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Temple Tour
Visiting
Buddhist Monasteries, or Wats
Visitors,
both Thai and foreign, are usually welcome inside Buddhist monasteries, and
a visit there can be most informative and interesting. There are scores of
monasteries on Phuket, and virtually every Buddhist community here has a wat
as its traditional cultural centre. So it is acceptable to walk into the
grounds of any monastery on the island during daylight hours. Most close
their doors at night.
Since
these are quiet sanctuaries where monks are supposed to live with the
minimum of material possessions and where they are challenged with the task
of overcoming physical desires, it is expected that women – representing the
physical desire perhaps most difficult to overcome – should act and dress
modestly. A Thai woman would normally not come into the presence of monks
dressed in sexy or revealing attire. Women, therefore should avoid visiting
the monasteries in beach clothes or short pants. Monks are also forbidden to
have physical contact with any woman, or to receive an object directly from
one hand of a woman. To give something to a monk a woman must first place
the object on a table, or mat, and leave the monk to pick it up. Or give it
to a man who can hand it to the monk.
When entering any building within a monastery shoes must be removed. They
can be worn throughout the grounds – unlike in Burma, where shoes must be
taken off when entering any monastery grounds.
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The typical Thai temple is composed of several
parts, including the ‘temple’ itself, called ubosot, in which the most
important Buddha image is usually housed. Identifying this building is easy:
look for short, carved stone pillars buried in the ground around it, one at
each corner, with others in the middle of each side. The ubosot is usually
closed, except on Buddhist holidays (one every 14 days) and perhaps in the
evenings or early mornings when monks may come to chant prayers. When the
monks are doing this laymen may enter the back of the temple hall quietly,
sit down and absorb the holy atmosphere.
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buildings in the typical wat include a cheddi, or stupa, the soaring golden
spire that represents the Buddhist strive for infinity, or the ultimate. A
second temple-like building is often present, and is recognised by the lack
of the holy pillars that surround and sanctifying an ubosot. This my also
contain Budddha images, and will be used for more everyday Buddhist
functions. A sala, or meeting hall, is often present, and is often
distinguished by a lack of walls. This will be used for public gatherings,
and monks may eat their meals here and receive offerings from laymen. The
guthi are the monks’ simple accommodation, and may be built as small
Thai-style homes, often surrounding a raised eating platform.
In
former generations Buddhist monasteries were the site of learning, and had
the only schools in the country. Today the government builds independent
schools, though still today many monasteries contain schools within their
grounds. The monastery at Rawai is a good example of this, and here each
morning hundreds of students parade under the coconut palms in the monastery
grounds.
The Buddhist site most often visited on Phuket is Wat Chalong, a sprawling
temple in the middle of the island with lots of room for tours buses. But
the island has numerous, equally interesting monasteries that can be visited
freely. One of the most curious, with a strange history, or fable attached
to it, is Wat Phra Thong (Golden Buddha Monastery) on the airport road on
the north side of Talang town. To read about the fable attached to it, see
Phuket Magazine’s story on The Legend of Wat Phra Thong.
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Related Stories:
A Surprise in Store
- A short examination of the depiction of hell in temple murals. Photography
by ARTASIA Phuket Magazine Vol 9 No 8 Page 34
The Heart of the Community – Ellen Teper Lochaya looks at the history of the
Thai temple. Phuket Magazine Vol 7 No 3 Page 26
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