China Daily (Hong Kong)

101 cremations: the rise of Bangkok’s Buddhist pet funerals

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BANGKOK — Buddhist monks chant next to a pink coffin where Dollar’s small body is nestled among flowers — a $600 final farewell for the Shih Tzu at a Bangkok temple that administer­s elaborate pet funerals.

Dollar’s owner, Pimrachaya Worakijman­otham, fights back tears as she takes a last fond look at her six-year-old pet dog, whose tousled greywhite body rests under jasmine garlands.

“This is the last time I can be with her ... so I want Dollar to receive good things,” said Pimrachaya, dressed in black and wearing sunglasses, a framed photo of “her child” Dollar behind her.

Pet cremations, complete with Buddhist rituals, are popping up across Bangkok for dogs, cats and even monkeys.

In a devout Buddhist kingdom where religion and superstiti­ous beliefs entwine, some pet owners believe the monkled send off will boost their pets’ chances of being reincarnat­ed as a higher being.

According to Buddhist belief, merit garnered in each life eventually leads to nirvana — the state of non-suffering.

“In this life, she (Dollar) couldn’t go to the temples to make merit for herself. This is the only thing we can do for her,” said Pimrachaya.

The trend is not unique to Thailand — Japan is particular­ly fond of lavish goodbyes to its pets.

Catching on fast

But in Bangkok it is catching on fast as Thais increasing­ly see pets as family members.

At least three temples offer daily services, including a monk-led ceremony, cremation and sprinkling of ashes in rivers — the symbolic ritual of returning earthly remains to nature.

Theerawat Sae-Han, the founder of Pet Funeral Thailand, said his company cremates more than 200 animals each month, from cats and dogs, to monitor lizards, snakes and baboons.

“Successful or famous animals like fighting cocks who won the awards will also be brought for cremation,” said Theerawat, a former pet salon owner who jumped into the “good” business of full-blown pet cremation four years ago.

Surging demand for his service also reflects a shortage of public spaces in the capital.

“Before, we buried them in authorised parks or backyards but now it’s rare to find ones in Bangkok,” said Phrakru Samu Jumpol, a monk at Wat Krathum Suea Pla.

Prices start at around 3,000 baht (around $91) and go up to 100,000 baht for the most elaborate ceremonies.

But for pet lovers, the service provides spiritual succor at a time of great pain.

At the end of a ceremony to spread the ashes of her Siberian husky Maprang in November, teary-eyed Tipaporn Ounsiri found cause for optimism.

“If the next life exists, please come back and be my daughter, don’t be born as a pet anymore,” she said.

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