       |
The Birman Legend
"At that time there lived, in a monastery
built on the slopes of the Lugh mountains, the Kittah Mun Ha,
the Grand Lama, the most honorable of all the Kittahs
(Khmer-Priests), whose golden beard had been woven by the god
Song Hio... His entire life, all his thoughts, all his glancing
at was devoted to and in the contemplation of the goddess Tsun
Kiankse; Tsun Kiankse was the goddess with the sapphire colored
eyes, the goddess of the transformations of the souls. She had
given to the Kittahs the power to live again, after their
deaths, in the form of a sacred animal. After the animal died,
the Kittah could again be reincarnated as a Grand Priest at
which time he was considered pure and perfect. Next to Mun Ha,
the Grand Lama, sat Sinh, his dear oracle, a w hite
cat with yellow eyes, as yellow as the golden body of the
goddess with the sapphire eyes. The color of the ears, the nose,
the tail and the tips of the paws were of the dark color of the
earth, a symbol of the impurity of all that touches or can touch
the ground....
One evening, in the moonlight, Phoums coming from Siam were able
to approach the sacred place. That moment, Grand Priest Mun Ha
died while praying. Next to him sat Sinh and in front of him
stood the desperate Kittahs.... Then the miracle happened, the
miracle of the transformation of the soul. With one leap Sinh
reached the golden throne and placed himself on the head of his
dead master. It was the first time that the eyes of his master
were not directed toward the goddess.
Without moving, the cat remained in
contemplation of the eternal goddess and suddenly, his hair
turned golden and his eyes deep blue like the eyes of the
goddess. While he was turning his head south toward the
entrance, the four paws turned into a pure white up to that
point where they were covered by the sacred clothes. With a
commanding look, his eyes turned from the south entrance to the
Kittahs who understood the cat's look and immediately rushed to
lock the heavy bronze doors, in which the first robbers already
appeared.... The temple had thus been saved from desecration and
looting. Sinh was still sitting on the throne and on the 7th
day, without moving just once and always glancing at the
goddess, he died. He took the soul of Mun Ha with him in order
to present it to the goddess Tsun Kiankse, because Mun Ha did
not have to live on, he was pure and perfect...
Again 7 days later, the priests assembled in front of the statue
of the goddess in order to choose Mun Ha's successor. While they
prayed, all cats of the monastery assembled there, too, and they
all had turned golden, with blue eyes instead of the former
yellow ones and every single one of them had the sign of purity,
the white paws. Silently, the cats gathered around the youngest
Kittah. The dead Kittahs, reincarnated in the form of the cats
had thus chosen their successor. When a cat dies in the
monastery of Lao Tsun, it is the soul of a Kittah which has been
freed forever and which takes its place forever in the paradise
of Song Hio, the god of all golden things. But woe also to he
who brings about the end of one of these marvelous beasts, even
if did not mean to. He will suffer the most cruel torments until
the soul he has upset is appeased."
from
Harriet Rindfleisch's papers...legend attributed to Sir Russel
Gordon.
|