
Published on January 3, 2008
Her many charities included campaigns to get rid of landmines and promote road safety. She even cared for elephants.
She worked tirelessly on rural healthcare, carrying the work of HRH the Princess Mother. The best known of these programmes was the Princess Mother's Volunteer Doctors Organisation.
Every year, the Princess travelled with medical doctors deep into the countryside, visiting villages in 51 provinces.
The Princess was also known for her work with the Kidney Foundation of Thailand and Prostheses Foundation, which made the Guinness Book of Records in 2006 when it provided 664 artificial legs for 646 people in 11 days to mark the 60th year of His Majesty the King's reign.
Her list of charities runs long, some of which she initiated herself.
These included the Foundation for Slum Children, which was set up after she read an article about their plight in a newspaper. She decided to visit the children to see how she could best help.
"You have to see for yourself to understand the hardship they endure", she said after visiting them the first time. She sits on its board and actively presided over other various organisations.
Unbeknown to many, she had been supporting Thai students competing in the International Science & Mathematical Olympiads since May 1989.
She also oversaw their training and funding needs.
Her diverse interests included the Elephant Hospital in Lampang, which has been under her patronage since 2002; the Foundation for the Hospital for Autistic Children; the Anti-Drowsy Driving Campaign; the Promotion of French Language Teaching; the Foundation for the Development of Women in the North; and Thailand Mine Action Centre, which had been under her patronage since 2000.
The Princess was responsible for channelling and raising millions of baht to fund these organisations and foundations.
The Nation