30,000 monks attend alms-giving in Myanmar

Published December 9, 2019
MANDALAY (Myanmar): Monks line up for alms during an  alms-giving ceremony organised by the regional government of Mandalay on Sunday. Thirty-thousand monks assembled in the early morning chill for the spectacular alms-giving event involving a controversial mega-temple under scrutiny across the border in Thailand.—AFP
MANDALAY (Myanmar): Monks line up for alms during an alms-giving ceremony organised by the regional government of Mandalay on Sunday. Thirty-thousand monks assembled in the early morning chill for the spectacular alms-giving event involving a controversial mega-temple under scrutiny across the border in Thailand.—AFP

MANDALAY: Thirty-thousand monks assembled in the early morning chill in Myanmar on Sunday for a spectacular alms-giving event, partly organised by a controversial mega-temple under scrutiny across the border in Thailand.

With many barefoot, Buddhist monks from Myanmar and Thailand and senior religious officials from a dozen countries collected alms next to an airport in the central city of Mandalay, that is also a heartland of the faith.

As the sun rose over the ancient town, a sea of saffron and maroon-robed monks assembled in an area the size of a football field.

They meditated, prayed and collected alms in an event meant to tighten the relationship of “monks and Buddhists between (the) two countries” and to “strengthen the monkhood” in the region, according to a statement.

“I hope we can continue to hold bigger events in the coming years,” said U Thu Nanda, a 24-year-old Burmese monk.

The event was the third and largest of its kind since 2015 and comes as one of the organisers, the Thailand-based Dhamm­akaya foundation, attempts to bounce back from an embezzlement scandal more than two years ago.

The Dhammakaya temple’s massive compound in northern Bangkok was under siege for two weeks in early 2017 as thousands of officers try to arrest the sect’s spiritual leader.

Phra Dhammachayo was accused of colluding in a $33 million embezzlement scheme and was believed to be hiding somewhere on the temple’s sprawling 1,000 acre grounds, an area twice the size of Monaco.

Published in Dawn, December 9th, 2019

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