Quiet tsunami prayers mark Christmas in Thailand
By Darren Schuettler, The Star (Reuters), Dec 25, 2005
KHAO LAK, Thailand -- Simple Buddhist ceremonies marked Christmas Day in 
Thailand's tsunami zone on Sunday as relatives of victims remembered their 
loved ones on the eve of the Indian Ocean disaster's first anniversary.

 
<< Buddhist monks recite prayers during a ceremony to commemorate the first 
anniversary of the tsunami on Thailand's Phi Phi island December 25, 2005. 
(REUTERS/Bazuki Muhammad)

"I will have to die before I can forget," said 80-year-old Thai Sorjia 
Aiawsakul, who lost her son, daughter-in-law and niece in the Dec. 26 tragedy, 
which killed an estimated 231,000 people in Asia and Africa. Thailand's 
official death toll stands at 5,395. 

"He was the son I liked most. Even though a year has passed I think about him 
each day. I still cry every day," she said as saffron-robed monks intoned 
Buddhist chants at Wat Ban Muang on Khao Lak, the coastline where most of 
Thailand's victims died. 

In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, the temple served as a temporary 
morgue for the hundreds of bodies of foreign holidaymakers and Thais dragged 
from the waves and debris. 

On Sunday, it hosted around 300 mourners -- both Thai and foreigners -- seeking 
a chance for quiet reflection before Monday's planned mass commemorations. 

"We wanted to come here to remember those who died," said 17-year-old New 
Yorker Joann Johnson, who is teaching English and art at a school in the nearby 
fishing village of Ban Nam Khem, which has been totally rebuilt in the last 
year. 

While many of the physical scars of the tsunami have disappeared with the 
reconstruction in Thailand, the mental scars of victims -- and orphans in 
particular -- remain. 

"There are many at my school who lost their relatives. It's a very difficult 
time right now for the kids," said Johnson, who was accompanied by her parents 
and two sisters. 

On Koh Phi Phi, the backdrop to cult backpacker movie "The Beach", Buddhist 
monks from 13 different nations led a similar day-long ceremony on a secluded 
beach far away from the hustle and bustle of the rejuvenated paradise isle. 

Many survivors said they had spent the last year wondering why they had been 
spared when so many others on Phi Phi -- around 700 people in the final 
reckoning -- had perished. 

"I guess it makes you a little more religious," said Denny Sacipovic, a 
25-year-old Swede who narrowly escaped the killer waves when he left the island 
with his girlfriend and her mother the day before disaster struck. 

"Was it just luck or is there something more that decides if you are going to 
make it?" said Denny, whose back is covered with elaborate tsunami tattoos and 
the date few will forget -- Dec. 26, 2004. 

Since her brush with death, 41-year-old Internet consultant Evelyn Rodriguez 
from San Jose in California has been running a weblog to try to make sense of 
an event that completely reshaped her view of the world. 

"It's one thing to read about the immortality of the soul, but it's another to 
see your own life flash before your eyes," Rodriguez said.



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