Monday, 19 July 2010

Chau Chau Kang Nilda: Spitian Folklore

This is a story of Chau Chau Kang Nilda the peak behind Langza village. Chau Chau means little girl or princess, Kang is a snow-capped mountain, Ni or Nima means sun and Da or Dawa means moon. So this is the princess mountain on which the sun & moon shine.

[caption id="attachment_665" align="aligncenter" width="425" caption="Langza village and C C K Nilda in Background"][/caption]

This story starts years ago. Langza village gets its water from this mountain’s stream so every summer someone was sent to check the stream and remove any obstacles. They also had to watch over the stream through the season.
One day Landup was sent to check the stream. Landup was a lazy man & rather enjoyed playing his lute. So off he went to the base of the mountain. After he had checked the stream he sat down by it to play his lute and was soon lost in its music.

After finishing his piece he opened his eyes to find a beautiful woman standing before him. She stared at him transfixed and slowly said. ‘Landup I love your music would you play for me again.’
Landup couldn’t say no to such an ethereal beauty so he started to play again.

The beauty told him after he finished that she was the Chau Chau Kang Nilda fairy & she would like him to come often and play. Landup agreed and left at the end of the day. From then on he kept trying to get the job to check the stream. Over the season they fell in love and continued to see each other during the summers that followed.

It was during the winter a few years later that a drunk Landup was lazing about. His wife saw this and reminded him of some work he had to do. Drunken Landup got upset and shouted back that he rather be with the Chau Chau Kang Nilda fairy who didn’t ask him to work. To this his wife asked him to stop dreaming but by then Landup had passed out.
In the morning Landup woke up covered in boils & pain. He then remembered what had happened the night before & also remembered that the fairy had asked him never to mention her.

Now he was really worried, the boils marred his handsomeness & he tried everything through winter to be rid of them. But nothing worked.

As soon as summer came & he was no longer house bound he ran to the stream. He played his lute, called out, cried & even screamed but the fairy didn’t come. He never saw her again. And every time he went near the mountain the weather turned nasty & he had to turn back.

[caption id="attachment_675" align="aligncenter" width="425" caption="Chau Chau Khang Nilda in a bad mood"][/caption]

Even today when a man tries climbing up Chau Chau Kang Nilda the weather turns nasty. It is said the fairy is still nursing her broken heart and will not let any man come near her.

Credits:
Story - I first read this story in Spiti Through Legend And Lore by Kishore Thukral and then heard variations from locals in Spiti.

3 comments:

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Freya Fatema Rehman, Freya. Freya said: Chau Chau Kang Nilda: Spitian Folklore http://bit.ly/a0Hgpd [...]

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  2. Dont u see the similarity in this folklore Chau Chau Kang Nilda& Chandra Tal ;-)

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  3. Oh yes... It was one of the first things I noticed when I heard/read some of these stories... Similarities; almost all have -
    1. Fairies
    2. Lazy men
    3. Music

    Does all folklore from one place usually have similarities? Have you seen similarities in other folklore?

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