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Pulau Langkawi (Langkawi Island) |
| Legends
& Folklore |
| Pulau Langkawi is
a legendary island in more sense than one. Other than its wonderful
beaches, its beautiful legends are what draws a visitor to its shores.
The legends are all the more real simply because its people are
convinced of their authenticity. As such, a keen sense of mystique
and mystery surrounds the island and lends charm and intrigue to
an otherwise quiet and calm faade. |
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Once
upon a time, there lived in Pulau Langkawi, a childless couple,
Pandak Maya and Mak Andam, who prayed for a child. Their prayers
were answered when they had Mahsuri, a sweet delightful child
who grew into a beautiful young woman. Being such a beauty,
she had many suitors but she soon married a warrior in her
village. Their idyllic lives were disrupted when her husband
went off to defend their village against attackers. A travelling
poet arrived at the village and Mahsuri was said to have allowed
him to stay at her house. This soon gave rise to the vicious
gossip that Mahsuri was a faithless wife.
Another version claims that
Mahsuri's mother-in-law was jealous of her while others say
that a spurned suitor was behind the treachery. Yet another
version says that the village headman was so enamoured of
Mahsuri, that he tried to make full use of her husband's absence
to his advantage. Needless to say, his wife was not amused
and plotted to have Mahsuri punished and done away with. Hence,
she accused Mahsuri of being an adulteress, an offense puniDespite
her parents' pleas and the cries of her child at her skirts,
Mahsuri was dragged away and tied to a tree. Vehemently protesting
her innocence, she begged for mercy, but the villagers, under
the influence of the headman's wife, gave her no quarter.
The people really should have believed her when all the spears
that they threw at her fell harmlessly at her feet. They were
baffled but still convinced that Mahsuri was guilty of wrong-doing.
They would not release her no matter what. shable by death.
Finally, Mahsuri, having
resigned herself that only her death would appease them, told
them how they could kill her. She would only die by the blade
of the ceremonial sword kept at her home. Someone was sent
to fetch it and legend has it that the sky became overcast
and there was thunder and lightning as Mahsuri was fatally
stabbed. It is said that Mahsuri bled white blood, symbolising
her innocence and purity, and with her dying breath, she laid
a curse on Pulau Langkawi and its inhabitants, proclaiming that
they would know no prosperity nor progress for seven generations.
Soon
after her death, Pulau Langkawi was attacked by the Siamese. To
prevent the invaders from getting the upper hand, the villagers
poisoned their wells and burnt their padi fields, which effectively
put an end to their food supply and means of income for the
coming year. The evidence of this burning can still be seen
today, two hundred years later, as charred and blackened rice
grains surface from the ground especially after it rains heavily.
Do you not think it strange that the rice grains have not
turned into soil after so long? Some things have to be seen
or experienced first-hand to be believed. |
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| Of
Clashing Clans, And Pots and Pans…. |
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| On a lighter note, do
you know what happens when two families get together to celebrate
their children's wedding, then disagree and tempers flare?
Why, they have a food fight, the crockery flies and tourist
attractions are born; well, at least in Pulau Langkawi anyway.
Once, there were two influential
families in Pulau Langkawi and they were all set to become even
more powerful when their children decided to get married.
However, during the celebrations, there was a disagreement;
things got rough and literally out of hand, when they started
fighting and throwing things. As it was supposed to be a wedding
celebration after all, it would not have been surprising that
there were no weapons. So the clans used whatever they could
get their hands on and that meant the food and crockery. Each
flung whatever they could at the other.
As a result, visitors to
Pulau Langkawi today get to visit the main town of Kuah, which is
Malay for gravy. This is where the gravy was believed to have
been spilled and where it seeped into the ground, Kisap (seep)
is the name of the place. Where the hot water was believed
to have splashed, there spouted hot springs and was subsequently
named Telaga Air Hangat, literally, Hot Water Wells and no
prizes for guessing that there is a place named for all that
broken crockery - Belanga Pecah. As for the two patriachs
who started this ancient food fight, they have been turned
into two of the island's major mountains so that they can
always see the results of how their rashness had scarred the
unmarked beauty of Pulau Langkawi. |
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On
the neighbouring island of Pulau Dayang Bunting, there is
a cave so deep and dark that no one dares to venture in. People
today claim that thousands of bats live in it but the local
people of yesteryear would not set foot there, not even for
all the riches in the world. They are convinced the cave is
home to a female vampire called the langsir, which, after
having lured men to its lair, would suck their bodies dry
of blood. No one would go near Gua Langsir, for they believe
that the eerie sounds that come from the depths of the cave
are the cries of the banshee and it is enough to make their
blood run cold and their hair stand on end…. |
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| And
Then Fairies And Babies. |
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| On Langkawi island itself,
there is a magical looking-place which has seven pools, one
after the other on the face of a hill. This was believed to
have been where the fairies came to bathe. It is believed
that the unique lime trees and the sintuk, a climbing plant
which has large pods, that grow around the pools were left
behind by the fairies and locals who visit the Telaga Tujuh
waterfalls often use them to wash their hair in order to cleanse
themselves of bad luck.
Pulau Dayang Bunting also
has a legend about fairies. On this island, there is a beautiful
lake, with tranquil waters, often hidden from view by thick
foliage and the lack of a good guide - its existence lost
to humankind until fairly recently. The local people had long
known of its existence but could not find their way there.
Surrounded by lush tropical forests, the silence broken by
the occasional sounds from the exotic birds that live there,
this lake is reputed to have been the bathing spot for a fairy
princess and her handmaidens.
Unable
to resist the lure of the clear inviting water, the princess
would descend from her home and bathe there with her retinue.
One day, a villager - a mortal man - chanced upon them and
promptly fell in love with the princess. After they left,
he watched and waited for them to return. When they finally
came back, he hid in the undergrowth and when they were safely
in the water, he took the princess' discarded clothes and
hid them. Naturally, she couldn't return to her home and agreed
to marry the man. Then one day, she discovered her husband's
deception and heart-broken, she left him. But before returning
to her world, she went to the lake once more and blessed it,
saying that any woman who wanted a child could get her wish
fulfilled after drinking water from the lake.
This legend gained credence
when it was said that a couple, childless after almost twenty
years of marriage and not for lack of trying, drank from the
lake. Only then did they have their prayers answered. They
had a baby girl.
Today, a white crocodile
is said to be living in the lake. It is indeed a very lucky
person who manages to get a glimpse of it for it is hardly
ever seen. Guardian spirit or a real albino crocodile, no
one is able to say for sure but many believe in the authenticity
of this legend that has brought many a despairing couple to
its banks, who have put their faith in the good-will of a
broken-hearted fairy princess who had loved the lake and who
has given Pulau Langkawi another legendary legacy in Tasik Dayang
Bunting, that is the Lake of the Pregnant Maiden. |
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