Yahoo – AFP,
Sally MAIRS, 21 October 2017
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| Royal guards in uniform march during a dress rehearsal for the late Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej's funeral in Bangkok |
Gilded
chariots, horses and columns of military men in bright costumes swept through
Bangkok's old quarter on Saturday in a final dress rehearsal for late King
Bhumibol Adulyadej's funeral -- a meticulously-planned spectacle of devotion to
a man known as the "soul of the nation".
Steered by
the Buddhist ritual, palace protocol and social hierarchy that underpin
Thailand's powerful monarchy, the elaborate cremation ceremony will befit a
king who commanded a cult-like following during his 70-year reign.
The
five-day fanfare, which kicks off next Wednesday, is the culmination of months
of painstaking preparation that began after Bhumibol died a year ago, aged 88,
plunging the nation into grief.
It will
feature mass parades, cultural performances and Buddhist ceremonies centred
around a gleaming funeral complex that has been erected from scratch outside
Bangkok's Grand Palace.
On Saturday
thousands of black-clad Thais watched a dress rehearsal of the procession that
will deliver Bhumibol's body to the tiered funeral pyre on October 26.
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Men march
with drums during a dress rehearsal for the late Thai King
Bhumibol Adulyadej's
funeral
|
Onlookers
marvelled at the rich array of ancient garb on display -- from puffy blue
helmets to embroidered red caps and pointy white hats -- as marchers beating
drums and bearing tiered umbrellas strutted through Bangkok's historic heart.
Junta chief
Prayut Chan-O-Cha and the late king's daughter, Princess Sirindhorn, were also
among those striding through the blistering heat.
"Officials
had to study and work very hard to manage this event, because it is the first
time our generation has prepared for a king's funeral," 54-year-old Rataya
Kobsikarn told AFP.
"All
of us love our King so much and this is the last chance we have to be close to
him," she added.
Many Thais
have worn only black-and-white since Bhumibol's death, draining colour from
Bangkok's streets in a striking act of collective mourning encouraged by the
ultra-royalist junta.
Royal
propaganda has gone into overdrive in the run-up to his cremation, with
portraits of the bespectacled monarch popping up all over the country.
A draconian
royal defamation law criminalises criticism or perceived snubs of the monarchy.
Prosecutions
under the law have surged since the arch-royalist junta grabbed power in a 2014
coup, with record decades-long sentences handed down for insults often posted
on social media.
![]() |
A cadet
holds the reigns of a horse dressed with special ceremony adornments near the
Grand Palace before a dress rehearsal for the late Thai King Bhumibol
Adulyadej's funeral
|
Dressing
for a demi-god
Strict
dress codes for the royal funeral have been set for the public and officials.
"Ceremonies
for the king are still viewed as ceremonies for a demi-god," explained
Eakkarak Limsunggas, a police commander tasked with enforcing proper funeral
attire.
"The
language and dress code used for the monarchy must be different than what we
use in normal life."
Boosted by
the late king's charisma, Thailand's once-weak monarchy grew in popularity
during Bhumibol's reign and the palace revived royal rituals that had been
dropped by previous sovereigns.
By the time
of his death, Bhumibol sat at the apex of Thailand's power networks and was
revered as a moral paragon in a country riven by corruption.
Many Thais
refer to him as the "father" of the nation and are moved to tears at
the prospect of bidding him a final goodbye next week.
Bhumibol's
heir, 65-year-old King Maha Vajiralongkorn, has yet to command that level of
devotion and spent much of his first year in power abroad.
He is
expected to be formally crowned after his father's cremation, though no date
has been set.



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