Thais turn out to pay their respects to king a year after his death
Thais have marked one year since the death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej with solemn ceremonies and acts of personal devotion before an elaborate five-day funeral later this month.
Official commemorations of Bhumibol were organised at Bangkok’s Siriraj Hospital, where he died, and at Government House and the royal palace. But many ordinary people showed their respects on the streets, at neighbourhood markets and temples, kneeling before orangerobed monks to perform a Buddhist merit-making ritual.
“You see his achievements on TV sometimes, but now that he has passed we are learning about so many other things he has done for the country,” said Panicha Nuapho, 66, who travelled from a province 330 kilometres (205 miles) north of Bangkok to pay respects at Siriraj Hospital. “This is my final send-off,” she said, weeping.
Outside the hospital, mourners clad in black offered alms to a long procession of Buddhist monks and several thousand packed its grounds, joining nurses and doctors in prayers as monks chanted over loudspeakers.
Bhumibol’s death at the age of 88 after a reign of seven decades sparked a national outpouring of grief and a year of mourning that will culminate with his cremation on 26 October. More than 12 million people, or nearly a fifth of Thailand’s population, have visited the palace throne hall where the king’s body has been kept for the past year.
The reverence Bhumibol inspired was in part the result of decades of work by palace officials to rebuild the prestige of the monarchy, which lost much of its influence after a 1932 coup ended centuries of absolute rule by Thai kings. That effort built an aura of divinity around Bhumibol, who was protected from criticism by draconian lese majeste laws.
But the king was also genuinely adored for his charitable work, personal modesty and as a symbol of stability in a nation frequently rocked by political turmoil.
Thailand’s military government yesterday asked the public to observe 89 seconds of silence at 3:52pm, marking the official time of Bhumibol’s death in what Thai culture emphasises was his 89th year.
At the same time, nine elephants powdered an auspicious white will kneel with their handlers in memory of Bhumibol in the ancient royal capital, Ayutthaya, outside of Bangkok. His son, King Maha Vaj ira longk or nBo din dr a deb ayavar an kun, knelt before a portrait of the late king and Queen Sirikit at Dusit Palace and was expected to preside over ceremonies yesterday.