Rare white elephant born in Myanmar: state media | Inquirer News

Rare white elephant born in Myanmar: state media

/ 02:58 PM August 03, 2022

This handout photo taken on August 2, 2022, and released on August 3, 2022, by Myanmar's Military Information Team shows a newborn baby white elephant walking on the ground at Taungup township in Rakhine state. (Photo by Handout / MYANMAR MILITARY INFORMATION TEAM / AFP)

This handout photo taken on August 2, 2022, and released on August 3, 2022, by Myanmar’s Military Information Team shows a newborn baby white elephant walking on the ground at Taungup township in Rakhine state. (Photo by Handout / MYANMAR MILITARY INFORMATION TEAM / AFP)

Yangon, Myanmar — A rare white elephant has been born in western Myanmar, state media said on Wednesday, unveiling what many in the Buddhist-majority country believe to be an auspicious creature.

Born last month in western Rakhine state, the baby weighs about 80 kilograms (180 pounds) and stands roughly 70 cm (two-and-a-half feet) tall, according to the Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper.

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Footage released by state TV showed the tusker tot following his mother to a river and being washed by its keepers, and later feeding from her.

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The mother — a 33-year-old called Zar Nan Hla — is kept by the Myanma Timber Enterprise in Rakhine state, the Global New Light said, adding the baby possessed seven of the eight characteristics associated with rare white elephants.

“Pearl-coloured eyes, plantain branch-shaped back, white hair, a distinctive tail, auspicious plot signs on the skin, five claws on the front legs and four on the back legs and big ears,” the newspaper reported.

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Social media users first posted about the birth of the elephant — which has not been named yet — late last month.

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Historically, white elephants were considered extremely auspicious in Southeast Asian culture, and the region’s ancient rulers acquired as many as they could to boost their fortunes.

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But the ruinous cost of keeping the beasts in appropriately lavish style gave rise to the modern expression in which a “white elephant” is a useless, if beautiful, possession.

There are currently six white elephants in captivity in the military-built capital Naypyidaw, according to state media — mostly from Rakhine state and the southern Ayeyarwady region.

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With Myanmar reeling from a military coup last year and its bloody crackdown on dissent, the reaction of many on social media was muted or sceptical.

“Am I colorblind if it just looks brown to me?” posted one user.

“Elephants were important only in the old eras,” said another.

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“Now the poor elephant will have to go to jail.”

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TAGS: Culture, Elephant, Myanmar, rare animals, world news

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