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  2. Textiles show history of Secret War in Laos, and how women ...

    www.aol.com/news/textiles-show-history-secret...

    For generations, the women of rural Laos have told the stories of their lives through weaving, threading symbols like flowers, rainstorms and mythical serpents into everyday clothes and fabrics.

  3. Plumeria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plumeria

    Plumeria alba is the national flower of Laos, where it is known under the local name champa or dok champa. In Bengali culture, most white flowers, and in particular, plumeria (Bengali, chômpa or chãpa), are associated with funerals and death. Indian incenses scented with Plumeria rubra have " champa " in their names.

  4. Women in Laos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Laos

    Many rural Lao women undertake a variety of semi-formal roles in their communities, including handicrafts, commerce, public health, and education, in addition to their traditional roles as homemakers and the caretakers of children. In the cities and at the government level, Lao women are underrepresented, particularly in high-level positions.

  5. Curcuma alismatifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curcuma_alismatifolia

    Curcuma alismatifolia, Siam tulip or summer tulip (Thai: ปทุมมา, RTGS: pathumma; กระเจียวบัว, RTGS: krachiao bua; ขมิ้นโคก, RTGS: khamin khok) is a tropical plant native to Laos, northern Thailand, and Cambodia. [2][3] Despite its name, it is not related to the tulip, but is a close relative of ...

  6. Sbai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sbai

    Lao women wearing colorful sabai or phaa biang in traditional dance. In Laos, this garment is known as phaa biang or sabai. It is common for Lao women to wear sabai as it is considered traditional clothing. A sabai can also be worn by men in weddings or when attending religious ceremonies. The type of sabai typically worn by Lao men often has ...

  7. Phra Mae Thorani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phra_Mae_Thorani

    Images of Phra Mae Thorani are common in shrines and Buddhist temples of Burma, Cambodia, Thailand and Laos. According to Buddhist myths, Phra Mae Thorani is personified as a young woman wringing the cool waters of detachment out of her hair to drown Mara, the demon sent to tempt Gautama Buddha as he meditated under the Bodhi Tree.

  8. Marisa Darasavath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marisa_Darasavath

    Darasavath was born in Vientiane in 1972. [2] A keen artist from a young age, developing an interest in Japanese animation, in 2008 she graduated from Laos's National Institute of Fine Arts. She attended the Fukuoka Asian Art Triennale in Japan in 2009 and has exhibited in Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Bali. In 2011 she showcased her works for two ...

  9. Culture of Laos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Laos

    Laos developed its culture and customs as the inland crossroads of trade and migration in Southeast Asia over millennia. As of 2012 Laos has a population of roughly 6.4 million spread over 236,800 km 2 (91,400 sq miles), yielding one of the lowest population densities in Asia. Yet the country of Laos has an official count of over forty-seven ...