Irish Independent

How 25-year-old former monk kept trapped Thai schoolboys alive

- Shibani Mahtani Mae Sai, Thailand

THE head coach of the Thai soccer team spent the morning of June 23 preparing his young assistant for an important task: looking out for the boys by himself.

Nopparat Khanthavon­g, the 37-year-old head coach of the Moo Pa (Wild Boars) soccer team, had an appointmen­t that morning. Ekapol Chanthawon­g, his assistant, was to take the younger boys to a soccer field nestled by the Doi Nang Non mountain range, a formation with numerous waterfalls and caves that straddles the Thai-Myanmar border.

“Make sure you ride your bicycle behind them when you are traveling around, so you can keep a look-out,” he wrote in a Facebook message.

Ekapol coaches the younger boys, so Nopparat told him to bring some of the boys from the older team for additional eyes. “Take care,” he wrote.

The hours that followed kicked off a chain of events that has riveted the world: a dramatic search that found the boys alive nine days later, huddled on a small, muddy patch surrounded by floodwater­s, and the subsequent rescue.

Attention has focused on the only adult, former monk Ekapol (25), and the role he has played in both their predicamen­t and survival.

As efforts got under way to extract the boys, some chided Ekapol for leading the team into the cave. A large warning sign at the cave’s entrance raises the risk of entering so close to the monsoon season,

some say, and he should have known better.

But for many in Thailand, Ekapol, who left his life in the monkhood three years ago and joined the Wild Boars as an assistant coach soon after, is an almost divine force, sent to protect the boys as they go through this ordeal. A widely shared cartoon drawing of Ekapol shows him sitting cross-legged, as a monk does in meditation, with 12 little wild boars in his arms.

According to rescue officials, he is among the weakest in the group, in part because he gave the boys his share of the limited food and water they had with them in the early days. He also taught the boys how to meditate and how to conserve as much energy as possible until they were found.

“If he didn’t go with them, what would have happened to my child?” said the mother of Pornchai Khamluang, one of the boys in the cave, in an interview with a Thai television network. “When he comes out, we have to heal his heart. My dear Ek, I would never blame you.”

Ekapol was an orphan who lost his parents at age 10, friends say. He then trained to be a monk but left the monastery to care for his ailing grandmothe­r in Mae Sai in northern Thailand. There, he split his time between a working as a temple hand at a monastery and training the then newly establishe­d Moo Pa team. He found kindred spirits in the boys, many of whom had grown up poor or were stateless ethnic minorities, common in this border area between Myanmar and Thailand.

“He loved them more than himself,” said Joy Khampai, a longtime friend of Ekapol’s who works at a coffee stand in the Mae Sai monastery.

“He doesn’t drink, he doesn’t smoke. He was the kind of person who looked after himself and who taught the kids to do the same.”

He helped Nopparat, the head coach, devise a system where the boys’ passion for soccer would motivate them to excel academical­ly. If they got certain grades in school, they would be rewarded with soccer gear, such as fresh studs for their boots or a new pair of shorts. The two spent time looking for sponsors and used the Moo Pa team to prove to the boys that they could become something more than their small town would suggest – even profession­al athletes.

“He gave a lot of himself to them,” Nopparat said. “He would ferry the boys to and from home when their parents could not and took responsibi­lity for them as if they were his own family.”

He also kept the boys on a strict training schedule, according to physical education teachers at the school field where they practised. That included biking across the hills that surround Mae Sai.

As the boys continue to emerge – thin, probably traumatise­d, but otherwise well – friends grow worried for Ekapol. He had the boys’ complete trust, and it is unlikely that they would have set off exploring in the cave’s chambers without him.

“I know him, and I know he will blame himself,” said his friend Joy.

On Saturday morning, the Thai Navy posted photos of letters that the group had written to their family and the outside world. Ekapol’s, scribbled on a yellow-stained piece of paper, torn out from a notebook, was brief, but included a promise and an apology.

“I promise to take the very best care of the kids,” he wrote. “I want to say thanks for all the support, and I want to apologise.”

 ??  ?? Left to right: police and military personnel use umbrellas to shield a rescued boy being transferre­d on a stretcher from a helicopter to an ambulance after he emerged from the Tham Luang cave; classmates of the trapped boys at Mae Sai Prasitsart school, close to the caves, pray after their teacher announced that more of the footballer­s had been rescued; and parents of a trapped boy wait for their son to be evacuated. Photos: Reuters
Left to right: police and military personnel use umbrellas to shield a rescued boy being transferre­d on a stretcher from a helicopter to an ambulance after he emerged from the Tham Luang cave; classmates of the trapped boys at Mae Sai Prasitsart school, close to the caves, pray after their teacher announced that more of the footballer­s had been rescued; and parents of a trapped boy wait for their son to be evacuated. Photos: Reuters
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 ??  ?? Ekapol Chantawong (second right) with Wild Boars players
Ekapol Chantawong (second right) with Wild Boars players

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