
amazing beauty stand alongside ramshackle homes on the banks of
evil-smelling klongs (canals); appetizing odors of exotic street food
mix with the earthy pungency of open drains; and graceful classic
dancers perform on stages next door to bars where go-go girls gyrate in
clinical nakedness. BMWs stall in traffic jams while tuk-tuks
(three-wheel cabs) scoot between them; deluxe hotels share the same
block with tin-roof stalls; and designer boutiques compete with street
vendors hawking knockoff Pierre Cardin shirts.
Chiang Mai, Thailand’s second-largest city, is in the mountainous
north. Older than Bangkok — in fact, older than the Thai kingdom —
Chiang Mai has a cultural heritage that reflects those of its
neighbors, Burma (now Myanmar) and Laos, as much as it does Thailand’s.
The surrounding hills are dotted with small villages of a people
collectively known as the hill tribes, whose way of life has, until the
last two decades, remained independent from Thailand’s national
development and the 20th century.
At the northern tip, the Golden Triangle, once notorious for opium
trafficking, is still famous for mountain scenery spread over three
countries — Thailand, Burma, and Laos. The small, sleepy market towns
of Sukhothai and Ayutthaya contain restored ruins that bear witness to
their might as past capitals of a powerful kingdom.
Thailand has no fewer than 50 national parks. Phu Kradung in the
northeast, for example, is 60 square mi of tableland covered with pine
trees and tropical flora. Just south of Bangkok, the province of
Kanchanaburi is filled with breathtakingly lush forests and cascades.
Forest cover, though, is declining fast. The mighty elephant, which
used to work the great teak forests, has joined the ranks of the
unemployed. What work he picks up nowadays comes from performing for
tourists a charade euphemistically called "Elephants at Work."
Just as tourism has given elephants a new lease on life, so has it
created alternative opportunities for a population that is 70%
agrarian. More than 4 million visitors flock to Thailand each year to
seek a quick fix of the exotic at bargain prices. Their demands and
willingness to pay top dollar for their pleasures have changed the Thai
view of the foreigner. No longer a guest, the visitor is something akin
to a one-armed bandit: if the Thai can jerk the tourist just right, he
will hit the jackpot. Because the Thai does this with a smile, the
foreigner keeps coming back for more. This is not the Thai heritage. In
the past, making money for its own sake was frowned upon. Important to
the Thai was social harmony and the simple goal of enough "fish in the
rivers and rice in the fields" for everybody — an idyllic state
associated with the 13th-century founding of the kingdom.
Thailand’s origins may reach as far back as 5,600 years to the world’s
oldest Bronze Age civilization. Much later, from the 6th to the 13th
centuries, known as the Dvaravati period, people from the southern
Chinese province of Yunnan moved into the fertile basin of the Chao
Phraya River. The Sukhothai period began when two Siamese chieftains
banded together, captured the Khmer outpost of Sukhothai, and
established the first Thai kingdom in 1238. Early in the Sukhothai
period, Thailand’s first great king, Ramkhamhoeng, came to power. Not
only was he an outstanding warrior, but he made two lasting and
significant contributions to Thai culture. He revised and adapted the
Khmer alphabet to the requirements of the Thai language, and he invited
Ceylonese monks to purify the Khmer-corrupted Theravada (sometimes
called Hinayana) Buddhism and establish the religion in a form that is,
for the most part, still practiced today.
By 1350, Sukhothai’s strength had waned sufficiently for the rising and
dynamic young state of Ayutthaya to usurp the reins of power. For four
centuries and 33 kings, Ayutthaya was the heart and brain of Thailand.
In the 1650s, the city’s population exceeded that of London and —
according to many foreign travelers — with its golden spires,
waterways, and roads, it was the most glorious capital not just in
Asia, but in all the world.
In 1766 the Burmese attacked the city. After a 15-month siege, they
finally captured Ayutthaya and plundered it. Golden Buddhas were melted
down, treasuries ransacked, and buildings burned. Thais who were unable
to escape were killed or sent into slavery; by the time the Burmese
left, Ayutthaya’s population had dropped from 1 million to 10,000.
Under General Taksin, the Thais regrouped, established a capital on the
Chao Phraya River at Thonburi (opposite present-day Bangkok), and set
about successfully expelling the Burmese from Thailand. In 1782, Chao
P’ya Chakri, a supporter of General Taksin, who had briefly been
crowned king, became the first king of the current Chakri dynasty. (The
present monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej, is the ninth in the line.)
One of the first acts of P’ya Chakri, or Rama I (all kings of the
Chakri dynasty are given the title Rama), was to move the Thai capital
to Bangkok.
During the past 200 years, Thailand has had two prime concerns: staving
off foreign encroachment on its sovereignty and restructuring its
society to meet the demands of modern industrialism. Despite the
economic crisis and devaluation of its currency in 1998, Thailand has
managed to succeed quite well with both.
Western powers were first welcomed when they arrived in 1512, but the
French (from whom the Thai word farang, meaning foreigner, is derived)
tried to overthrow the legitimate government and install a puppet
regime. The result was that the Thais not only threw out the French,
but also closed their doors to all outsiders until the middle of the
19th century. When the West again threatened Thailand’s sovereignty,
King Mongkut (Rama IV, 1851-68) kept the colonial forces at bay through
a series of adroit treaties. His efforts were continued by King
Chulalongkorn (Rama V, 1868-1910). Thai independence was eventually
secured by the cession to the British of a little of what is now
Malaysia and to the French of a little of Cambodia.
Thailand’s other concern was adapting to modern social pressures. Under
King Chulalongkorn, slavery was abolished, hospitals and schools were
established, and some upper-class Thais received a European education
so they could replace Western advisers. Under King Prajadhipok (Rama
VII, 1925-35), the world’s economic depression brought its share of
discontent to Thailand. The pressure for sweeping reform ended in 1932
with the military demanding the establishment of a constitutional
monarchy on lines similar to that of Great Britain. Since then,
quasimilitary governments and a strong bureaucracy have administered
the country. Changes in government have been by coup as often as by
election. Despite such occasional upheavals, the nation’s policies have
been remarkably consistent in fostering the expansion of the industrial
economy. But in their increasing affluence, Thais are developing a
desire for pluralistic representation and accepting less the dictates
of unelected officials.
Throughout all this, the monarchy, which has enormous respect at all
levels of society, has been a powerful stabilizing influence (it is an
indictable offense to show disrespect for the monarch). The much-loved
king is seen as the father of the nation, and the queen has won the
heart of every Thai. This trust and respect for the royal family had a
calming effect during the democracy demonstrations that brought down
the military-backed government in 1992 and the economic woes of 1998.
They bind Thai society and permit the nation, unlike any other in Asia,
to progress peacefully into the 21st century.