Las Vegas Review-Journal

Thailand begins king’s elaborate funeral

Somber five-day event rich in cultural history

- By Tassanee Vejpongsa The Associated Press

BANGKOK — Thailand on Wednesday began an elaborate five-day funeral for King Bhumibol Adulyadej with his son, the new monarch, performing Buddhist merit-making rites in preparatio­n for moving Bhumibol’s remains to a spectacula­r golden crematoriu­m.

Thousands of mourners dressed entirely in black have endured tropical heat during the day and torrential rains at night as they waited to enter the historic royal quarter of Thailand’s capital to bid farewell to a monarch celebrated as a unifying symbol throughout his seven-decade reign.

The rites in the ornate throne hall of Dusit palace, where Bhumibol’s remains have been kept for the past year, began the series of ceremonies and procession­s that include his cremation on Thursday evening within a golden edifice representi­ng mystical Mount Meru, where Buddhist and Hindu gods are believed to dwell.

About 250,000 people are expected to line the streets of Bangkok’s royal quarter to witness elaborate gilded procession­s that will be broadcast live.

As orange-robed monks chanted and officials in crisp white uniforms looked on, King Maha Vajiralong­korn knelt beneath a nine-tiered golden umbrella. The ceremony was preparatio­n for the moving of an urn representi­ng Bhumibol’s remains to the crematoriu­m built over the past year.

By tradition, deceased Thai royals have been kept upright in elaborate urns during official mourning. But Bhumibol, who spent much of his early life in the West, opted to be put in a coffin, with the urn placed next to it for devotional purposes.

Bhumibol’s death at age 88 on

Oct. 13 last year sparked a national outpouring of grief and a year of mourning. More than 12 million people — nearly a fifth of Thailand’s population — visited the throne hall at Dusit palace to pay respects.

The adulation Bhumibol inspired was in part the result of decades of work by palace officials to rebuild the prestige of the monarchy, which lost its mystique and power 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 was also respected for his charitable work, personal modesty and as a symbol of stability in a nation frequently rocked by political turmoil.

Mourners are allowed to prostrate when royal procession­s pass but must not shout out “Long Live the King” or hold up cellphones to take photos or selfies.

 ?? Sakchai Lalit ?? The Associated Press Mourners hold up portraits of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej near Grand Palace to take part in the Royal Cremation ceremony Wednesday in Bangkok, Thailand. Bhumibol will be honored in a royal cremation ceremony from Oct. 25 to 29.
Sakchai Lalit The Associated Press Mourners hold up portraits of the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej near Grand Palace to take part in the Royal Cremation ceremony Wednesday in Bangkok, Thailand. Bhumibol will be honored in a royal cremation ceremony from Oct. 25 to 29.

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