'The monarchy is god': A Thai royalist in a divided kingdom
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[November 12, 2020]
By Matthew Tostevin and Jiraporn Kuhakan
BANGKOK (Reuters) - The words the Thai king
spoke to Thitiwat Tanagaroon have been tattooed on his arm: "very brave,
very good, thank you".
The 50-year-old restaurant manager never imagined he would win praise
from King Maha Vajiralongkorn when he brandished a royal portrait at an
anti-government protest last month. Nor had he expected online attacks
and calls for him to be fired from his job.
"There are a lot of people who still love the monarchy and worship the
monarchy but they don’t come out," he told Reuters.
"Whoever comes out gets harassed."
Just months ago, criticising Thailand's monarchy was taboo and few dared
brave harsh royal insult laws.
Now, defending the monarchy can also draw criticism - a monumental shift
in a kingdom where the institution has been promoted for decades and
must be revered according to the constitution.
The Palace did not respond to a request for comment on changing
attitudes since protests began in July.
"The new generation and youth, they're not into it," protest leader,
Tattep Ruangprapaikitseree, 23, said of the deference generations of
Thais have shown for the monarchy.
"They see that they're human, the king is human, not a god."
Like many Thais his age, Thitiwat grew up watching the nightly royal
news on television. He saw people kneel as royal cars passed on streets
lined with royal portraits. The monarchy was the one thing he always put
faith in, he said.
"It's the same love I have for my dad and mum," he said. "For me, the
monarchy is god."
A decade ago, he himself joined street protests - by royalist "yellow
shirts" - to bring down an elected populist government.
DRAMATIC CHANGE
He was among thousands who prayed and slept outside the hospital when
King Bhumibol Adulyadej fell sick in 2016. And when King Bhumibol died
after a seven-decade reign, Thitiwat - like the rest of Thailand -
dressed in black for a year.
But Thailand has changed dramatically since protests that began in July
against Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha - a former army chief.
Anti-establishment demonstrations have evolved into demands to curb the
powers of the monarchy, which critics accuse of abetting military
domination, taking excessive authority, lavish spending and allowing a
crackdown on critics.
The protesters have emphasised that they seek to reform the monarchy not
abolish it, though royalists distrust them.
For Thitiwat, all accusations against the king are lies and the monarchy
stands above politics.
His anger boiled over when chants on the street changed from vulgar
expletives thrown at Prayuth to cursing the king and he fumes at the now
widespread criticism of royalty on social media.
"It makes me want to vomit," said Thitiwat.
The protests have drawn tens of thousands of people - including to the
Pinklao suburb where Thitiwat works: a humdrum tangle of choked roads,
flyovers and shopping malls.
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Royalist Thitiwat Tanagaroon, whom the King Maha
Vajiralongkorn and Queen Suthida praised for holding a royal
portrait at an anti-government protest, shows his tattoos
reading 'Very brave, very good, thank you' on the left arm
and 'Under his graciousness' on the chest during an
interview with Reuters at his house in Nonthaburi, Thailand
November 6, 2020. REUTERS/Jiraporn Kuhakan
"Half the people support the protesters and half are against," said
Gade, 50, who supports the demonstrations and has a clothes stall
100 metres from Thitiwat's restaurant.
On the day Thitiwat stood nearby with his picture of the late king,
there was no confrontation, the royalist said. Protesters just
raised their emblem of defiance, the three-finger "Hunger Games"
salute.
But online, he said was branded "disgusting" and much worse. The
restaurant's rating was knocked from 4.8 stars to 1 and it was
bombarded with calls to fire him, its owner said.
"I was very scared," said owner Bo, 33, who did not want to give her
full name or have her restaurant identified.
On Facebook, one user called Mind Pain wrote "I'm disappointed, time
to find a new place to eat." However, the owner said royalists were
now coming in solidarity and takings had risen.
While royalists condemn such attacks, protesters complain of worse.
"Think about what the pro-democracy side endured in recent years.
Prosecuted, followed, harassed, put into choke holds," Tattep said.
"There has to be dialogue, not harassment."
SENTIMENT SHIFT
Gauging the shift in the country of 70 million is hard. The biggest
protests have been bigger than royalist shows of support, but one
recent poll said 60% of people thought the protesters should not
attack the monarchy - though without explaining why.
Change is evident. Not everyone stands for the royal anthem in
cinemas any more. When a woman slapped a teenager who didn't stand
for the national anthem at a railway station, it was she who faced
public condemnation.
Thitiwat's emergence as a hero for monarchists came when the king
praised him outside the palace on the evening of Oct. 23 as he knelt
with thousands of other well-wishers.
Thitiwat said the encounter was not staged, as critics have
suggested. He burst into tears of emotion and later couldn't sleep.
The video he posted of the meeting went viral.
But many were not sympathetic. They accused the king of stoking
division by praising Thitiwat while ignoring protest demands. A week
later, the king said protesters were "loved all the same", but there
has been no royal response to their demands.
Some radical monarchists say they are ready for violence, but
Thitiwat saw no place for that.
"The kids are like family," he said. "I'll try to be tougher and
endure the hatred."
(Additional reporting by Chayut Setboonsarng; Editing by Robert
Birsel)
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