Phatthalung Province held its annual Nora Teacher Ceremony at Wat Tha Khae in late April, drawing thousands of performers and devotees to honor the UNESCO-recognized southern Thai dance tradition through sacred rituals and artistic performa
In late April 2569, Suchin Wajkij, Governor of Phatthalung Province, presided over the opening of a cultural and religious tourism development project titled "Phatthalung City of Arts: Home of Uncle Nora" at Wat Tha Khae in Muang District, Phatthalung.
Amidst an atmosphere of joy, reverence, and vibrant community spirit, people from all directions—tourists, nora descendants, and devotees of nora masters—gathered to return to their ancestral homeland and participate in the sacred teacher veneration ceremony following ancient traditions.
The Nora Teacher Ceremony at Wat Tha Khae is well-known throughout Phatthalung and neighboring provinces. Descendants of nora lineages return annually to perform inherited rituals. The ceremony represents the pinnacle of nora artistry, and all who revere nora masters must participate yearly as a show of gratitude to ancestors and teachers. This tradition of goodness is passed down to future generations, strengthening virtue in society and promoting peace. It also promotes tourism in the area.
The "Nora Teacher Ceremony at Tha Khae" is not merely a ritual—it is a ceremony of spirit and gratitude, a place of remembrance for nora masters and lineage ancestors. Through significant ceremonies including teacher dances, ritual purifications, hair-cutting ceremonies, and cloth-tying rituals, performers advance toward becoming complete master nora artists. This is the highest ceremony in the nora arts lineage and the heart of faith for nora descendants everywhere, embodied in the saying: "Wherever you are, you must return to pay respects to the teacher at Tha Khae." In 2569, people from all regions participated in the first day's ceremony.
The Nora Teacher Ceremony at Wat Tha Khae is special because it attracts thousands of participants—nora masters, performers old and young, and enthusiasts.
Annual activities include nora house and city establishment ceremonies, teacher invocations, teacher offerings, bodhi tree cloth-tying, shrine dances, ritual purifications, foot-stepping rituals, twelve-step dances, ritual cleansing dances, swan-gliding dances, twelve-verse performances, and sword-swallowing acts.
These activities demonstrate that nora is deeply woven into southern Thai life, blending Buddhist beliefs with Brahmanical traditions and spirit worship, creating rituals passed down through generations.
Nora's beauty—the distinctive performing art of Southern Thailand—gained international recognition when UNESCO registered "Nora: Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity," affirming the value of Thai wisdom to the world. This made the "Nora Teacher Ceremony at Tha Khae" a significant landmark for cultural travelers from both Thailand and abroad.
The ceremony overflows with religious, artistic, and cultural activities set against a warm, simple community atmosphere brimming with northern charm. It reflects Phatthalung as a city of wisdom, arts, and faith, welcoming visitors to experience profound and memorable cultural tourism.
You will fall in love with Phatthalung—the city of faith, the city of arts, the city of enchantment unforgettable.