By Mandy Leong and Hasnoor Hussain
KUALA KANGSAR, Malaysia (Reuters) โ As Malaysian Muslims began celebrating Eid al-Fitr after a month of fasting, the sound of cannons echoed through the rice fields of a northern village, in a decades-long tradition heralding the start of the festivities.
Residents of Kampung Talang, 250 km (155 miles) north of the capital Kuala Lumpur, began firing the cannons, known as โmeriam talangโ in the Malay language, in 1937.
โFor us, Eid doesnโt feel complete without the sound of the cannonโฆ Without it, the village feels empty,โ said Amar Ehzan, a 37-year-old villager.
Amar told Reuters the tradition started because the cannons helped scare off wild animals in the surrounding forest and ensure villagersโ safety as they celebrated Eid.
Once made from soil and bamboo, the cannons are now built from steel, Amar said, adding that the villagers use up to 2 metric tons of cobalt to fire more than 80 cannons every year.
โAll the younger generation in the village agree and work together to uphold this cannon tradition,โ Amar said.
โItโs a rare event so the excitement to fire the cannon is there.โ
(Writing by Danial Azhar; Editing by Kate Mayberry)
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