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The Tiger
Temple
A
casual acquaintance in Bangkok told us Sam's Place was a good place to
stay in
Kanchanaburi. It was on the River
Kwai. Some of the rooms were on a big
floating deck, but we chose to stay in a row of concrete rooms, with
trees and
shrubs outside. Staying right on the
river would have been very noisy, due to riverboat taxis that cruised
by at
high speeds, powered by engines that were not graced with mufflers, and
the
floating discotheques, that spent the night passing to and fro, blaring
music
with the usual Asian disregard for anyone who might want to sleep. We
had heard about the Tiger Temple, since it is a
typical tourist jaunt. I was always
leery of such outings, because I'm not a typical tourist, but the idea
of
getting close to a tiger was very intriguing. Apparently,
the monks at this temple adopted tigers who,
for whatever
reason, cannot be rehabilitated into the wild. Most
had been found as cubs and kept in human company as
they were
growing up. At Sam's Place, there was a
leaflet describing the temple, and when we inquired further, the
smiling young
woman at reception told us we could go on a trip the following day for
a
reasonable price. So we signed up.
The next morning we were picked up at Sam’s by a truck
taxi loaded with westerners. Before we
set off, the smiling receptionist gave us a little lecture, assuring us
that
Lek, our driver, was very experienced with the tigers, and “also
particularly
with monkey.” I wondered if that was
intended to make us feel safer. I
couldn’t imagine that Lek or any other human individual would be able
to stop
an uncaged tiger. “That’s what they said at
the tourist information kiosk,”
replied the Scottish guy. “But
apparently they’ve got it all set up now so it’s really safe.” “Safe by Thai standards
or western standards?” asked the
German woman. I laughed.
“Thai
standards, of course, we’re in Thailand! If
you’re really nervous, then stay away from them. They
can smell fear, you know.” I was only half
joking – I had been around
enough big animals to know that they quickly pick up on the emotions of
nearby
humans. We drove for about an
hour, until we arrived at a single
concrete building inside some gates, where we signed a waiver, paid 150
baht,
and received a little booklet with a poem about compassion, written in
Thai. The bad English translation made
me wish, even more than usual, that I could decipher the strange
rounded
characters of the Thai script. Several
photos, some of them very blurry, showed the bespectacled abbot of the
monastery sitting and walking with tigers. Lek led us amongst well
spaced trees with bare earth in
between, where we met two stags in velvet, their blunt horns all shiny. They were tame enough that they almost let
us touch them. A few black and white
pigs were snuffling around in the dirt. We
passed through a metal gate in a wall, and on to a
place where a
large irregular pit had formed in the earth, looking like a natural
feature of
the landscape. No vegetation grew
here. We wound our way down into the
pit along a path in the red soil, and turned a corner.
My heart jumped. Five tigers
lay around on the ground in front of us. The terrain here had
formed high walls around a flattened
spot. The only way out was where we had
just entered. A line had been drawn in
the bare earth, and several westerners already stood behind it. Three Thai men in plain long pants and
T-shirts hung around looking important, while a fourth man, a monk in
yellow
robes, attended to a tiger who lay on its side on a flat rock. He was periodically feeding it small white
pills that he placed, one by one, on the rock. Every
time he did so, the animal lazily turned its huge
head on one side
to lick up the pill with an enormous red tongue. What
was it ingesting?
Three other tigers lounged placidly in a group near the
flat rock, and one more was sprawled on its side, further back against
the red
cliff wall. They all looked well fed
and sleepy, and each one had a piece of rope tied around its neck. We were about twenty yards away.
Thais tend to be small people, and the
animals dwarfed the men standing near them. It
was clear that if any of the animals decided to attack,
they would
cover the ground between us in a few strides, and anyone who tried to
prevent
them would be casually knocked aside. I
was confident that it was not part of my destiny to be mauled by a
tiger, but
one or two of the other tourists were fiddling nervously with their
cameras,
and standing well back from the line.
We waited, and soon one of the Thai men, in business-like
and self-important mode, as they tend to be when they are involved in
any
official task, came up to the closest tourist, took her by the arm with
one
hand and took her camera from her with the other. The
camera was passed to another Thai man who took photos of her
as she was led to the closest tiger, who was lying on the ground; she
was
briefly allowed to touch it, and then hurried on to the one that lay on
the
rock. The huge animals paid no
attention as she laid her hand on them and turned to smile inanely at
the
cameraman. In this fashion we were
walked out one by one, and walked back. None
of the tigers even appeared to notice us.
