
Wednesday 19 January 2005 The Princess and the TsunamiOut of the countries that I have visited
in The Kingdom has been much in my thoughts
over the past few weeks. I had planned to
write a column on the Thai Royal Family but as I watch the devastation caused by Boxing
Days Tsunami, it is hard to ignore the impact the wave had on the world. People from all corners of the globe have been
affected, including King Bhumipols immediate family.
Most of the places hit by the wave are
ones that I had been too. As unrecognisable as
they are now, I can still remember the feeling of sun baking on the sand under a warm sun
and swimming in the crystal clear tropical waters. I
can remember the exhaustion at the end of the day that I felt from the effort of doing
these rigorous activities and the hunger it built in my (regrettably still insatiable)
stomach. So, I have no trouble putting my feet in
the shoes of the thousands of tourists affected by that day.
I think we can all imagine the lazy contentment they felt earlier on that morning. And, I suspect, King
Bhumipols eldest daughter, Princess Ubol Ratana felt much the same. Princess Ubol Ratana is the eldest
daughter of HM King Bhumipol Adulyadej and HM Queen Sirikit of After finishing her schooling, the
Princess began study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and later at the What controversy the relationship caused
within the family is hard to gauge. It is
illegal to criticise the Thai Royal Family and information on their personal lives, is
hard to find. But, it seems unlikely, at least
in the 1970s, that marriage to a non-Thai westerner would have been the first choice
of a son-in-law for eldest daughter of the King and Queen. When the couple married in1972, Princess
Ubol Ratana relinquished her title and settled permanently in the Their first child, a girl, Khun
Ploypailin was born in 1981, followed by a son, Khun Bhumi in 1983 and another girl, Khun
Sirikittiya in 1985. It would be Khun Bhumi
who would have the greatest effect and challenge on the Princesss life. Khun Bhumi was born with autism and like
any parents with a child afflicted by the syndrome, the Princess and her husband worked
intensively to help bring Khun Bhumi out of his own world.
The Princess was open about her sons condition and did much to raise
awareness about autism over the years. The Princesss marriage
deteriorated in the early 1980s and she eventually divorced Peter Jensen. The break up was not amicable and Mr Jensen
challenged the Princesss decision to take Khun Bhumi back to Her sons autism improved as he
grew. He attended school and later university
where he majored in physical education. The
Princess, as pictures show of the two together, was very proud of Khun Bhumi's
achievements. When Princess Ubol Ratana returned to At the end of last year, the Princess
took Khun Bhumi and her youngest daughter to Khao Lak for a vacation. Khun Bhumi was sports mad and on that fateful day
had been jet skiing with his bodyguards. It has been reported that when the wave
struck, Khun Bhumi was still in the water but the Princess has said publicly that he had
finished and was just about to make his way from the beach. The Princess and her daughter were in
their hotel room when a frantic knock at the door alerted her that something was not
right. Opening the door, she was told of the
imminent danger and she, her daughter and their guards ran from the hotel. They spotted a multi-storey building and
got to the fourth floor when the wave hit, completely swamping the entire three floors
below. When the waves subsided, she began a
frantic search for her son. The two bodyguards who had been with him survived and the
Princess believed that as her son was making his way from the beach when the Tsunami hit,
that like his guards she would find him somewhere. Her bodyguards insisted that she go to
Phuket and await news, which she did. She then
allowed her helicopter to ferry injured people to and form Khao Lak and helped look after
others in the aftermath of the wave. As the
hours wore on, no news arrived about her son. Her brother Crown Prince Maha
Vajiralongkorn rushed to Phuket to help the Princess and together they went back to Khao
Lak to continue the search. They looked
through the night for Khun Bhumi, finally finding his body early the next morning, a
hundred metres away from their hotel. Princess Ubol Ratana immediately flew
back to In a grandfatherly gesture, King
Bhumipol granted Khun Bhumi a royal funeral, which was attended by the royal family. Princess Ubol Ratana was visibly deeply upset
throughout the ceremony. It was a week the world will never
forget. Thousands of stories of human kindness come out of the disaster, including
accounts from tourists assisted by Princess Ubol Ratana, at a time when worry over Khun
Bhumi must have been all consuming. Perhaps to some extent ones grief in such a
circumstance is somehow made more bearable knowing that so many experience the same sense
of loss. It might also explain Princess Ubol
Ratanas public presence only a couple of weeks after saying goodbye to her son. Link to letter from Khun Bhumi's sister Khun Ploypailin Jensen on behalf of the Red Cross: http://www.redcross.or.th/article/ploy.htm - Gioffredo |
Previous columns can be found in the archive

This page and its contents are ©2006 Copyright by Geraldine Voost and may not be
reproduced without the authors permission. Gioffredo's column is ©2006 Copyright by Gioffredo Godenzi who has kindly given permission for it to be displayed on this website.
This page was last updated on: Wednesday, 19-Jan-2005 09:30:01 CET