Kaiya Blog Post 2022

There is a moment- when I walk silently into a location of history, that I feel a sense of awe and reverence. I can feel in my bones the hopes, dreams, and prayers that have been given and trusted to the place. I can see the focus and care and time that has been put into each detail, each tiny piece.

This sense of astonishment and wonder was almost overwhelming at the Buddhist temples. As a group, we would walk carefully and silently into the Wat, our bare feet and socks sliding gracefully on the smooth floor. In the Wat Phra Kaew, the Emerald Buddha gazed over the people who were bowing to him, as they lowered their heads and hands to the floor three times. The room was completely quiet, and in that moment I was startled by that intense feeling of awe. In this silence, the Wat buzzed with energy. The energy of history and time. The buzz of thousands of people having arrived here before with reverence and worship that the place holds. It was beautiful. Abruptly, someone whispered something; their voice breaking through the silence, and that moment was broken.

The Emerald Buddha in the Wat Phra Kaew.

The Wat Huay Pla Kang dominates the environment; the vast white Buddha surveying all of Chiang Rai. As we walked into the Wat, the music and prayers filled the room. There was a different energy here compared to the Emerald Buddha. The place was loud and bustling, with people moving around with purpose. Collecting flowers for offerings and sweeping the floors, the Wat was buzzing with organized chaos. Still, that noise held power and awe. It held the activity of prayers, held the care and dreams of the people who spent their time here. It was beautiful.

In Wat Huay Pla Kang

Welcome to the 2022 Thailand Global Change, Communities, and Families Blog!

My name is Acharn Cathy (Acharn is the Thai word for professor). I am the instructor for this Thailand learning abroad course. The students have been meeting as a class since mid-March, learning about Southeast Asian diasporic communities that are now part of the Minnesota population mosaic.
We spent a morning in early April at Wat Promwachirayan in St. Louis Park to prepare for students immersion in multicultural northern Thailand, where we will spend two weeks, beginning May 14.

Students learned how to make Pad Thai from Wanpen Gresser.

Making Pad Thai (Eliana left; Wanpen center)

We also learned about Buddhism and walking and sitting meditation from the monks in residence.

Thai monks explaining tenets of Buddhism.

Yia Kou lighting ritual candles and incense

See a brief video of the group practicing walking meditation: https://youtu.be/Wg0tp8Wf0JM

We completed our time at Wat Promwachirayan with a wonderful Thai music lesson from teacher Packy, a fine arts graduate of Chiang Mai University in Thailand, who taught students how to play several traditional Thai instruments. Through a very innovative rote process, she had them playing a song together at the end of the session!

Here is a short video of what the “Thai xylophone” and in the background, the “Thai Saw” sound like: https://youtube.com/shorts/8oizWVI-Xp0?feature=share