Mawphlang
Gaurav BhatnagarGaurav Bhatnagar|Guest Contributor|SIGHTSEEING, MAWPHLANG Updated : Jul 1, 2016, 03.33 PM IST
Gaurav Bhatnagar
Gaurav Bhatnagar is a Software Engineer turned Travel Writer and Entrepreneur on Rural, Eco and Offbeat travel. He blogs at www.thespunkytraveler.com, and runs www.thefolktales.com as a Rural Travel organization.
One of the interesting day hikes from MaplePine Farm is to the Mawphlang sacred forest. According to the local folklore, the sacred forest is looked after by Labasa, the deity that transforms into a tiger or a leopard to protect the forest. The pristine cold wind pierced through my tired lungs, energising them immediately while I hiked up to the sacred forest through columns of monolith stones that dotted the meadows. It is advisable to take a local guide who will also tell you about the folklore and will take you inside the forest to show its lush green cover, flowers, medicinal herbs and even carnivorous insect eating plants. We were mischievous to walk into the forest on our own. We stopped on the way when we heard a local priestess chanting inside the forest in Khasi language. Her voice sounded eerie and even our dog stopped in its tracks, turned around and ran away.
There are many sacred forests in East Khasi Hills, but Mawphlang is the most well known. Local communities protect the forests fiercely, and it is said that if you take away anything from the forest you will either fall ill or die. The mystery around sacred forests of Khasi Hills will surely make me go back for more stories.
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