Shanghai Daily

How does that feel? Thai massage gets global OK

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AT Bangkok’s Reclining Buddha temple Krairath Chantrasri says he is a proud custodian of a 2,000-year-old skill — the body-folding, sharp-elbowed techniques of Thai massage, which this week could be added to UNESCO’s prestigiou­s heritage list.

From upscale Bangkok spas and Phuket beach fronts to modest street-side shophouses, “nuad Thai” — or Thai massage — is ubiquitous across the kingdom, where an hour of the back-straighten­ing discipline can cost as little as US$5.

This week it may be added to

UNESCO’s list of Intangible Cultural Heritage when the body meets in the Colombian capital of Bogota.

Krairath, who teaches at the Reclining Buddha School inside the famed Wat Pho temple, helps thousands of Thai and foreign students who flock to the center each year.

The son of a masseuse, he takes great pride in his role sharing the ancient discipline at a temple whose certificat­ion is a proud banner for any massage shop.

“I’m a continuati­on of our collective knowledge,” said the 40-year-old man.

At Wat Pho’s complex, trainees run through a catalogue of moves targeting the body’s acupunctur­e points with thumbs, elbows, knees and feet also incorporat­ing deep stretches and contortion­s.

Originatin­g in India, these methods were said to have been brought to Thailand by doctors and monks 2,500 years ago, passing its secrets from master to disciple in temples and later within families.

Under Thailand’s King Rama III in the 19th century, scholars engraved their knowledge of the field onto the stones of Wat Pho.

But it really took off in 1962 thanks to the formation of the school, which has since trained more than 200,000 massage therapists who practice in 145 countries.

Massage employs tens of thousands of Thais. The school’s director Preeda Tangtrongc­hitr says they usually see an uptick of interest from Thais when the economy is bad.

“For many people who are disabled or in debt, this job is an opportunit­y because it requires no material — only their hands and knowledge,” he says.

Today, a therapist at a top-end spa can charge around US$100 an hour inside Thailand, two or three times more in London, New York or Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region where the Thai massage brand is booming.

But the training is “demanding,” says Chilean Sari, a profession­al masseuse who traveled to Bangkok to learn the discipline. “The technique is very precise, there are so many things to be aware of,” the 34year-old says.

(AFP)

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