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Monks share temple with tigers
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-05-11 09:03
Walking fully grown tigers on a leash is all part of a day's
work for a group of Buddhist monks who have taken on the task
of protecting the endangered animals by offering them a home
within the walls of their temple.
The sanctuary is run by head monk Phusit Khantidharo, who
insists all 10 tigers living at the Pha Luang Ba Tua temple
in western Kanchanaburi province in Thailand have adopted
peaceful Buddhist ways.
"We are a big family here and we live together, not
just with the tigers but many animals," said Phusit,
sitting cross-legged on a rock surrounded by five large tigers
that take turns to affectionately nuzzle up to their saffron-robed
master.
The tigers, with names like Storm, Lightning and Great Sky,
live among monkeys, horses, deer, peacocks, geese and wild
pigs in a scenic gully where they are free to roam and feed
during the day.
Visitors to the remote temple, about 200 kilometers west
of Bangkok, are invariably stunned by the sight of the monks
frolicking with tigers as if they were ordinary domestic cats.
One monk, who weighed less than half his furry companion,
was bold enough to crouch down and mock fight with the big
tiger, which gently lunged back with its deadly claws retracted.
The monks have documented the personalities of all the big
cats in a booklet with profiles varying from "likes to
be a star and loves showing off" to "pretends to
be tame and gentle but will bite."
The tigers, say the monks, are at their most frisky around
dinner time when tourists are allowed to enter the gully to
watch them eat.
"We are Buddhist monks so we can't kill to provide them
with food and so we give them dog food paid for by donations
to the temple — they enjoy the dog food," Phusit said.
The first tiger was brought to the temple in 1998 after being
injured by a hunter, but died within days.
Soon after, two very ill cubs arrived with large knife wounds
in their stomachs. Inexperienced hunters had tried to cut
them open and inject them with the preserving agent formalin
in a bungled attempt to stuff them for a collector.
Miraculously, they survived, and the temple quickly earned
a reputation as a tiger haven.
"When the villagers saw how we tended to the first tigers
they brought others. Some were injured by hunters who had
a change of heart, others by people who did not want the tiger
near their village but also did not want to see it die,"
he said.
"The last cub to arrive had no hair as it had only just
been born when its mother was killed," he said, adding
that the monks had named the tiny cub Sengtawa (Sunshine).
Despite the head monk’s assurances that the tigers have chosen
the path of non-violence, some devotees living at the temple
bear scars that look suspiciously like the work of the big
cats, and locals living near the temple say there have been
a handful of maulings.
Sitting with his tigers, and three handlers who keep an eye
on the beasts just in case they get excited by the visiting
strangers, Abbot Phusit conceded that the temple grounds were
a less than ideal home for his striped guests.
“We have started building an area in which they can roam,
of about 30 rai (4.8 hectares), and eventually we want to
send them back to the forest once they are ready to return,”
he said.
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