Three menhirs, commemorating the meeting of the three brothers – Okhe (meaning 'Tiger' representing all of the animal kingdom), Orah (meaning 'God' representing all of the supernatural world) and Omei (meaning 'mankind') who, in the Mao mythology, are said to have descended from a common mother. Two menhirs, representing Orah and Omei, stand upright on the eastern side with the third (representing Okhe) on the western side lies flat on the cairn, at Chazhilophi, south of Makhel or Makhrai Rabu,a Mao Naga village in Manipur state of India. Makhrai Rabu is also believed to be the ancestral village of the Nagas who first settled there after years of migration and before further migrating to their present areas of habitation.
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{{Information |Description=Three monoliths, two standing upright on the cairn and one lying in the middle, lie south of Makhel village or Makhrai Rabu, believed to be the ancestral village of the Nagas who first settled there after years of migration. |So