National Post

Temple’s monks found to be on meth

- Wilawan Watcharasa­kwej bryan pietsch and

BANGKOK • A small Buddhist temple in northern Thailand has been left without monks after the entire monastery was found to have been using methamphet­amine, according to local officials.

Following orders to investigat­e drug use in Phetchabun province, the local sheriff and village headman in Bung Sam Phan subdistric­t, nearly 250 kilometres north of Bangkok, poked around schools, factories and temples in search of drug addicts and dealers so they could be sent for rehabilita­tion.

“As a community leader, I was frightened because I never thought the monks would be addicted to drugs,” said Sungyut Namburi, the village headman. “I never thought that drugs would spread to temples.”

Monks are revered figures in Thai culture; in Bangkok’s metro system, seats are reserved for them alongside pregnant and elderly individual­s. Particular­ly in rural areas outside of Bangkok, monks are trusted advisers, often serving as counsellor­s and role models to the community.

So it was much to Sungyut’s surprise that all four monks in one small temple tested positive for methamphet­amine use when he and the sheriff paid a visit to the monastery Friday. At another small temple, two monks tested positive, he said.

But the writing was on the wall: The monks’ personalit­y and behaviour gave them away as drug users, Sungyut said. Some villagers had tipped him off, telling him to check on temples in the community.

Even the abbot — the head of the monastery, who had served as a monk for 10 years — was found to be using drugs. “When I inspected the abbot’s shelter, I was stunned because it was a mess,” Sungyut said. After the drug tests came back positive, he said, the monks confessed to using drugs. Some of them admitted to being longtime addicts.

The scandal in Phetchabun province comes amid a nationwide crackdown on drugs following a mass killing at a daycare centre in October that left 38 dead, most of them children. The suspect, an ex-police officer, was reported to have been dismissed from the force for methamphet­amine possession.

Niti Rungjaruen­kij, head of the subdistric­t’s administra­tion, said the drug users in the community — including the ex-monks — were enrolled in rehabilita­tion Wednesday. Sungyut noted that the monks had to leave the monkhood first, as having a monk in rehab would be “inappropri­ate,” he said. After they are clean from drugs, he said, they can become a monk again if they choose to do so.

But for now, “the temple is empty” without the monks, Sungyut said.

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