Lamduan Festivals
Read MoreDescendants of generations of proudly independent elephant masters, the mahouts from Surin Province are skilled in the capture and training of these great animals, whose numbers are dangerously in decline. Elephants, once essential to Thailand's logging industry, were also used for transport and in warfare, and a royal white elephant was the symbol that emblazoned the national flag of Siam.
A Suay woman demonstrating the technique of handlooming silk. Silk fragments over 4,000 years old were among the artifacts excavated at Ban Chiang, in northern Isaan, and techniques of silk making have been passed on among Isaan women for countless generations.
Lamduan Festival ThailandSuay in Isaansilk making IsaanSuay in Sisaket
Local musicians playing traditional Isaan music on traditional instruments. The xylophone-like instrument in the foreground is a pong lang.
Lamduan Festival ThailandIsaan musicpong langSuay in Sisaket
Suay dancers performing at the festival. The Suay are also known as Kui or Kuay.
Lamduan Festival ThailandSuay in IsaanSuay dancingSuay in Sisaket
Suay men and women performing the "grasshopper dance"
Lamduan Festival ThailandSuay in IsaanSuay dancingSuay grasshopper danceSuay in Sisaket
Originally a nomadic tribe, the Suay, in addition to Thai, speak a Mon-Khmer language that is distinct from Thai. Today, their highest concentration is in Sisaket Province.
Lamduan Festival ThailandSuay in IsaanSuay dancingSuay in Sisaket
To honor the spirits of their ancestors, at least once a year the Suay perform a sacred ceremony, of which the dancing seen here is a part. More information on this particular ceremony is in the next gallery, "Lamduan Festivals 2."
Lamduan Festival ThailandSuay in IsaanSuay dancingSuay in Sisaket