Reverence for the saffron-robed Buddhist monkhood is deeply woven into Thai society, but a sex extortion scandal has besmirched the clergy and left the devout questioning their faith.
Thai police this week arrested a woman accused of bedding at least 11 monks in breach of their vows of celibacy, before blackmailing them with thousands of secretly taken photos of their trysts.
The monks are said to have paid nearly US$12 million, funneled out of their monasteries, funded by donations from laypeople hoping to increase their merit and prospects for reincarnation.
Photo: AFP
The scandal provoked outrage over hypocrisy in the monkhood, concern that their status shields them from scrutiny and soul-searching across society about the role of religion.
“I’m not involved in the religion like I used to be,” 33-year-old motorbike taxi driver Mongkol Sudathip said. “I don’t have full respect for it anymore.”
Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn has canceled invitations to more than 80 monks who had been due to attend his upcoming 73rd birthday celebrations, citing “inappropriate behavior that caused mental distress among the Thai people.”
While the 11 monks have been stripped of their robes, the kingdom’s National Office of Buddhism has vowed to “restore public trust” with a sweeping police probe into the affair.
Theravada Buddhism has been the spiritual backbone of Thai identity for more than two millennia, and still shapes national laws banning alcohol on religious holidays and protecting sacred objects.
Thai men are traditionally expected to ordain as monks at least once in their lives for a period lasting as short as a few weeks or as long as decades.
The clergy are bound by 227 strict rules, including a ban on masturbation, touching women and handling objects directly from them.
Monks traditionally survive on alms, food offerings and a modest US$170 monthly stipend, but some pocket fees for lectures, blessings and ceremonies — blurring the line between faith and fortune.
In a TV interview, the woman at the heart of the scandal said she had developed a “splurging attitude” as her monk lovers lavished her with shopping trips worth up to US$90,000 a day.
Motorcycle taxi driver Mongkol said he now prefers to donate to hospitals or schools for underprivileged children. “It feels more meaningful than giving money to temples,” he said.
This month’s scandal is not the first to rock the monkhood.
In 2017, police raided Wat Dhammakaya temple north of Bangkok, arresting its former abbot over allegations of laundering US$33 million in public donations.
In May, police held another monk in the capital over allegations of embezzling nearly US$10 million from a temple for an online gambling network.
Thammasat University associate professor of Buddhist philosophy Danai Preechapermprasit said repeated scandals — especially among senior monks — have “shaken people to the core.”
“People question whether donations are used for spiritual significance or personal desire,” he said. “I think Thailand has reached a point where it’s difficult for monks to even walk down the street.”
A powerful lawmaker has pledged tighter regulations within three months — including mandatory donation disclosures and laws treating monk misconduct as a criminal offence.
“This case does not represent Buddhism as a whole,” Thai national police chief Kitrat Panphet said on Thursday, pledging a new task force to probe misbehaving monks.
“It’s about a few individuals doing wrong,” he said.
In Buddhist tradition, monks are viewed as the Buddha’s spiritual heirs, entrusted with preserving and passing on his teachings.
However, at Wat Bowonniwet in Bangkok — one of Thailand’s most revered temples — only 26 monks were ordained this year, a steep drop from nearly 100 before the COVID-19 pandemic.
A monk there, speaking on condition of anonymity, blamed societal changes after the pandemic, which forced people into isolation. Nowadays, “people prefer to live outside the temple life,” he said.
However, independent Buddhism expert Jaturong Jongarsa said temples are increasingly being treated as “a garbage dump” — where families send drug addicts or LGBTQ young people to be “corrected.”
“Temples are no longer seen as the sacred spaces they once were,” he said. “People send their problems to the temple and hope they’ll go away.”
Still, not all Thais have lost faith.
Camphun Parimiphut, a 52-year-old security guard from Maha Sarakham in Thailand’s northeast, said: “Buddhism is about the teachings, not the individuals who fail it.”
Due to corruption scandals, he now avoids giving money to monks — preferring to donate only food, but his devotion remains steadfast.
“You can lose faith in monks, but never lose trust in Buddhist teachings. They still teach us how to live a good life,” he said.
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