Country | |
Publisher | |
ISBN | 9786162150432 |
Format | HardBound |
Language | English |
Year of Publication | 2012 |
Bib. Info | xviii. 397p. ; 21cm. |
Product Weight | 500 gms. |
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Narin Phasit was one of the most remarkable yet little‐known figures in the annals of Thai history, a man who devoted his life to what the seventh king of Siam called seeking a name for himself in a wildly inappropriate manner, and he himself preferred to describe as working contentedly for my country, alone and despised by my fellow countrymen. Narin Phasit was the founder and acting president of half a dozen societies with names such as the Society to Assist People in the Overcoming of Their Barbarian Craziness, of which he was often the sole member. With such little support, he had rather ambitious and equally controversial plans, so controversial in fact that the list of those who hated him included two Siamese kings, the Buddhist Council of Elders, and a succession of prime ministers. For what reason was Narin so despised? During the period of the absolute monarchy, he insisted that government officials should be held accountable for their actions, and in the years that followed the revolution he spoke out strongly against the rise of the military. He established the first line of female monks in the history of Siam, fought to abolish capital punishment, and for one precarious moment came close to wresting Buddhism in his kingdom from the tight grip of government control. The place that he properly belonged, said Prime Minister Phibul Songkhram, was inside a mental institution. Written as creative nonfiction, this is the engaging story of one mans relentless attempt to build a more humane society. Often told in Narins own words, it is an unlikely tale of Buddhism, politics, and the creation of modern Thailand.