Mae Nak Phra Khanong

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from Mae Nak)
Jump to: navigation, search
Mae Nak Phra Khanong
MNPK-portraits76.JPG
Mae Nak shrine offerings in the inner sanctum:
Portraits of the spirit and folded dresses.
Grouping Legendary creature
Tutelary deity
Sub grouping Undead
Mythology Thai folk mythology
Other name(s) Mae Nak, Nang Nak
Country Thailand
Region Southeast Asia
Habitat Phra Khanong area, Bangkok
File:Shrinetomaenak.jpg
Outer perimeter of the shrine to Mae Nak Phra Khanong at Wat Mahabut.
File:MNPKcanal side74.JPG
Inside the Mae Nak Phra Khanong shrine compound, part facing the canal side.
Mae Nak Phra Khanong shrine, offerings of lotus buds and releasing of live fishes at the Phra Khanong canal.

Mae Nak Phra Khanong (Thai: แม่นากพระโขนง,[1] meaning "Lady Nak of Phra Khanong"), or simply Mae Nak (Thai: แม่นาก, "Lady Nak") or Nang Nak (Thai: นางนาก, "Miss Nak"), is a well-known and popular Thai female ghost. According to local folklore the story is based on actual events that took place during the early 19th century.

Mae Nak has her own shrine, located in a particular place by the Phra Khanong canal in Bangkok.

Legend

As stated by tradition, the events occurred during the reign of King Mongkut. The story is about a beautiful young woman named Nak, who lived on the banks of the Phra Khanong canal, and her undying love for her husband, Mak.

With Nak pregnant, Mak is conscripted and sent to war (in some versions of the story the war is against the Shan tribe, while others are not specific), where he is seriously wounded. While he is being nursed back to health in central Bangkok, Nak and their child both die during a difficult childbirth. When Mak returns home, however, he finds his loving wife and child waiting for him. Neighbors who try to warn him that he is living with a ghost are all killed.

One day, as Nak is preparing nam phrik, she drops a lime off the porch. In her haste, she stretches her arm to pick it up from the ground below. Mak sees it and at last realizes his wife is a ghost. Terrified, he tries to find a way to flee without alarming her.

That night, Mak says he has to go downstairs to urinate. He then runs away into the night.

Discovering her husband has fled, Nak pursues him. Mak sees her and conceals himself behind a Blumea balsamifera (Thai: หนาด; pronounced Nat) bush.[2] According to folklore, ghosts are afraid of the sticky Blumea leaves. Mak then runs to Wat Mahabut temple, which a ghost cannot enter, as it is holy ground.

In her grief, Nak terrorizes the people of Phra Khanong, furious at them for causing Mak to leave her. However, Nak's ghost is captured by a powerful exorcist. Confining her in an earthen jar, he throws it into the canal.

There are differing versions of the rest of the story. In one, an old couple new to Phra Khanong finds the jar while fishing; in another two fishermen dredge up the jar. Nak is freed when they opened it.

Nak is conquered again by the venerable monk Somdet Phra Phutthachan (To Phrommarangsi). The learned monk confines her spirit in the bone of her forehead and binds it in his waistband. Legend says the waistband is currently in the possession of the royal family. Admiral Aphakonkiattiwong, the Prince of Chumphon, also claimed to have had the relic.[3] In alternative version, the monk assured Nak that in a future life she would be reunited with her beloved husband, and thus she voluntarily departed for the afterlife.

Mae Nak's story is still very popular because her undying devotion to her husband inspires people of all ages.

A shrine dedicated to Mae Nak is at Wat Mahabut. In 1997, the shrine relocated to nearby Suan Luang District of modern Bangkok.

