Yama Zatdaw, unofficially Myanmar’s national epic, is the Burmese version of the Ramayana. There are nine known pieces of the Yama Zatdaw in Myanmar. The Burmese name for the story itself is Yamayana, while zatdaw refers to the acted play or being part of jataka tales.
Ramakien (Thai version of Ramayana) into the epic. Rama sā-khyan, one of the well known literature in Burma, is believed to be composed in 1775 by U Aung Phyo which begins with Bala kanda and ends at Yudha kanda as in Valmiki‘s Ramayana.
There are also important Burmese literature and classical music related to the Ramayana which were developed in that era such as U Toe‘s Yama yakan (Rama’s song) and Thida yakan (Sita’s song), both written in 1784; Yama pyazat (Ramayana ballet, in 1789; and Kalay Yama wuthtu (Young Rama’s life) in 1800.[1]
The ethnic Mon adaptation of Ramayana is known as “Loik Samoing Ram” which was written in 1834 AD by a Buddhist monk named Uttama. It is evident that “Loik Samoing Ram” is mainly derived from Burmese version as the author of the Mon version stated in his preface that due to the popularity of Burmese version in the capital. [2]
The characters of Yama Zatdaw share the same features and characteristics as those in the original story. However, in acting, the costumes are a mixture of Bamar and Thai elements. The names of the characters, in general, are Burmese transliterations of the Sanskrit names.
- Rama is known as Yama (ရာမ).
- Sita is known as Thida (မယ်သီတာ).
- Lakshmana is known as Lakhana (လက္ခဏ).
- Hanuman is known as Hanuman (ဟနူမာန်).
- Parashurama is known as Pashuyama (ပသျှူးရာမ).
- Ravana is known as Yawana (ရာဝဏ) or Datha-giri (ဒဿဂီရိ).
- Vali is known as Bali (ဘာလိ).
- Maricha is known as Marizza(မာရဇ).
- Vibhishana is known as Bibi-thana (ဘိဘိသန).