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film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
Menu
film shop
Ethnographic film catalogue
RAI Film – view on demand
Teaching resources
Prices
RAI film festival
RAI Film Festival 2025
Group rates for RAI Film Festival 2025
Prizes and awards
RAI Film Festival programme 2023
Archive of past editions
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Films
found one film
Directors
“Tsering Lepcha, Dawa”
x
Region
South Asia
1
Country
India
1
Keywords
Dance / Theatre / Performance
1
Religion / Belief / Faith
1
Ritual
1
Directors
Tsering Lepcha, Dawa
1
x
Series
not set
1
Country of production
India
1
Year of production
2007
1
Film
Cham in the Lepcha Village of Lingthem
2007
52
‘
Directed by
Dawa Tsering Lepcha
.
Every winter, over a period of six days, the lamas of Lingthem’s village monastery hold their annual cham. These dramatic ritual masked dances impart elementary Buddhist teachings while providing entertainment to villagers. Their main purpose is to remove obstacles and ward off misfortune for the village, its inhabitants and the monastery. However, for lamas and more serious Buddhist practitioners, these cham and their rituals hold deep philosophical meanings. The dances were beautifully filmed by Dawa Tsering Lepcha in his own village monastery in the Lepcha reserve of Dzongu, North Sikkim. In the course of this village event, the deities who emerge in the period between death and rebirth make their rhythmic appearances followed by the Lord of Death who judges one’s good and bad deeds in the after life. This film is the second produced by the Namgyal Institute of Tibetology as part of its visual anthropology project. This training program for indigenous filmmakers aims to produce a documented video record of Sikkim’s vanishing indigenous and Buddhist cultures. Its primary purpose is to record and preserve the meaning and proper performance of Sikkim’s rituals within their social and economic context.
South Asia
Ritual
Dance / Theatre / Performance
Religion / Belief / Faith
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Dr Cai Hua – Royal Anthropological Institute
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