Tell Me A Story: Rediscovering The Lost Art Of Oral Narrations

Bhutanese author Kunzang Choden is breathing new life into traditional Bhutanese lore through online storytelling videos for children during the lockdown

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Bhutanese author Kunzang Choden is breathing new life into traditional Bhutanese lore through online storytelling videos for children during the lockdown

The storybook Membar Tsho: The Flaming Lake begins in the warm glow of a wood-stove kitchen, where a portly grandmother whips up a story from the beautiful Bhutanese Valley of Tang. “This story was told to me by my grandparents, who had heard it from their grandparents. And now I will tell it to you …” she says, as she takes her grandchildren on a delightful adventure, away from the bustling city of Thimphu, into the pine-forests of Bumthang. Dotted with butter lamps, prayer flags and mystical treasures, the illustrated book immerses you in the ancient traditional art of oral storytelling.

Kunzang Choden, author of the book, mirrors this scene in a video where she narrates the story of Pema Lingpa, to her three-year old granddaughter, CZ. She listens in rapt attention as the legendary figure leaps into the Membartsho Lake, crosses into another realm to reach a mysterious temple and miraculously retrieves a statue of the Buddha and a sealed skull.

The video is part of a series titled Tell Me a Story, the brainchild of Choden—one of Bhutan’s most eminent writers, the first Bhutanese woman to write a novel in English and former co-director of the erstwhile Bhutan Mountain Echoes Literary Festival—and her film-maker daughter, Dechen Roder. Streamed on social media under the production banner of Dragon Kidz, the series was created for young children stuck at home during the COVID-19 lockdown in Bhutan. These six- to seven-minute-long videos are released on a weekly basis. So far four of Choden’s five folktales have been produced.

Tell Me a Story was first conceived by Roder as a way to engage her toddler when the day-care centres in Bhutan closed during the lockdown. While visiting her hometown, Bumthang, Roder struck on the idea of making these short videos of her mother and daughter for other children similarly cooped up at home. Although her folktales have been written in ...

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