|
bristling with television antennas, and
probably the most spectacular traffic
jams on earth. And it is a holy city,
studded with splendid temples, shrines,
and monasteries, haunted and blessed by
thousands of gods, ghosts, and angels.
Because
the city has no real geographical
core, no central point a visitor can navigate
from, perhaps a good way to explore it
is by historical periods. Bangkok is relatively
young as Asian cities go-about two centuries
old-but its cultural heritage extends
back to the founding of the original Thai
monarchy in the 13th century, and far
beyond that, into the ancient underworld
of ritual and myth that lies beneath the
surface of everyday life in modern Thailand.
This
is a Buddhist nation,
but it has delightfully variegated the
faith, combining Theravada, the oldest,
most traditional school of Buddhism, with
Hinduism and native Thai animism. At Bangkok's
wats,
or temples, you see this vibrant,
convoluted spiritual world in all its
living glory.
Surrounded
by gilded gods, golden spires,
and ritual objects of every size and description,
the Emerald Buddha looms over the central
chamber, seated on his own elaborately
tiered gilt mountain, with a delicate
spiked parasol of gold above his head.
The Buddha's flesh glimmers like moonlight,
twinkles like a star in the shadows. There
is real magic, real power here that the
incredible agglomeration of art and architecture
in the rest of the wat somehow misses.
Sometimes, less is more.
Everyone
who has spent much time in Bangkok
seems to have a favorite Wat
Arun has
its cool riverside porcelain monuments;
Wat
Pho,
its 145-foot-long Reclining Buddha; Wat
Traimit,
a 10-foot-high Seated Buddha of
solid gold. My favorite is the
Wat Saket,
situated on the Golden Mount, a century-old
concrete mountain that towers 254 feet
above the city. That may not sound like
much, but on the dead-flat plains of Bangkok-just
slightly above sea level-it is something
out of a dream, a miniature alp floating
on high like a mirage.
There was
a sense of timeless calm within those
walls, but there was vitality, too. Most
of young monks would leave the temple
after about three months and return to
the secular world outside. Spending two
months-a period describes as blissful-in
a monastery, they would get jobs, marry,
and raise families. But they would never
completely lose the peace, the transcendent
wisdom they had found in that magical
place.
The
effects
of the monastic experience, common
to almost all-young Thai men and many
young women, are palpable. Thais are tough
folk-if you harbor any doubts, just watch
a local kick boxing match or check out
the paratroops that guard Chitaladda
Palace.
Now
to Bangkok's earthier, more worldly side.
If two terms sum up the Thai attitude
to everyday life, they are "Sanook-Have
a good time," and "Mai
pen rai-Never mind." The city's
carefree attitude is manifest in myriad
shopping centers, bazaars, hotels, restaurants,
nightclubs, massage parlors, and discos.
Always
the unexpected, the revelation, the happy
surprise, the pearl in the oyster. Even
the city's name. Bangkok means "Village
of the Wild Plum", from a
small trading settlement on the banks
of the Chao Phraya River, long since swallowed
up by the mushrooming metropolis. The
authentic name, the one Thais use, is
Krungthep-"City
of Angels." But even that is only
an abbreviation of the real name, which
is, in fact, in the Guinness
Book of World Records
as the longest place-name on earth: "Great
City of the Angels,
Supreme Repository of Divine Jewels,
Great Land Unconquerable, Grand and Prominent
Realm, Royal and Delightful Capital City,
Full of the Nine Noble Gems, Highest Royal
Dwelling Place and Grand Palace, Divine
Shelter and Living Place of Reincarnated
Spirits."
|