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Village Wishes for Happiness in North and South Korea - P2/2 (In Korean)
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Today’s
Enlightening Entertainment
will be presented
in Korean,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
Halo loving viewers.
Welcome to
Enlightening Entertainment.
Yesterday,
we explored together
the folk arts of North Korea.
Today,
continuing our program,
“Village Wishes for
Peace and Happiness,”
we’ll introduce
one of South Korea’s
representative kinds of
folk play called Nongak,
which is performed
on the first full moon day
of the lunar calendar.
Nongak, which is also
called “Pungmul”
(farmer’s music ensemble),
“Dure”(communal
labor arrangements) or
“Gut”(shamanic ceremony),
is a form of
communal consciousness.
It is also an exciting game
performed by farmers to
wish for a good harvest
and peace in the village,
as well as to get rid of
negative energy by playing
various instruments.
Nongak has been
one of the essential parts
of our culture, and I see it
as a play and a game,
unlike a performance
but rather like a festival,
which villagers
in the village community
enjoy together.
Nongak can be performed
anytime during the year.
At the beginning
of the year, it is
performed in the hopes
that everything will be
all right over the year.
In spring, it is played to
wish for a great harvest.
During the farming season,
Nongak cheers on
the hard work of farmers.
At harvest time,
it’s performed in gratitude
for the good harvest.
However,
the most crucial time
to play Nongak is
the first month of the year.
In the first month
of the lunar calendar,
all villagers rejoice
in one concerted spirit,
repelling the negativity and
bringing into the village
luck and abundance
for the year.
Now, shall we learn about
the components
of Nongak?
Nongak is composed of
an instrumental part
and a dancing part
where each participant is
assigned a particular role.
The music player
is called jaebi or chibae
and characters
are called jabsaek –
literally translated as
“various colors,” indicating
the characters roles.
The instruments used
in Nongak mainly consist of
percussion instruments
such as kkwaenggwari
(small gong), janggu
(hourglass shaped drum),
buk (drum) and jing (gong),
which blend well
and go together,
leading the flow of rhythm.
People say
that kkwaenggwari
sounds like thunder.
We attach a red cloth
to the stick and fix a string
to the instrument
and hold it
with an index finger
extended out,
and that’s one of
the distinct features.
And kkwaenggwari leads
the other instruments
and its sound is sharp.
Next, let me introduce
the janggu.
The janggu
makes various sounds
because it’s the one
and only instrument
in Nongak
that requires the player
to use two sticks
in both hands.
Gungpyun
(one side of the drum)
makes a low-pitched sound
while Yeolpyun
(the opposite side) makes
a high-pitched sound.
I’m going to play it now.
When the buk
is played solo, it’s played
more elaborately,
whereas when it’s played
in Nongak, it doesn’t play
a fine melody but rather
plays only the big beats.
There’s an instrument that
plays even bigger beats,
and that’s the jing.
The jing that is used
in Nongak is a bit larger
than a normal one,
because it needs to
make a bigger resonance.
And like the buk,
the jing keeps the big beat,
but it plays
even bigger beats.
Say if other instruments
are hit ten times, then
the jing is struck only once.
Let me play it for you.
Apart from these, there is
the sogo, or small drum,
that dances
to the exciting rhythm
and evokes merriment.
There is also the nabal, or
bugle, that signals the start
or an important phase
of the performance.
And Taepyungso,
or conical oboe,
is the only instrument
that plays the melody
in Nongak.
In Nongak,
there are people who don’t
play any instrument but
who dance and play a role.
These people
are called jabsaek.
The head of jabsaek
dances in the front
with a masculine figure
and energetic movements
to lead the Nongak troupe.
There is also a hwadong,
or flower boy,
who wears a red costume
and a straw hat;
and a changbu, or jester,
who dons a blue overcoat.
Apart from
these characters,
there are also: a chorijung,
or Buddhist monk
donning a dharma robe;
a yangban, or aristocrat;
halmi, or
elderly grandmother;
and kakshi, or bride.
These people
dance excitedly
both in the back and front
and mingle with
the spectators
to stir up the atmosphere.
The jabsaek characters vary
depending on the region,
and their costumes,
speech, and actions
are also diverse.
There are people
called jabsaek who
don’t play instruments
but entertain with jokes
and play a part
in bridging people, which
the instrument can’t do.
If all these blend well
into one, then we can say
Nongak is performed
like Nongak should.