An alternative account

Anek Nawikamul, a Thai historian, researched the story and found an article in Siam Praphet newspaper written by K.S.R. Kularb, dated March 10, 1899. Kularb claimed the story of Mae Nak was based on the life of Amdaeng Nak (อำแดงนาก, "Mrs. Nak"), daughter of a Tambon Phra Khanong leader named Khun Si. Amdaeng Nak died while she was pregnant. Her son, worried that his father might remarry and his inheritance have be shared with a step-mother, invented the ghost story. He dressed in women's clothing and threw rocks at passing boats to make people think Nak's ghost had done it. Kularb also suggested that Nak's husband was named "Chum", not Mak. No one knows how true this is, or even it was the same Nak, since it does not agree with the traditional tale. http://www.sarakadee.com/feature/1999/09/nang-nak.htm

The Shrine of Mae Nak

The shrine of Mae Nak stands next to Klong Phra Khanong, at Wat Mahabut, a large temple down Soi 77 off of Sukhumvit Road.

To get there to take the Sukhumvit line of the BTS Skytrain to On Nut, then walk back to On Nut Road Soi 77), on the north side of Sukhumwit.

About 1 km down On Nut, there is a small lane known as Soi 7. Wat Mahabut and the Mae Nak shrine are at the end of Soi 7. You can also reach the temple by boat on Klong Pra Khanong.

The shrine is a low building under large trees with a roof that encompasses the tree trunks. The main shrine has several minor shrines around it.

Offerings

A statue of Mae Nak and her infant form the centerpiece of the shrine. Devotees often make offerings, accompanied by a request for help, generally by women seeking an easy childbirth or for their husband to be exempt from military conscription.

These are usually lengths of colored cloth, wrapped around the trunk of the Bo tree. Other offerings include fruit, lotuses, and incense sticks left in different locations.

Toys for her child and portraits of the ghost are displayed in the shrine's inner sanctum. A collection of fine dresses offered to her are displayed behind her statue.

Offerings are also made at Phra Khanong canal, where fish purchased live at markets are brought in buckets to the edge of the canal and freed. Stalls at the shrine sell toys, fish, lotus buds, incense sticks and garlands for those who wish to make an offering.

In popular culture

The story of Mae Nak Pra Kanong is the subject of many films, television series and printed media.[4] Among these are:

Representations of Mae Nak, sometimes humorous,[24][25] are very common in Thai comic books[26] and animated cartoons.[27]

See also

Bibliography

  • Chutima Pragatwutisarn (ชุติมา ประกาศวุฒิสาร), Evil Woman in a Beautiful Body: Femininity and the Crisis of Modernity in Thai Society, Chulalongkorn University, 2010

Notes

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. หนาด (Blumea balsamifera (L.) DC.) (Thai)
  3. เจนจบ ยิ่งสุมล. (ตุลาคม 2553). ๑๓๐ ปี ไม่มีวันตาย พลเรือเอกพระบรมวงศ์เธอ กรมหลวงชุมพรเขตอุดมศักดิ์. สำนักพิมพ์ DK พับลิชิ่ง. ISBN 978-616-7327-07-5. หน้า 45
  4. Mae Nak movies and TV series
  5. Mae Nak Phra Khanong (1959) poster
  6. Mae Nak Kheun Chip movie poster
  7. Vinyan Rak Mae Nak Phra Khanong movie poster
  8. Mae Nak Khanong Rak movie poster
  9. Mae Nak Phra Nakhon poster
  10. Mae Nak Phra Khanong (1973) poster
  11. Mae Nak Alawat poster
  12. Mae Nak Amerika 1975 poster
  13. Mae Nak Buk To Kiao movie poster
  14. Mae Nak Phra Khanong (1978) poster
  15. Sannya Chai Mae Nak Phra Khanong (1992) poster
  16. Mae Nak Cheu Phi Pop poster
  17. 1990s decade
  18. Ghost of Mae Nak - Movie poster
  19. Nak movie
  20. BangkokPost.com
  21. Rachadalai.com, Maenak Prakanong the Musical official website
  22. Maenak Patha Pop Sam Tua
  23. พี่มากพระโขนง
  24. Mae Nak comic
  25. Mae Nak comic image
  26. Mae Nak comic
  27. Nang Nak Kab 3 Puan

External links