Lables:
Brau ethnic group, Ethnic Groups, Mon-Khmer Group
Other names:
Brao.
Population:
231 people, (1999 census).
Language:
Brau language belongs to the Mon-Khmer language group (of the Aus- troasiatic
language family).
History:
The first Brau came to Vietnam about a century ago. They live mainly in
southern Laos and northeastern Cambodia. At present, most Brau communities are
still living in the basins of Xe Xan (Xe ma cang) and Nam Khoong (Mekong)
rivers. The Brau are proud of their traditions, which they recall in such
legends as Un cha dac lep (rising blaze, rising water), about how great floods
were weathered by the Brau people.
Production activities:
The Brau live mainly on widen fields, cultivating sticky rice and ordinary
paddy, corn and manioc. Slash-and-burn agriculture is widely practiced, with
people using digging sticks to make holes into the ground for sowing seeds.
Harvesting is done manually. Hunting and gathering still play an important role
today, which ensures a sufficient daily food supply for the family. In
addition, every Brau village has a black- smiting workshop where agricultural
tools are made. Brau men are skilled in weaving and plaiting. Local people
often barter agricultural and forestry products for clothes and textiles
supplied by other minority groups.
Diet:
The Brau cook ordinary rice in an earthen pot, but use a fresh length of
neohouzeaua (a type of bamboo) to prepare the sticky rice dish called com lam.
They grow corn and manioc as feeds for livestock and poultry. Popular foods
include salt with chili, vegetables, fresh bamboo shoots, fish, and the meat of
certain animals. Can (pipe) wine is enjoyed by both men and women. People of
all ages like smoking local tobacco with a khan pipe
Clothing:
In the past, men wore loin cloths and women wore one-piece long dresses. In
summer, people often left their upper torso naked or wore a short pullover. In
winter, they often covered their bodies with a heavy blanket. A mark of beauty
for Brau women is the stretched earlobe, meant to carry yellow bamboo ornaments
or ivory earrings. Women's jewelry includes wrist-chains and necklaces, often
made of bronze, silver or aluminum. According to Brau customs, boys and girls
who reach the age of puberty (between 15 and 16 years old) must have the four
front teeth of the their upper jaw evenly filed, a deed which fully integrated
them into village life as adults.
Lifestyle:
The Brau live in the Dac Me village of Bo Y commune, Ngoc Hoi district, Kon
Turn province. They live in houses on stilts with steep roofs. The floor of the
house is arranged at different elevations which clearly define the various
activities of the family members. A plank connects the main house with the
adjacent rooms. Brau homes are oriented with their main doors, built below the
gable, opening towards the centre of the village where the communal house
stands. This arrangement results in circle of houses radiating out from the
centre like the spokes of a cart-wheel.
Transportation:
The bamboo- woven back-carrier is the most popular means of. transporting goods
and produce.
Social organization:
The Brau's society is now in an early stage of differentiation between the rich
and the poor. More patriarchal nuclear families are appearing, with increased equality
between men and women. Traces of matriarchy still exist and remain influential
in some places.
Marriage:
The Brau wedding is organized at the bride's home, but the costs are borne by
the bridegroom's family. After the wedding, the husband stays at his wife's
family for about, four to five years, followed by a change of residence to the
husband's family.
Funerals:
When a family member passes away, the funeral host beats the drums and gongs to
inform other villagers of the death. The body of the deceased is placed in a
coffin made from a hollowed-out tree trunk, and put in a makeshift funeral
house erected near the family's home. The coffin is often half-buried in the
ground. A funerary shelter is built over the grave to hold the property
inherited by the deceased. Some of these items will be destroyed through
breaking, piercing or chipping.
Building
a new house: When a new house is finished, the veneration of the village's gods
takes place, followed by a big house-warming party that is attended by the
whole village.
Festivals:
A ceremony for celebrating "new rice" after each harvest time is the
principal festival of the year. It does not have a precise date because it
depends upon the planting schedule, and the timing may vary from family to
family.
Calendar:
As in the past, an agricultural calendar, based on phases of the moon each
month is- used for fixing the schedule for planting and harvesting.
Education:
The communal house in the heart of the village serves as a traditional school
for the village children and youth. It is often run by the village elders. The
students are vocationally oriented and taught about the cultural traditions of
their community, as well as fighting skills to ensure public security and to
protect their own village and customs.
Artistic activities:
The Brau have their own folk songs and tales about the creator-god Pa Xay, the
"Un cha dac lep" legend, and other, songs for celebrating weddings
and lullabies. Popular musical instruments include the klong put (also called
tap dinh bo) xylophone and sets of bronze gongs. The three most important kinds
of gongs are coong, mam and tha which emit different tones.
Games:
The Brau's favorite pastime activities are spinning top, flying
butterfly-shaped kites, swimming in the river, rope tug of war rope seizing,
hide and seek, stick walking, etc.
This
article written by Lanh Nguyen from Travel Agency in Vietnam
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original article, please visit:
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