The various Palaung groups of Myanmar live in Shan State. Some are located in the northwestern corner around Tawngpeng, while others live as far south as Kengteng.
Most likely the Palaungs immigrated to Myanmar before the Shan who came from China during the twelfth century. The Palaung cluster consists of several smaller groups including the Rumai Palaung, the Riang-Lang, the Golden Palaung (or Shwe), and the Silver Palaung, each of which speaks its own language. Some groups are bilingual, speaking their own dialects at home, and either Burmese or Shan while in official, literary or religious circles.
Myanmar has a long history of coups, wars, and rebellions. Ethnic divisions and political unrest have been common since the first Burman kingdom in the eleventh century. This has affected all ethnic groups, including the Shwe Palaung community.
Today, the Burmese military maintains forcible control over the ethnic groups, such as the Shwe Palaung, who want equal importance in the government and in commerce. The Shwe Palaung often find themselves innocently, but forcibly, involved in much of the conflict.
The Shwe Palaung live in villages together with other ethnic tribes, such as the Shan or the Burmese. Over the years, the Shwe Palaung have steadily assimilated through intermarriage. Since there are no Palaung traditions forbidding inter-tribal marriages, Palaung-Shan marriages are particularly common. This explains why the Shan have had the greatest amount of cultural influence over them.
The Palaung are farmers. They raise rice, grains and vegetables by using the "slash and burn" method. Unfortunately they also grow opium, an addictive drug that brings in both wealth and dangerous criminal activity.
Among the Shwe Palaung, extended families live together in oval-shaped, bamboo houses that are raised on posts about six feet above the ground. Some are up to 100 feet in length and contain numerous families. Their diet is predominantly vegetarian.
Shwe Palaung social culture is a hierarchy based on age, gender and wealth. The Myanmar constitution dictates the political organization which is an unbroken line of administrative authority from the prime minister down to the village headman. The community, which elects a single headman, is accounted for in the national census as a territorial unit and accessed taxes. For the common Shwe Palaung citizen, the government is one of five traditional enemies along with fire, famine, flood and plague.
Buddhism was introduced into Myanmar in the fifth century and today, most of the Rumai Palaung are Buddhists. However, they have also maintained their ethnic animist religion which is a system of beliefs based on evil spirits called nats. The Shwe Palaung believe that while all of the nats are inherently evil, some are more evil than others. One must spend their life trying to appease the nats. If the nats are pleased, the people will have a bountiful harvest and good health. If favor is not found with the nats, the people may be subject to great harm. The Shwe Palaung believe that these spirits can do almost anything in nature, such as prevent floods and other natural disasters.
The Shwe Palaung have been tremendously affected by the fighting and bloodshed of the past. They need healing and new spiritual hope.
Pray that the Lord of the harvest will send dedicated laborers into Myanmar to share Christ with the Shwe Palaung.
Ask God to protect and encourage the small number of Shwe Palaung believers.
Pray that Shwe Palaung Christians will be a clear witness to their people of God's goodness and grace.
Ask the Holy Spirit to soften the hearts of the Palaung towards the gospel.
Ask God to create a hunger within the hearts of the Shwe Palaung to know the truth.
Pray for many fellowships of Christian believers to be raised up among the Shwe Palaung.
Scripture Prayers for the Palaung, Shwe in Myanmar (Burma).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palaung_people
Profile Source: Joshua Project |