The Daily Telegraph

The quiet hero who kept boys calm with meditation learnt at monastery

- By Jake Fenton

AS THE man who placed his 12 young charges in mortal danger by taking them deep into a mountain cave system, the young coach of the Wild Boars football team could easily be cast as the villain of one of the greatest rescue stories of recent times.

But yesterday, as it was confirmed that all 12 boys had finally been released from the Tham Luang cave system in northern Thailand, 25-yearold Ekapol Chanthawon­g was being hailed by relatives of the boys as the quiet hero of an adventure that so nearly ended in tragedy.

It is still unclear why the young coach decided to lead his boys into the forbidden cave system on the cusp of the rainy season, but when the group did become trapped he demonstrat­ed leadership and maturity far beyond his years.

Using meditation techniques learnt in a monastery where he grew up from the age of 10, Mr Chanthawon­g is credited with keeping the boys calm through the nine-day ordeal as they waited for rescuers to reach them.

When British divers finally arrived on the scene, videos showed the boys looking eerily calm, smiling weakly for the cameras – with Mr Chanthawon­g the weakest of them all after reportedly sharing out much of his own food rations to the boys.

The mother of one of the boys described the picture of calm stoicism as “astonishin­g”, adding that the boys were just “sitting there and waiting”, with “no one crying or anything”, she told The Washington Post.

After losing much of his family, she said the young Ekapol had been “sad and lonely” and had been sent to Mae Sai Monastery to train as a monk. He left to care for elderly members of his family a few years ago, before becoming the Wild Boars’ assistant coach, she said. Local media reports said that Mr Chanthawon­g had trained daily with the team, incorporat­ing the strict schedules he had learned as a monk in order to improve the boys’ physical health. Among the activities were regular cycle rides around Mae Sai, where the boys’ bikes and schoolbags were found chained up at the entrance to the cave 17 days ago.

The young coach was apparently able to communicat­e the techniques of deep breathing and intense concentrat­ion, learnt over long hours in the monastery, to keep the boys from being overcome by their own fears and feelings of isolation.

The boys also attended a school where the pupils are 95 per cent Buddhist and where basic meditation is part of the curriculum.

Nopparat Khanthavon­g, the team’s 37-year-old head coach, chose to praise, not chastise, his young assistant, saying that he had taken “responsibi­lity for them [the boys] as if they were his own family”.

One of the first things the coach did after rescuers reached the group was to write a letter of apology to the boys’ parents for leading the excursion into the cave. But the parents replied: “We just want you to know this is not your fault. We all here don’t blame you and we are here supporting you.”

The mother of one of the boys in the cave added: “If he hadn’t gone with them, what would have happened to my child?”

 ??  ?? Ekapol Chanthawon­g has been praised by parents for his leadership and maturity
Ekapol Chanthawon­g has been praised by parents for his leadership and maturity

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