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They are often referred to as sakai, or slave. To most central Thais, they are known as ngoh, like the rambutan fruit, a derogatory term that refers to their curly hair. But besides that -- and besides being featured in well-known literature -- the people from the Orang Asli community are little known to the wider public. This is despite the 150,000 Orang Asli tribe members -- according to the Centre for Orang Asli Concerns -- still living in the Malay Peninsula.
Descendants of the region's original inhabitants, the Orang Asli ethnic minorities still live on their ancestral lands and have inherited a particularly rich history, customs and crafts.
On Saturday and Sunday, TK Park is holding an exhibition of photographs exploring the community's life and soul.
Dulfitree Cheema, one of the photographers and a curator to this exhibition, explains that the show will serve as a connecting platform for those wishing to learn more about the group's history and current way of life at a time when they are facing dramatic changes -- increasingly pushed out of forests and into cities.
The exhibition, which was previously held at TK Park's Yala centre in the South, will travel to Bangkok this coming weekend, along with installations, performances and seminars. The exhibition will be located in TK Park's library and learning centre on the 8th floor of CentralWorld. Today, most Orang Asli people live in southern Thailand's Yala and Narathiwat provinces, while another tribe has settled down in Phatthalung and Satun.
Who are they? What are their customs and beliefs, and how do they lead their lives? The exhibition will provide some insight into one of Thailand's most well-known but little-understood ethnic minorities.
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