1. Sea Gypsies' Tsunami Rebuild Curse
A ethnic-moken sea gypsy man walks on a beach after the whole villlage was distroyed by the giant
wave at Surin islands located 60 kilometres for Phang Nga's Kuraburi district, 220 kilometres from
Phuket.
AP
Thailand's Moken tribe -- a small community of fishermen whose elders ordered a hilltop evacuation
just before the tsunami hit -- is rebuilding on a nearby beach. The Moken believe their old home is
cursed because they mistakenly left behind a handicapped boy.
The boy was the only tribe member to die in the waves, which killed more than 157,000 across
southern Asia and 5,300 in Thailand.
Whereas the soaring death toll has touched off calls in the high-tech capitals of the world for a
global tsunami warning system, here on this small island it has strengthened an ancient people's
faith in skills passed down from generation to generation.
Younger Moken seem impressed by the way several elders detected unusual movements in the Bay
of Bengal on Dec. 26 and warned villagers to seek safety on a hilltop before the tallest of three
waves hit the island following a 9.0-magnitude earthquake in the Indian Ocean.
The tsunami swallowed the Moken's beachside village of several dozen wooden houses on stilts and
destroyed many of their precious boats. A new village is already being built -- as close to the shore as
before but not on the same beach.
"We will build a new village in Bon Yai beach because there is a person who died in Bon Lek beach,"
said Moken headman Salama Klatalee, referring to the boy left behind.
Likewise, the death of several Moken from cholera several years ago prompted a similar move, that
village also having become taboo, said Pantjaporn Panklin, an official of the Care International
Foundation, which is helping the Moken rebuild.
There are some 200 Moken living on South Surin Island, one of several groups of so-called sea
gypsies in Thailand and Myanmar. They are darker than most Thais, with curly hair and bushy
eyebrows.
For centuries, the Moken spent several months of the year -- the monsoon season -- plying the
Andaman Sea, fishing with nets and spears. They lived in long wooden boats that were big enough
for whole families and partially covered by canvas roofs. Occasionally, they stopped on islands to sell
their catch, buy food and get water. The rest of the year they lived in their elevated homes along the
shore, still surrounded by water at high tide.
The Moken are animist -- a belief in the existence of individual spirits -- and worship the sea. Every
year during the full moon of the fifth lunar month, they stop working for three days and nights to
feast, dance, sing and put themselves into a trance.