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Although the Thais were trying to hurry us up, the process took a while, since there were sixteen of us. I admired the tigers while we waited. They are so beautifully marked, the dull orange hide seared with black lines that end in perfect points, with one white line on each erect ear. When my turn came, the small Thai man grasped my upper arm firmly, and I had to resist the impulse to shake him off. “Camera?” he asked, and I shook my head. This wasn’t a photo moment for me, it was an experience. We stopped at the first animal lying on the ground, and I squatted beside it, feeling small. I stroked its rough short hair, looking at its enormous feet, just the tips of the black claws showing, and its white throat stretched out. Its eyes were closed and it only twitched one ear as I touched its back. My guide led me on to the second tiger. I sat beside it on the rock, my hand on its huge flank, saying, “You are a very handsome animal and I’m honored to be so close to you. Not that my presence seems to be of any interest to you, I suppose you get a string of tourists admiring you every day. Does it get boring?” Its white belly gleamed with dull cleanliness, like the perfectly curved long white whiskers around its mouth. The end of its long striped tail flicked lazily. I could happily have sat
there for half an hour, but the man
was tugging at my arm, and I could only ignore him for a couple of
minutes. I walked back reluctantly to
the waiting group of onlookers. Liz
went next, and as she sat down on the rock, the huge beast who was
lying over
by the wall lazily got up, starting to walk towards us.
Immediately one of the Thai men ran to grab
it by the tail. The monk joined him,
and together they pushed the huge animal back down, smacking and
slapping it,
until it rolled onto its side with its head laid out on the ground. Such harsh treatment seemed a little
unwarranted but apparently the magnificent animals didn’t mind being
handled
roughly. Twice while we were waiting,
one of the handsome comatose beasts rolled over on its side, yawning
hugely to
reveal its array of massive white teeth, with a huge canine on either
side, its
pink tongue lolling between them; then the monk or one of the other men
hurried
over to smack it on the side of the head until it lay upright again
with its
head on its paws. One woman didn’t want to
go near them, but the rest of us
all took our turn. Then the men hustled
us out of the area. Just before we
turned the corner, I looked back; the monk had put another little white
pill on
the rock and the tiger was licking it up. Lek led us to some other
concrete buildings, where three
monkeys were in separate cages. One sat on a bar scratching itself,
staring off
in the distance all the time I stood there, only glancing briefly at me
with
its sad black eyes. The other two were
climbing up, down and around their cages, swinging by one arm and
propelling
themselves across their small space. Their
movements, so fluid and relaxed, were a pleasure to
watch. The keeper brought one of the
active ones
out for us to pet, and Liz sat with it on her lap for a little while. I wasn’t interested in being close to them,
partly because the monkey keeper was hovering nervously and I suspected
he was
afraid it would bite. I had heard that
monkeys are known for biting people without any warning at all. Lek was calling us, and
everyone else was wandering back
towards the entrance. As we walked back
through the large compound, we saw the monk leading one of the tigers
by its
rope. He carried a stick in his free
hand, and whenever the tiger slowed down, he walloped it.
“They don’t treat them
very gently,” said Liz in a
disapproving tone. I shrugged.
“They’re
not gentle animals. I don’t think you
can afford always to be sweet and gentle with an animal that could kill
you so
easily. You’d have to establish that
you are in charge, and keep it that way. It
doesn’t mean that they don’t treat them with
compassion.” Liz looked doubtful, and
I changed the subject, not wanting
to get into an argument. “The leaflet
says that the open pit is the ‘exercise area’ but the tigers didn’t
seem at all
energetic. I wonder if they are kept
drugged the whole time. What do you
think those pills were?” “Some kind of drug?” “Yes, but what kind? Opium?” “I suppose opium poppies
grow well here. They tigers certainly
looked relaxed and
well fed.” “Yes, I guess that’s the
fate of the pigs we’re
seeing.” I nodded to a couple who were
rooting nearby. Liz’s eyebrows came
together in a scandalized expression. “You don’t think they
feed the pigs to the tigers, do
you? This is a monastery, they’re
Buddhists!” “What, you think the
tigers are going to be vegetarian
too? They have to feed the tigers some
kind of meat. They would have to
slaughter some of the pigs anyway, because these pigs are going have
lots of
babies, and if they don’t cull them, they would overrun the place. I’ve raised pigs, I know what I’m talking
about.” Liz turned away. She
didn’t want to deal with that kind of reality, and she didn’t have to.
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