Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Thai drumming actors don't hurt?

Thai drumming actors don't hurt?

Doesn't it hurt to be a Thai drumming actor.

Thai drumming is also a culture. Thailand has an International Drum Festival, part of a tourism promotion program, which attracts nearly 1,000 spectators, including Thais and international tourists.

Drum performance artists showed the important role played by different kinds of drum instruments in festivals, weddings, celebrations and other events in their respective countries. With the help of stage performances such as choreography and lighting, accompanied by highly ethnic costumes and dances, the feel-good artists took the audience to experience different drum cultures with distinctive characteristics.

Note:

Thais are accustomed to calling elders they don't know uncle, uncle, aunt, uncle, or grandpa, grandma. Peers also call each other brother or sister. They have been educated by their families since childhood to respect their parents and elders. The school fosters a culture of respecting teachers and being polite to their senior classmates, and teaches students to honor their teachers as if they were their parents.

On the annual Songkran festival, it is customary to sprinkle holy water blessings to one's respected elders and superiors. On the day of honoring teachers, students are expected to worship and pay homage to their own teachers.

The honoring of elders and teachers is related to the society's promotion of the education of knowledge of kindness and repayment of virtues. Thai people do not have a patriarchal culture, and many families are happier to have a girl than a boy. Thai women have achieved equal status with men in all aspects, such as education, the right to vote and be elected.