometimes organized rituals in
secret. But if they were discovered, they were violently criticized
in public. As daba Dafa says, "Carrying out rituals
was considered a worse crime than theft."
In l980, after the fall
of the extremists, the land was redistributed to each household.
At the same time, religion was allowed again. But it was first of
all limited to the "great religions"; Taoism, Buddhism,
Christianity and Islam. The religions of other ethnic groups continued
to be considered as superstitions and regarded with disapproval.
Until l992, during my fourth
session of fieldwork in Yongning, the consequences of a quarter
of a century of prohibition were that the villagers were no longer
familiar with the daba's rituals and that the daba
were few and elderly.3 For this reason the daba
themselves remain discreet about their activity and the cadres are
very careful about what they say about the daba when they
want him to carry out rituals. For example, the same year, I made
contact with three daba. One of them told me that six days
later he was going to carry out rituals for a lhe and invited
me to attend. On the appointed day I tried to make contact with
the head of the lhe, a cadre in the district administration
whom I had met during my third fieldwork session. When I found him,
he warmly welcomed me into his house to partake of a meal. He encouraged
a long discussion. In the meantime, he cancelled all the rituals
which had been planned.
During the period of liberalization
in China in the l980s, the fact that the farmers owned their land
weakened the influence of ideology and also, from the official point
of view, it was difficult to specify the difference between the
"great religions" and the other "primitive religions",
although the latter were still considered to be superstitions. Since
l994 the daba have started to practise their rituals openly
again. This is a general phenomenon which can be observed in the
various ethnic minorities in China.
However, in the Yongning
region and its surrounding districts, there are now very few daba.
Dafa Luzo (66 years old) is the most learned and active. For several
years now a young daba (28 years old) from the village of
Woilabiai who learned from his maternal uncle (who died in
l99l) has started to carry out rituals, but he is only a novice.
There are also a few elderly daba in the villages of Wujiué
and Lajiadzi, as well as in the Labo region, who continue to officiate,
but they are less capable of mastering the recitation and the fabrication
of ritual objects than the others.
For many years, because
there was no daba, in several areas certain rituals were
no longer carried out at all. For example, when the Laomi household
of Baqi village invited daba Dafa to carry out the offerings
to the water spirit, the drum and cymbal music attracted many village
spectators. Elderly women commented: "This rite addressed to
the water spirit that this daba is performing resembles what
we used to see our village daba doing more than thirty years
ago."
Nowadays the rituals which
the daba are still invited to carry out are the following:
to send, during the funeral, the soul of the deceased to Sibuinawa,
land of origin of the Na, so that it may join the ancestors of the
lhe; to purify the bodies of all the members of a household
to protect them from illness; to carry out the offerings to the
water spirit; to recall a terrified soul; to conquer Nati - a demon
who is particularly harmful to pregnant women; and to remove impurity
from the body of a sick person.
It should be underlined
that amongst these rituals, it is only for funerals that the villagers
really insist on inviting a daba. When a lhe cannot
obtain the presence of a daba, they always find someone,
from their village or from a village nearby, who is familiar with
the rituals. For other rites, the villagers only invite a daba
according to their finances and his availability, otherwise they
carry out the rites themselves. For example, the annual service
of offerings to the ancestors for each lhe is always carried
out by the head of the household (male or female).
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