| The grace with which His Majesty
the King has carried himself for 60 years on the
throne is being marked with people's personal recollections
of his generosity Harvesting fish in the South
Who is there when one needs hope, inspiration
and courage to overcome one of life's crises?
For many Thais, the definitive answer is His
Majesty the King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who has literally
handed them "new lives" in desperate
times.
"I couldn't sleep, I wept for so many nights,
I had lost all hope but then, suddenly, my thoughts
went to His Majesty," said Useng Zalaemae,
64, through teary smiles.
In 1993, he and many neighbours in Ban Patateemore,
part of Pattani's Sai Buri district, lost all
of the sea bass they had raised in baskets floating
in a local river because an irrigation station
polluted the waterway.
"The sea bass meant so much to us, they
were our hope and our livelihoods. We borrowed
money from a cooperative to start raising the
fish," the elderly man said.
In the depths of Useng's despair, the King entered
his thoughts, bringing him a sliver of hope in
seemingly hopeless times.
"I thought that only His Majesty would be
able to help me," said Useng.
One day, Useng made a decision to personally
relay his problems to the King, who was scheduled
to visit a nearby district.
Because he was not a fluent Thai speaker, preferring
his native blend of Malay and Thai, he took along
a dead sea bass as a prop when he spoke with His
Majesty.
"With confidence, I joined well-wishers
waiting to welcome the King ... But when His Majesty
arrived, I simply couldn't utter a word,"
Useng said.
"I just sat there, shivering and choking
on my tears, with the sea bass in my arms.
"It was like that for nearly half-an-hour
when finally His Majesty found out what had happened
to me, other people had to tell him" he said.
Useng said the King then asked him how many fish
he had lost, how big they were and how much he
could have sold them for.
"Very soon, His Majesty the King gave myself
and seven of my neighbours 1,000 young sea bass
each, fish food, nets and some cash," Useng
said.
And, he said, His Majesty launched a project
entitled "Crying Fish" here.
The project, managed by the Pattani coastal fishery
station, has provided assistance and advice on
the best fish species to farm and how to manage
and maintain optimum water quality.
Today the project has 85 participants.
His Majesty also visited Pattani to follow up
on the project's progress and again Useng found
himself crying in His Majesty's presence.
For Useng, the memories of His Majesty chatting
with him warmly remain vivid to this day.
"His Majesty asked me about the project,
my debt repayments and my children.
"His Majesty also said jokingly, 'Well,
take good care of the fish! Don't make them cry
again'," Useng said.
For the past 14 years, Useng has personally presented
sea bass to His Majesty every year - sometimes
via Her Majesty the Queen.
"And every time I pray, I pray that Allah
blesses Their Majesties the King and the Queen,"
Useng said.
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Reaping plenty in the North
Walking through crops on his farm in the Kingdom's
North, 52-year-old Surachai Morakotwijitkarn says
he will be eternally grateful for His Majesty's
kindness.
He says because of the King's kindness, he has
been inspired to help others.
People call at his farm almost every day to see
how Surachai manages his pigs, fish and frogs
and walk among his garden beds laden with vegetables,
decorative plants and fruit trees.
And all this on an area of 1,200 square metres.
Some days as many as five groups of people visit
his farm for to learn about how he does things.
"I've managed to brave my way through the
darkest days because of His Majesty. So now, I
want to help others.
"Even though I'm still in debt, I know I
am now on the right path and head-ing for a better
future," he said.
"I have found true happiness in life,"
Surachai said.
Surachai said he was once a cloth vendor, who
had lived carelessly and wrongly believed that
money alone could keep his family happy. "I
had sold clothes in various flea markets, I had
travelled to many provinces ... I was never home.
"But when I did make it home, I came with
lots of money for my family," he said.
Surachai said the easy money allowed him to indulge
in going out and gambling.
He never realised such a lifestyle was problematic
until 1997, when the country's economic crisis
stopped him in his tracks.
"Sales were less brisk and I had more and
more stock and bigger and bigger debts.
"But instead of changing myself for the
better, I gambled all my available cash on lotteries
and I lost it all," Surachai said.
In 1999, Surachai's darkest days began because
his string of moneylenders seriously began demanding
their money back.
"I was under huge stress. It was so bad
that at one point I wanted to die.
"I pulled out a gun, but before I shot myself
in the head, my oldest daughter intervened,"
the now-happy father said.
After his daughter discovered his suicidal tendencies,
his wife and his parents talked the desperate
Surachai out of killing himself and reminded him
of the need to exercise his conscience.
"It was lucky for me there was a royally
initiated project near my house.
"I went there to recover my livelihood and
learned how to raise frogs," he said.
Surachai later invested Bt2,800 to raise frogs
in October of 1999.
Although his venture flopped, Surachai did not
give up.
"My brother gave me a book about His Majesty.
One I had read it, I was so moved, and found
the courage to go on," he said.
Part of the book read: "Unlike any other
palace on Earth, the Chitralada Palace and Suan
Chitralada is brimming with experimental fish
ponds, paddy fields, dairy cattle, mills
"It is no overstatement to say there is
no gap between His Majesty and the farmers of
Thailand, because His Majesty has worked on the
farm."
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