
Skulls, smoke and spirits: Thai ceremony to lay to rest the unclaimed dead
RUNGJIRAJITTRANON (Thailand), April 30 — Flames crackle through piles of hundreds of human skulls and thick grey smoke pours into the Thai sky in a moment as spiritually significant as it is gruesome.
The Lang Pacha ceremony is observed by Thais of Chinese descent to give a dignified funeral to the unclaimed dead.
In Thailand, hospitals hand unidentified bodies and those with no-one to give them appropriate last rites to local foundations.
These then bury the corpses in graveyards, sometimes for several years, before a weeks-long ritual when they are exhumed, cleaned and all cremated together.
In Buddhist belief, the spirits of the uncremated remain trapped between worlds and cannot be reincarnated until monks perform the proper rites.
'Spirits without cremation still roam,' said Pisit Pongsirisupakul, vice president of the Dhamma of Buddha Nakhon Ratchasima Foundation, which organised the event.
'They suffer and they can't be reborn. We help them move on, and that's why this is an act of merit,' he told AFP.
Buddhists believe death marks the beginning of a new life, and making merit ensures a better rebirth.
'It's not scary,' said Pisit. 'When people die, we all look the same—like skeletons.'
Empty eyesocket
The ritual begins with volunteers digging up the graves—the event's name translates as 'cleaning the jungle'—before brushing dirt and flesh from the remains and washing them in holy water boiled with tea leaves.
One man scrubbed out an empty eyesocket firmly with a toothbrush.
The scene is incongruously cheerful: wearing blue surgical gloves, Pimjai Sornrach grinned broadly as she held a skull, declaring 'it's so good, it's so good', while her smiling friend held up a femur for the camera.
'I just want to be there whenever there's an event like this,' said Pimjai, a 54-year-old shopkeeper.
She started volunteering at 17 after seeing two people killed in a hit-and-run, and says the ritual is about helping others as well as earning merit.
'My heart tells me to go.'
Accumulated over the course of a decade, some of the 600 corpses were only recently deceased and the smell of death hung over the foundation complex in Nakhon Ratchasima province, north of Bangkok.
Some will have been Alzheimer's patients who wandered from their homes, never to be found by their families, others include road accident victims or undocumented labourers from Myanmar.
Laid out to dry, the remains are combined and divided up by bone type and laid out on mats or piled in buckets—hundreds of skulls, leg bones and others.
It is a family occasion—two young girls sat alongside rows of skulls, each holding an anonymous head in their lap.
This photo taken on April 23, 2025 shows smoke rising from cremations during the Lang Pacha ceremony at the Dhamma of Buddha Nakhon Ratchasima Foundation complex in Thailand's Nakhon Ratchasima province. — AFP pic
'Peace of mind'
In the days running up to the ceremony's climax, volunteers press gold leaf onto the bones, and reconstruct faces on a few.
Each set of bones is loaded by turn into two separate crematorium towers—one for the men, one for the women—with the skulls on top completing the stacks.
Monks chant and pray before the flames are lit. Later the ashes from each tower will be interred in a graveyard.
Thitiwat Pornpiratsakul, 63, began volunteering after he, his wife and two sons survived a bus crash 20 years ago.
'Our bus flipped over, and no one came to help us,' he recalled. 'My wife and children were with me. We felt helpless.'
Since recovering, he has taken part in the ritual every year.
'My family and I have stayed healthy, and I believe it's because we help in this ceremony,' he said.
Organisers say the event not only honours the dead, but also highlights a need for legal reform.
Pisit has long campaigned for government support to expand DNA testing and connect the civil registration system to police forensics to help identify the unclaimed.
'We need a centralised database where families can search by ID and find their loved ones,' he said. — AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malaysian Reserve
6 hours ago
- Malaysian Reserve
Eight dead in Brazil hot-air balloon accident
SAO PAULO – At least eight people were killed Saturday when a hot-air balloon with 21 passengers caught fire in southern Brazil, a state governor said. It was the second fatal balloon accident in the vast South American country in less than a week. 'Eight fatalities and 13 survivors,' Santa Catarina state governor Jorginho Mello said on X. Videos taken by bystanders and carried on Brazilian television showed the moment when the balloon erupted in flames above a rural area outside the Atlantic coast town of Praia Grande, a tourist hotspot popular for hot-air ballooning. The basket carrying the passengers plummeted dozens of meters to the ground in flames. Other images showed some of the passengers jumping. The 13 survivors were treated at hospitals, firefighters said. Officials at Our Lady of Fatima hospital said of the five survivors treated there, three were in stable condition with minor injuries and two had already been discharged. Information about the other survivors was not immediately available. An investigation was launched to determine the cause of the accident. Weather conditions were clear at the time. 'I want to express my solidarity with the families of the victims,' Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a statement. The pilot told officials the fire was sparked by a blowtorch — used to ignite the balloon's main flame — in the basket, Tiago Luiz Lemos, a police official in Praia Grande, told local media. The pilot tried to bring the balloon down as soon as the fire erupted, 'and once it was close to the ground, he told the passengers to jump from the basket. But some of them couldn't do it and the fire grew,' the official said. Four people were burned to death and four others died from injuries sustained in the fall, fire department official Zevir Cipriano Junior told reporters. One witness told the Razao newspaper that he saw 'two people falling, they were on fire, the basket broke off and the balloon fell.' Less than a week ago, a woman died during a balloon ride in southeastern Sao Paulo state. –AFP


