Monkeys Live Like Kings in Thailand's Lopburi

LOPBURI, THAILAND, June 2, 2018 (Latin American Herald Tribune): Monkeys,
said to be descendants of the Hindu God Hanuman, continued to live a life
fit for kings on Saturday in the Thai city of Lopburi, where local
authorities give them food twice a day by and allow them to roam freely in
the streets and around temples. An estimated 3,000 macaques - Macaca
fascicularis - live in the city, situated around 93 miles north of Bangkok,
although their biggest colonies are found in the Khmer-style Prang Sam Yot
temple and the Phra Kan shrine dedicated to Lord Vishnu.

"We have lived together for a long time. I have spent 40 years here, and
there have always been monkeys. However, their number has grown in recent
years. When I arrived, there were less of them," Taveesak Srisangnan, a
74-year resident, told EFE. The reason why the primates are tolerated and
even cared for is related to a legend which says they are descendents of
Hanuman, who helped the prince Rama - an incarnation of Vishnu - kill a
giant, Thotsakan, according to the epic poem Ramakien, the Thai version of
India's Hindu epic Ramayana. Lopburi's name is also inspired by a character
in the Ramakien, a reflection of the eclectic religious atmosphere in
Thailand, where the majority practices a form of Buddhism mixed with Hindu
and animistic beliefs.

With best wishes

S Chander

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