KING MONGKUT RAMA IV.
King Mongkut was a different generation of King compared to the
first Chakri Kings who were, by necessity, men of war. He was born in
October 1804 as the son of Rama 11. Notwithstanding he was the first in
line to the succession upon the death of his father, the nobility
supported his brother Nangklao to be the next King, so Mongkut entered
the Buddhist priest hood for the next 27 years. During this time he
studied Latin and English and western sciences such as astronomy.
- In 1851 Mongkut succeeded to the throne as Phra Chom Klao. During
these times the dangers to the Kingdom of Siam were coming from French
and English colonialists. Mongkut learnt the ways of the west and had
his children similarly educated in English. One teacher he commissioned
to come and teach was Anna Leonowens who subsequently wrote novels about
her experiences which later formed an historical excuse for the content
of film and stage entertainment in the west, entitled, '' The King and I
''.
- Anna Leonowens arrived with her son Louis who subsequently became
the founder of Louis T. Leonowens [ Thailand ] Ltd now a public company
in Thailand. Much of the content of the American play and film is
nonsense and is an offensive and incorrect portrayal of Buddhism and the
people and events of the time.
- In reaching out to the west Mongkut at the same time revealed
aspects of life in Asia which were not understood. The idea of an older
man having some 600 women and over 82 children tantilized Victorian
ideas as did the preconceived concepts and confusion about slavery in
Thailand which were incorrectly mentally compared to the English slave
trade between Africa and the West Indies, and elsewhere in the then ''
British Empire ''.
- Apart from the issue of sovereignty and loss of territory and with
it wealth, the big on going issue was for the battle of control of
peoples' minds and the western attempts to introduce Christianity. King
Mongkut is reported to have said to one westerner,
"What you
teach us to do is admirable, but what you teach us to believe is foolish". His selection of Anna as his childrens' teacher and her conditions for employment were conditioned by this attitude.
- This push for conversion of peoples' minds was taking place for
hundreds of years in Southeast Asia before. The Muslims were pushing
South in Malaya, Indonesia and Southern Philippines and the French
Catholics in the rest of South East Asia. Japan had previously closed
its doors to Europeans to keep the Catholic Christians out and in Siam
in 1688 following the death of King Narai the Catholic Greek adventurer
Paulkin was forced to eat his own cooked flesh for trying to convert the
King of Ayutthaya [ Narai ] to Catholicism.
- Thai freedom from colonialism is not just about freedom from
military, economic and administrative control, but freedom of the mind.
Buddhists do not believe there is a god, or that people should subjugate
their thinking to religious minders of socially controlled churches,
but rather they should accept the consequences of their own conduct, not
seek forgiveness for compliance and learn to understand for themselves
the causes and effects of their conduct and learn to live with the
social, emotional and moral consequences of their conduct.
- Thus Mongkut rejected as foolish the concept of ceasing to think
for one's self and subjugate one's mind to new European minders. Thus
the established Christian Churches failed in Siam, however in the 20 C a
proliferation of American new religions were active in remote ares such
as with the Karen in Burma. So in this period of Siam's history we see
Mongklut and others engaging with the west to learn how to contain them
without letting them infiltrate into the community.
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