Devotees
cleansed of bad luck at Thai resurrection
temple
By AFP
January 18, 2016
NONTHABURI, THAILAND: Eyes closed and gripping a
bouquet of flowers between his palms, Kriangsak Puangsarn quietly
prays before lowering himself into a coffin.
As Buddhist monks draw a
sheet over the top of the casket, shrouding him in darkness, he
undergoes a symbolic death, before the sheet is removed — and he is
reborn. “While I was lying down, I felt as if I had been
resurrected once I felt the movement of the cloth,” he told
AFP.
Ever since monks first
began performing this ritual in 2008, dozens of people have been
coming each day to Wat Ta Kien temple, around an hour from Bangkok,
looking for the chance to start again. The ceremony aims to rid
participants of bad karma and help reconcile them to the
inevitability of death.
“People cannot escape from
being born, getting old, getting ill and dying, so this is like
practising dying before you die for real — as when you die, your
body has to be put in a coffin anyway,” says the temple’s chief
abbot, Phrakru Samusangob Kittiyano.
Monks hold around twelve
sessions per day, with the weekends by far the most popular. Around
twenty people can take part in each ceremony at a time and there is
even an extra-large coffin reserved for entire families.
After reciting prayers,
participants line up in front of their casket. Once the order is
given by a microphone-wielding monk, each person lies down in his
or her coffin.
Bright pink sheets are
draped over the coffin and then removed to symbolise death and
rebirth in a ritual that lasts barely a minute. The coffins are
paid for with donations by the faithful, who hope to improve their
karma by donating to the temple.
After a year, they are
replaced, with the old coffins given to poor bereaved families. “My
friend told me about it after she saw that I had been having bad
luck lately”, 25-year old Voravan Satienlerk, who was visiting for
the first time, joined by a gaggle of friends, told AFP. “I believe
that laying down in this coffin will make my life improve,” she
added.