THAI BUDDHISM AND RELIGION.
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| The  vast majority of the Thai populations adheres to Theravada Buddhism.  The Thais count their years in the Buddhist Era. At present we are in  the year 2548. The Buddhist calendar is 543 years ahead of the Christian  calendar, and the Buddhist era started with the passing away of the  Buddha. (the Buddhist era starts one year earlier in Sri Lanka and  Myanmar) Scientifically  speaking, Gaudama Buddha certainly is an historical figure, though his  exact date and year of birth is not exactly established. The Buddha  started his life as Prince Siddharta, and was born in Lumbini (presently  located in Nepal). Initially he led a well protected life inside the  palace grounds, until at the age of 29 while wandering outside he  palace, he encountered the sufferings of old age, disease, poverty and  human decay in general. He set out on a long solitary journey, and left  all his possessions behind. He grew tired and renunciated all worldly  pleasures, realizing that all these never lasted long and that life was  in fact full of sufferings. By doing so, he intended to discover the  Ultimate Truth of the whole existence, so as to find a sure way out of  all suffering.                                 He spent his time meditating in  solitude, and doing everything which he believed to lead him to success,  for instance, starving and torturing himself until he become weak and  thin. After his self-mortifications, his finally found that the best way  to success was” The Middle Way”,, that is avoiding the two extremes:  indulging oneself in pleasures or torturing oneself to the utmost. He  became enlightened in one full-moon night under the Bodhi three on the  bank of Nerunjara River, in the state of Magadha, when he was  thirty-five years old, after spending six years altogether in search of  truth. 
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                           |                                                            The Buddha  discovered the three characteristics of existence and the four noble truths. 
  The Three Characteristics of Existence : 1) Dukkha   — Often this term is translated as suffering. Dukkha tends to refer to  anxieties experienced in the course of living. If you set a goal and are  experiencing difficulty attaining it, this can be dukkha. If you love  someone and that person does not reciprocate, that may amount to dukkha.  If you try and control your child and that child seeks his or her own  way, this could become dukkha. Let us say, dukkha implies a gap. There  is nothing wrong with goals and gaps (Buddhism has occasionally been  criticized for making people lazy or lackluster; and this is simply not  true). It is when a gap cannot be managed that one experiences dukkha.  Often the metaphor for progress in Buddhism is a path. If you are not  able to attain your goal step by step you may become frustrated. Again,  the gap is not the problem, it is how you perceive it and how you deal  with it that matters most.
 2) Anicca   — This is impermanence. All things are subject to the forces of nature.  Even the rock is gradually worn down by the incessant rain drops.  Intellectually, at least, this principle is not that hard to understand.
 3) Anatta   — This is one of the most challenging concepts in the Buddhist  teachings. Anatta is often translated as no-self or not-self. This idea  relates to the non-substantiality of self or personality. In other  words, the self or soul that we may believe is ours does not really  exist. There is nothing to cling to. In the West, we often hear people  proclaim that they are seeking to find their “real self” — for Buddhists  there is no such thing. According to Buddhism, we are very lucky to  have been born in a form that tends to maintain its shape as we move  from task to task. Our compounded form comes into contact with nature  and must fight disease, discomfort, and changing conditions. Since there  is no essence, no constant state of being, we are subject to many  different (impermanent) conditions. Furthermore, how we perceive  ourselves may not be the way that others perceive us. We must meet  others and the changing conditions around us with a flexibility  (grounded in the spirit of ethics). If we do not adjust our self when  conditions change, dukkha will most likely follow.
 Thai people use the terms dukkha ( thuk ) and anicca ( anichang )  often in daily speech. They tend to be relatively open to change and  accepting loss, but this does not mean that they simply accept fate  blindly. Understanding fate and the momentum of karma is different from  being fatalistic.
 The Four Noble Truths :
 1. The existence of suffering (Dukkha)
 2. The reality that suffering is impermanent and will eventually end
 3. The reality that suffering is a consequence of desire  : the desire to posses what seem to us pleasurable and to avoid what seem to us unpleasurable.
 4. That suffering can be brought to an end through practising of the dhamma
 
 The dhamma, or ‘Buddhist life', encourages the Eightfold Path, to put an end or control the existence of Dukkha (suffering) :
 1. proper understanding
 2. proper thought
 3. proper speech
 4. proper action
 5. proper livelihood
 6. proper effort
 7. proper mindfulness
 8. proper concentration
 A synonym for the Buddhist teachings is The Middle Path.
 Aside from this, most Thai Buddhists people in the fundamental principle of reincarnation  : we can be back and do it right then. The concept of reincarnation has  profound implications for Thai society. Bad circumstances (poverty,  physical handicaps etc) are related to bad behaviour in a previous life.  The concept of 'do good, and you will get good', 'do bad, and you will  get bad (if not now, then in a later life)'. Thais also very much  believe in the concept of 'making merit'.  There are many ways of doing so, one common way being collecting money  for donations to temples etc. A belief is that making merit, will make  you more effective in coping with the existence of suffering (in the  next life). As good Buddhists, the Thai perceive that all living beings  stand in a hierarchy of varying ability to make actions effective and of  varying degrees of freedom from suffering. Making merits, according to  this view, will get you higher in the hierarchy.
 
 
 
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  Historical aspects : 
King Asoka of India (3rd century B.C.) was instrumental in spreading  Buddhism around the Indian subcontinent. There are writing suggesting he  sent missionaries to present day Thailand. However, Indian traders  certainly did business along the shores of present day Myanmar, Thailand  etc. and could have started the spread of the Buddhist religion. ,  Thailand. King Mongkut (Rama IV) surmised that Phra Pathom Chedi in  Nakhon Pathom probably was the first stupa to be built in Thailand,  containing Buddha relics. Nakhon  Pathom was possibly the capital of the old kingdom of Suwannaphumi  (approx. 139 B.C -457 A.D.), and in contact with King Asoka's India. The Mons established the old civilizations of Dharavati (3rd to 7th  century A.D.) and Haripunchai (present day Lamphun, about 1000 years  ago). The Mons were Theravada Buddhist. Theravada Buddhism was  established as the religion of the Sukhothai (first recognized Thai)  Kingdom from the 13th century B.C. on.
 Theravada Buddhism - Mahayana Buddhism   Theravada is the school of Buddhism that draws its scriptural  inspiration from the texts of the Pali Canon, or Tipitaka , which  scholars generally accept as containing the earliest surviving record of  the Buddha's teachings. As most other great religions, Buddhism has  been subject to Schisms. At present Theravada Buddhism (southern  Buddhism) is practiced in Thailand, Myanmar, Laos, Sri Lanka. Mahayana  Buddhism is practiced in Korea, Japan, Tibet and China and originated as  a reform movement in the early centuries of Buddhism. We will not go  into the differences between the two important ways of practicing  Buddhism.  The Sangha   To provide a social structure supportive of the practice of Dhamma, and  to preserve the teachings for posterity, the Buddha established the  order of bhikkhus (monks) and bhikkhunis (nuns) -- the Sangha -- who  continue to this day to pass his teachings on to subsequent generations  of laypeople and monastics. |  | 
 
 
 
          
      
 
 
KETURUNAN SIAM MALAYSIA.
Walaupun saya sebagai rakyat malaysia yang berketurunan siam malaysia,saya tetap bangga saya adalah thai malaysia.Pada setiap tahun saya akan sambut perayaan di thailand iaitu hari kebesaraan raja thai serta saya memasang bendera kebangsaan gajah putih.
 
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