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Gawai Dayak Festival PDF

The Gawai Dayak festival is celebrated yearly on June 1st in Sarawak, Malaysia as both a religious and social festival for the Dayak community. Preparations begin early with brewing rice wine and cooking traditional foods. On the eve of Gawai, ceremonies are held to cast away bad spirits and make offerings. Celebrations include dancing, music, and drinking rice wine at midnight while wishing each other good health and long life. The multi-day festival promotes unity and is an important part of Dayak culture and traditions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
187 views2 pages

Gawai Dayak Festival PDF

The Gawai Dayak festival is celebrated yearly on June 1st in Sarawak, Malaysia as both a religious and social festival for the Dayak community. Preparations begin early with brewing rice wine and cooking traditional foods. On the eve of Gawai, ceremonies are held to cast away bad spirits and make offerings. Celebrations include dancing, music, and drinking rice wine at midnight while wishing each other good health and long life. The multi-day festival promotes unity and is an important part of Dayak culture and traditions.

Uploaded by

Hania Sheikh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GAWAI DAYAK FESTIVAL

The Gawai Dayak festival is celebrated yearly on 1 June in Sarawak, is both a


religious and social festival. Gawaj means ritual or festival and Dayak is a
collective name for the tribes of Iban, Bidayuh, Kayan, Kenyah, Kelabit, Murut
and more.

Tracing its roots back to as early as 1957, the Gawai Dayak festival was
formally gazetted on 25 September, 1964 as a public holiday in place of
Sarawak Day. The first official celebration being on 1 June, 1965, Gawai
Dayak became a symbol of unity, aspiration and hope for the Dayak
community and is an integral part of Dayak social life today.

Preparations for the festival begin early with brewing of tuak (rice wine) and
traditional delicacies like penganan (cakes from rice flour, sugar and coconut
milk). On Gawai eve, glutinous rice is roasted in bamboo known as ngelulun
pulut.

The celebration starts on the evening of 31 May with a ceremony called Muai
Antu Rua (to cast away the spirit of greediness), signifying the non-
interference of the spirit of bad luck in the celebrations. Two children or men
each dragging a chapan (winnowing basket) will pass each family’s room in
the Iban longhouse with each family throwing unwanted articles into the
basket. The unwanted articles are then tossed to the ground from the end of
the longhouse for the spirit of bad luck.

Around 6pm, the offering ceremony known as miring will take place, with ritual
music; gendang rayah being performed beforehand. The feast chief will thank
the gods for the good harvest, ask for guidance, blessings and long life as he
sacrifices a cockerel. Dinner will then be served, while everyone talks and
mingles awaiting for midnight.

At the stroke of midnight, a gong is sounded and the tuai rumah will lead
everyone in drinking the Ai Pengayu (tuak for long life) at the same time
wishing each other ‘long life, health and prosperity’ (gayu-guru, gerai- nyamai).
A procession to welcome the spirits known as Ngalu Petara ensues with a
procession walking up and down the entire length of the longhouse.

The celebration now gets merrier with dancing and traditional music being
played. Others will recite pantun (poetry). Other activities that may follow the
next day include cock-fighting, blowpipe demonstrations and ngajat (dancing)
competitions.

On this day, the homes of the Dayaks will be open to visitors. In the
longhouses, a practice called masu pengabang takes place where guests will
be served with tuak by the host before they can enter the longhouse.

The Gawai Dayak festival may last up to several days, with visitors being
welcomed to the homes of the Dayaks throughout the festival. It is also this
time of year that many Dayak weddings take place, as it is rare for all
members of the community to assemble at the longhouse at one time.

In Sarawak’s capital city of Kuching, the festivities and celebrations of the


Gawai Dayak commence even a week before with enchanting street parades
and cultural activities. On the eve of the Gawai, a beauty pageant is held
crowning several Gawai Queens, one for each Iban, Bidayuh and Orang Ulu
communities.

Some notable places to visit during the Gawai Dayak festival are The Skrang
River, The Lemanak River, Batang Ai and Annah Rais.

Gawai Dayak is one of the best times to visit Sarawak as the festivities are
aplenty and the lifestyle comes alive, embracing visitors within the
celebrations.

For more information regarding the Gawai Dayak Festival, please contact the
Sarawak Tourism Board at +6082 423 600, email them at
[email protected] or surf www.sarawaktourism.com.

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