The Borneo Post

Thai cave boys ordained as Buddhist novices to honour dead rescuer

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BANGKOK: Eleven boys from a soccer team, rescued from a flooded Thai cave in a drama that gripped global audiences, were ordained as Buddhist novices yesterday at a temple in Chiang Rai in memory of a volunteer diver who died during their rescue.

The boys and their 25-year- old coach, Ekapol Chanthawon­g, arrived at the Wat Phra That Doi Tung temple in Chiang Rai’s Mae Sai district dressed in white robes amid light rain and fog.

The group listened to Buddhist chanting before they were given saffron robes to wear during an emotionall­y- charged ceremony that was broadcast live on Facebook by local authoritie­s.

The group had their hair shaved a day earlier in preparatio­n to become novice Buddhist monks.

“Their lives will change now. This experience will help them to appreciate their parents and give them a taste of Dhamma,” Manit

Their lives will change now. This experience will help them to appreciate their parents and give them a taste of Dhamma.

Prakobkit, vice- chairman of the Mae Sai Cultural Council, told local media.

The boys and their coach will live for nine days at a Buddhist temple and adhere to the teachings and precepts of Buddhism, which is Thailand’s main religion.

One of the boys, fourteen-yearold Adul Sam- on is Christian and was not ordained.

An internatio­nal operation to rescue the 12 boys and their coach ended on July 10 when the last of the group was brought to safety from inside the flooded Tham Luang Cave in Chiang Rai.

During the rescue operation, the boys’ families promised that, in return for their safe rescue and in memory of diver Samarn Kunan, 38, the boys would ordain as novices.

Samarn, a former member of Thailand’s elite navy SEALs unit, was the only casualty in the operation to save the boys and their coach after monsoon rains trapped them inside the cave.

At the temple yesterday the boys helped each other to put on their new garments in a ceremony attended by their relatives and Samarn’s wife, Valeepoan Kunan.

The ceremony ended with attendees and temple visitors scrambling to collect pockets of coins scattered into the air — a custom in Thai ordination ceremony to signify giving up worldly treasures — with most catching the pockets in their umbrellas. — Reuters

Manit Prakobkit, vice-chairman of the Mae Sai Cultural Council

 ??  ?? Food and Drug Administra­tion officials check on vaccines for rabies at the Disease Control and Prevention Centre in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province. — AFP photo
Food and Drug Administra­tion officials check on vaccines for rabies at the Disease Control and Prevention Centre in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province. — AFP photo

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