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ASIA Monks
Thailand

Monks on vacation at ancient temple ruins.
Pra Vihan temple at Thai-Cambodian border.
Sunday, April 23, 2006
jD MONK-ING AROUND
Being around Buddhist
monks is part of everyday life here in Thailand. If you get up early enough, you
can see them, barefooted, walking the highways and byways to beg for their daily
food from the local population. We have some monks on staff at nearly every
college and university, and one has even been my student.
Every birth, death, marriage, and new-home dedication involves many long hours
of chanting by monks from the local temple.
There's another interesting side of monks. In fact, I thought of a future blog
with the title "Monks are people too." For example, I remember raising my
eyebrows the first time I saw a group of monks sitting on a bench at a bus stop
in Bangkok, all of them smoking. It didn't seem to fit the decorum of a
"religious leader", in my western mind. (I had the same problem watching
Christian Reformed ministers from Holland lighting up their pipes and cigars at
a ministerial meeting in Europe, too.)
A couple years ago, I went with a friend to visit his brother who had recently
become a monk. We entered his little bamboo hut on stilts within the confines of
the temple compound. He was a big man in his 50's, muscled, rough lines in his
face, and a couple of fiery-looking dragons tattooed onto his forearms. All
this, cloaked in the saffron robes of a monk, seemed incongruent.
After a short visit which involved my friend bringing food and cigarettes to his
brother, I asked him in the pick-up truck on the way home, "What did your
brother do before he became a monk?"
"Nothing much. He bounced from job to job, while mostly gambling, drinking, and
womanizing." End of conversation. I could only surmise that entering the
monkhood was his way of personal reformation.
Or was it?
Here
in Thailand, a British expat teacher's former student was recently admitted to
the monkhood of a local Buddhist temple. Three months into the student's monkdom,
the teacher visited his former student, and
here's the eye-popping account of the kid's daily life.
Please don't mistake my tone here, as merely blasting Buddhism. We all know
there are charlatans and counterfeits in every religion. (Yup, Christianity has
its Jimmy Swagarts, Jim Bakkers, and medieval dueling popes). However, it does
stand in contradiction to my impression of a monk's life up to now. It just
might shake up your impression too.
And the Adventure Goes On
jD
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