The Sun
13 hours ago
- The Sun
Nigeria receives over 100 looted artifacts from the Netherlands
LAGOS: The Netherlands on Saturday officially handed back to Nigeria 119 precious ancient sculptures, stolen from the former kingdom of Benin more than 120 years ago during the colonial era. It is the latest return of artefacts to Africa, as pressure mounts on Western governments and institutions to hand back the spoils of colonial oppression. Nigeria celebrated the return of the priceless 'Benin Bronzes' -- metal and ivory sculptures dating back to the 16th to 18th centuries -- with a ceremony held at the National Museum in Lagos, showcasing four of them in the museum's courtyard. The selection included a bronze carving of a king's head, a carved elephant tusk and a small leopard. In the 19th century, British troops stole thousands of Benin Bronzes in the then-independent kingdom of Benin, in the south of present-day Nigeria. The sculptures were pillaged from the kingdom's royal palace and have since been held in museums and private collections across Europe and the United States. The four artefacts currently on display in Lagos will remain in the museum's permanent collection, while the others will be returned to Ewuare II, the Oba of Benin -- the traditional ruler of the kingdom of Benin in southern Nigeria. 'These are embodiments of the spirit and identity of the people from which they were taken from,' said Olugbile Holloway, director-general of Nigeria's National Commission for Museums and Monuments. 'All we ask of the world is to treat us with fairness, dignity and respect,' he said at the ceremony, where he announced that Germany had agreed to return more than 1,000 additional Benin Bronze pieces. 'The German government has actually signed a transfer agreement to hand over a 1,000 Benin Bronzes back' to Nigeria, he said. Dignity Nigeria's art and culture minister Hannatu Musa Musawa, who signed the handover document with the Dutch ambassador for international cultural cooperation, Dewi van de Weerd, said 'Nigeria needs to reclaim its history and its heritage'. 'The deal reached with Germany further underscores the growing international commitment to right historical wrongs and foster mutual respect,' she added. Van de Weerd said the Netherlands said the 'return of the bronzes which were stolen in 1897 by the British is historic' and would help to restore 'dignity'. She said her government was also working with other countries such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka for the restitution of artworks plundered by imperialist nations. Adebimpe Adebambo, a Lagos-based artist who has followed the repatriation of the Benin artefacts over the years, said she had paid 'top euro to see the works that were stolen from my country'. 'Im happy that they have come home to us,' she told AFP at the ceremony.


Daily Express
14 hours ago
- Daily Express
Japan-US-Philippines coast guards simulate crisis amid China threat
Published on: Sunday, June 22, 2025 Published on: Sun, Jun 22, 2025 Text Size: Members of the Japan Coast Guard prepare to toss a dummy into the sea for a rescue operation simulation during a maritime exercise with the Philippine Coast Guard ship 'Teresa Magbanua', the United States Coast Guard ship 'Cutter Stratton' and the Japan Coast Guard ship 'Asanagi' in the waters around the southern city of Kagoshima, Kagoshima prefecture. Japan: Helicopters buzzed in the shadow of a smouldering volcano and boats rescued dummies from the sea this week in a show of maritime unity by Japan, the United States and the Philippines. The joint coast guard exercises held off Japan's southwest shore follow a warning from the three countries about Chinese activity in disputed regional waters. Tensions between China and other claimants to parts of the East and South China Seas have pushed Japan to deepen ties with the Philippines and the United States. This week marked the second time the countries' coast guards have held training drills together, and the first in Japan. They took place over five days off the coast of Kagoshima, where Sakurajima volcano dominates the skyline, quietly puffing out smoke and ash. Dozens of personnel took part, with Friday's final exercises featuring one vessel from each of the three countries' coast guards. Advertisement They included the BRP Teresa Magbanua, which was provided to the Philippines by Japan through a loan agreement. The 2,265-ton vessel, named after a schoolteacher and revolutionary, usually monitors Chinese boats in the South China Sea. China and the Philippines have engaged in months of confrontations in the contested waters, which Beijing claims almost entirely, despite an international ruling that the assertion has no legal basis. Chinese and Japanese patrol vessels in the East China Sea also routinely face off around disputed islands. On Friday, Manila accused China of using a water cannon on two of its fisheries department boats as they attempted to resupply Philippine fishermen near the disputed Scarborough Shoal. The US Coast Guard was represented in the exercises by the cutter Stratton, which can carry up to 170 personnel, and Japan by the 6,000-ton Asanagi. Friday's drills began with a simulation of a person falling overboard. Once the dummy, wearing a bright red lifejacket, was in the water, a US drone was launched from the Stratton, circling high above as it scanned the area. A small Philippine rescue boat then emerged from the Teresa Magbanua, zipping across the water before coast guard personnel fished the dummy out of the water. Other rescue scenarios enacted included a Japanese helicopter racing from shore to pull a human subject from the sea. The helicopter's rotor blades whipped up the calm blue waters, where the occasional small hammerhead shark could be seen idly swimming alongside the Asanagi. The exercises concluded with a simulated collision and fire, with all three coast guards blasting the stricken vessel with their water cannons. Japan Coast Guard official Naofumi Tsumura said the joint exercises had 'built mutual understanding and trust'. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia