Practices Laid to Waste: Symbolic Classification, Healing and Pandemic Ritual Transformation in a Bhutanese Village
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22439/cjas.v43i1.7628Keywords:
Bhutan, COVID-19, Waste, Discard Studies, Mediumship (nejom/pawo), Religious Transition, Vajrayana BuddhismAbstract
This report from the field in the form of a photo essay explores the shifting religious landscape of Ketokha, a village in the Chhukha district of southwestern Bhutan. Historically, Buddhist and shamanic traditions coexisted in Ketokha, negotiating varied positions of power, influence and healing. The nejom (female medium) and pawo (male medium) played pivotal roles in ritually protecting the villagers’ health and prosperity until 2018, when, with infrastructure development and through modernist discourses, Buddhism became the dominant religion and mediumship was discontinued. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated this transformation, marked by the decline of shamanic traditions and the establishment of a refashioned protective ritual called Aum Bogum as the primary marker of the community’s ritual identity. This report focuses on this ritual and the life story and perspectives of 94-year-old Tandin Om, the then oldest living nejom, and examines the laying to waste of the community’s archaic shamanic practices. Using insights of Discard Studies that treat waste as a system of symbolic classification and moral politics, this essay unpacks the marginalisation of elderly ritual practitioners as community elites propagate the adoption of what they consider a more progressive socio-religious order of Vajrayana Buddhism. The photographs document elements of these shifts, offering visual cues of Ketokha’s changing community and ritual lives.
References
Bauman, Zygmunt 2004. Wasted Lives: Modernity and Its Outcasts. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Cho, Yasmin 2024. ‘Foreword: A Short Note on Buddhism (or Religion) as Infrastructure’. Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies 42 (1): 5-10. https://doi.org/10.22439/cjas.v42i1.7330.
Chophel, Dendup 2020. The Picnic Makers of Bongo: Developing Rituals and Ritualising Developments in a Transitioning Frontier Bhutanese Community. PhD dissertation, The Australian National University. https://doi.org/10.25911/QV2E-J324.
Chophel, Dendup 2024. ‘Multiple Voices and a Single Body: Spirits’ Embodiment, Speech, Discourse and Historiography in an Old Ritual Community of Bhutan’. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft 19 (2-3): 175-198. https://doi.org/10.1353/mrw.2024.a957210.
———. 2024. ‘Multiple Voices and a Single Body: Spirits’ Embodiment, Speech, Discourse and Historiography in an Old Ritual Community of Bhutan’. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft 19 (2-3): 175-198. https:// doi.org/10.1353/mrw.2024.a957210.
Crowder, Jerome W. and Elizabeth Cartwright 2021. ‘Thinking Through the Photo Essay: Observations for Medical Anthropology’. Medicine Anthropology Theory 8 (1): 1-13. https://doi.org/10.17157/mat.8.1.5110.
Dorji, Tandin 2007. ‘Acquiring Power: Becoming a Pawo (Dpa’ Bo)’. In Ardussi, John and Françoise Pommaret (eds.) Bhutan: Traditions and Changes. Proceedings of the Tenth Seminar of the IATS, 2003. Leiden: Brill, pp. 53-64.
Dorji, Tandin and Bjørn Melgaard 2012. Medical History of Bhutan: Chronicle of Health and Disease from Bon Times to Today. Thimphu: Centre for Research Initiatives.
Gerke, Barbara 2024. ‘Sowa Rigpa, Vajrayana Buddhism, and COVID-19 Vaccines in India and Bhutan’. Asian Medicine 19 (1): 164-189. https://doi.org/10.1163/15734218-12341553.
Liboiron, Max and Josh Lepawsky 2022. Discard Studies: Wasting, Systems, and Power. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Nyenda, Sonam 2016. Kangsöl: A Vajrakīla Performance Tradition of Sumthrang Monastery in Central Bhutan. MA thesis, University of Colorado at Boulder.
Ortner, Sherry B. 1995. ‘The Case of the Disappearing Shamans, or No Individualism, No Relativism’. Ethos 23 (3): 355-390.
Prien, Johanna 2015. ‘Fieldnotes on my Stay with a Neljom Teacher and her Disciples in Western Bhutan’. Revue d’Etudes Tibétaines 34: 139-151.
Ramalingaswami, Vulimiri, T. A. Subramanian, and M. G. Deo 2001. ‘The Aetiology of Himalayan Endemic Goitre. 1961’. The National Medical Journal of India 14 (3): 180-184.
Reno, Joshua 2022. ‘Does Waste Make Language?’ Journal of Sociolinguistics 26 (3): 418-425. https://doi.org/10.1111/josl.12556.
Tashi, Kelzang T. 2023. World of Worldly Gods: The Persistence and Transformation of Shamanic Bon in Buddhist Bhutan. New York: Oxford University Press.
Tashi, Tshering 2020. ‘Yulsung: Bhutan’s Sensible Tradition of Quarantine’. Kuensel, 21 March, [Online], https://kuenselonline.com/yulsung-bhutans-sensible-tradition-of-quarantine/ (Accessed: 22 December 2024).
Thinley, Sangay, Dendup Chophel, Thinley Namgyel and Barbara Gerke 2025a. ‘Remembering Ritual Life and Epidemics in Ketokha, Southwestern Bhutan: Interview with the Female Medium Nejom Tandin Om’. Video recording with English subtitles. Vienna: Phaidra (the repository for the permanent secure storage of digital assets at the University of Vienna). https://doi.org/10.25365/phaidra.702.
———. 2025b. ‘Pandemic Ritual Transformations: Reviving a Village Ritual for Community Protection in Ketokha, Southwestern Bhutan (Interview with Tsip Dawa)’. Video recording with English subtitles. Vienna: Phaidra (the repository for the permanent secure storage of digital assets at the University of Vienna). https://doi.org/10.25365/phaidra.701.
Tshering, Dawa and Tseten Tshering 2018. ‘An Account of Ketokha Lhakhang (Video with English transcription)’. MANDALA Audio-Video. Tibetan and Himalayan Library. 10:43 minutes. https://av.mandala.library.virginia.edu/video/account-ketokha-lhakhang.
Wangchuk, Rinzin 2005. ‘Bonism and Shamanism: An Integral Part of Bongo’s Culture’, Kuensel, 6 April, p. 5.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Dendup Chophel, Barbara Gerke and Sangay Thinley

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
