Soccer-mad monks too tired to take alms (Reuters) Updated: 2006-06-22 09:26
Buddhist monks in Thailand are too tired to receive early morning alms
because they are staying up late to watch the World Cup, a Thai newspaper
reported on Wednesday.
The Nation quoted a woman in the northern city of Chiang Mai who said her
birthday celebrations were ruined because monks at a city temple were not awake
to receive her morning offering, a mandatory religious ritual in the
predominately Buddhist country.
 Monks pray during a
Buddhist ceremony celebrating World Vesak Day in Nakhon Pathom province on
the outskirts of Bangkok May 10, 2006. Buddhist monks in Thailand are too
tired to receive early morning alms because they are staying up late to
watch the World Cup, a Thai newspaper reported on Wednesday.
[Reuters] |
The woman, who declined to be identified, said she was told by a senior monk
that most of his young colleagues were still asleep because they had stayed up
to watch the games which can go on well past midnight.
The Sangha Council, which oversees the tens of thousands of Buddhist temples
in Thailand, has not banned monks from watching the World Cup but said it should
not interfere with religious activities.
Chiang Mai chief monk Phra Thep Wisuthikhun said he had received complaints
about "inappropriate behaviour" at seven temples in the province. "It is the
duty of the abbot of each temple to supervise the behaviour of young monks,
making sure that their religious activities will not be affected by the games,"
he told Reuters.
In neighbouring Cambodia, some 40,000 monks have been warned they could be
defrocked if they became too excited while watching the games.
"If they make noise or cheer as they watch, they will lose their monkhood,"
Phnom Penh patriarch Non Nget told Reuters this month.
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