Nongak is still loved
by many contemporary
South Korean people.
It’s played in various forms
in school, work places
and clubs.
Why do many people
play Nongak?
I love to mingle with
many people
while playing Nongak
and love to tune in
to the melody
with my own instrument,
and playing Nongak
is a kind of workout
and it’s good for health.
And for the elderly, it’s a
good chance to socialize
with the young people.
So everything about it
is good.
It’s a good exercise and
it helps to release stress.
I love it.
And I have pride in
inheriting our tradition.
Now, we’re going to travel
to Philbong Village,
in Imsil,
North Jeolla Province
to watch Nongak
being performed on
the First Full Moon Day
of the year.
The Philbong Troupe’s
Nongak was designated
as an important
intangible cultural asset
of South Korea in 1988.
Well known for
its 300-year-old tradition,
Philbong Nongak is
one of South Korea’s
five representative
Nongak troupes and has
an active ongoing lineage.
On the First Full Moon Day
when the first full moon
of the year rises,
the whole village
of Philbong
becomes a huge stage
and music is played
from early morning
to late night.
On the First Full Moon Day,
Nongak is performed
in the biggest scale.
When this splendid
festival begins,
many people nationwide
visit the village
and celebrate
the festival together.
After the melody signaling
the start of the full moon
shamanic ceremony
resonates in the air,
the Sangsoe, or leader
of the Nongak troupe,
gives words of blessing.
The people
who have come here
probably will live long
(That’s right!)
and play Gut
(shamanic ceremony)
next year as well. (Yes!)
Now, let’s play the exciting
First Full Moon Gut
together! (Alright!)
The Nongak troupe
first heads to where
there is a dangsan holy tree,
which has protected
the village
for hundreds of years.
Then, with a nonggi flag
and younggi flag leading
the Nongak performance
in front, farmers set off
on an odyssey in the
First Full Moon Ceremony,
together with
the sound of music that
longs for a year of peace
for the village.
Spectators already
dance about together
with the Nongak troupe.
After an exciting,
cheerful melody, they leave
for the village well.
The Nongak troupe
then starts up the music
in front of the well,
praying that villagers
will be healthy
drinking the water and
that the clean water will
never dry up for the year.
Next, leaving the well,
the troupe visits
every single house
in the village.
This is called “madangbari,”
or stepping on the yard,
which is to drive out
the negative force
and pray for blessings
and share good wishes.
After calling on
every house,
the Nongak troupe sets off
for the village square
where the villagers had
set up daljip beforehand.
Daljip is piled up in
the middle of the square.
It’s made of
pine tree branches,
firewood, straw sheaf,
bamboo, etc.,
which villagers bring
from their houses
and put on together.
Building up daljip dozens
of meters high,
they pray that their wishes
will reach the moon.
As the full moon rises,
daljip is lit to burn.
Encircling the daljip
and playing
the great ensemble
of Nongak performance,
the enthusiasm
and atmosphere
of the farmer’s
ensemble ceremony
reaches its peak.
If daljip burns evenly,
people believe
the year will be blessed
with a good harvest.
They also believe
that if they make a wish
looking up to the full moon
at the same time
that daljip is burning well,
the wish will come true.
That’s why
people pray about peace
and make their own wishes
in front of
the flaming daljip while
looking at the full moon.
Today I had a role
of flag holder,
walking in front
holding a flag.
You can enjoy the style
and enthusiasm
of Philbong Nongak
and have fun
along with other folks
and mingle together.
It’s really fun.
I’m here to participate
in the Philbong
Nongak ceremony.
I have been wanting
to see it because
it’s the very famous
First Full Moon Ceremony
in South Korea.
It’s exciting
and well organized.
The Nongak troupe
participating in the
First Full Moon Festival
in Philbong
as well as the thousands
of audience members
get excited and happy
through the enthusiastic
Nongak performance and
rejoice in learning about
the preciousness
of neighborliness
and the lessons of
sharing and cooperation.
The Nongak tradition
has been carried on
up till now
and has settled in as a
pleasant cultural heritage.
We have just explored
the folk arts
of both North Korea
and South Korea
through our two-part series.
May the traditions of the
North’s beautiful dances
and the South’s exciting
percussion playing
continue as bringers of
peaceful and happy times.
Now, coming up next is
Words of Wisdom, right
after Noteworthy News.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
May your life
be as brightly shining
as the first full moon that
blesses the coming year.
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