Sunday, August 16, 2009

Little Luk Chai makes me smile every time...



http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/australias-first-baby-jumbo-gets-buddhist-blessing-20090815-elli.html


Australia's first baby elephant got a Buddhist blessing yesterday. How adorable and tiny is he? Here's what the Brisbane Times reported (http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/australias-first-baby-jumbo-gets-buddhist-blessing-20090815-elli.html ):



"Australia's first baby jumbo gets Buddhist blessing"

August 15, 2009

The first elephant calf to be born in Australia has been blessed for good health and success during a traditional Buddhist ceremony in Sydney.

Taronga Zoo's six-week-old Asian elephant calf, Luk Chai, which means son or male child in Thai, received prayers then had water sprinkled over him by monks on Saturday morning.

The blessing was led by senior monk Pra Ratcha Silaporn from Wat Buddharangsee forest monastery in Leumeah with help from eight monks from temples in Sydney and Canberra.

The Reverend Bill Crews, from the Exodus Foundation, a Christian welfare organisation based in Sydney that helps disadvantaged Australians, carried out an ecumenical blessing by burning gum leaves.



Luk Chai appeared unaware of the first part of the ceremony, and continued dunking his trunk in the moat surrounding his enclosure during prayers lasting 10 minutes.

But he later warmed to the monks and wrapped his trunk around their hands as water was sprinkled over him inside his pen, under the watchful eye of his mother Thong Dee.

Taronga Zoo director Guy Cooper said Luk Chai's birth gave hope for the conservation of Asian elephants and had helped forge closer ties between Australia and Thailand.

"With the global response to the challenges of conservation we can only have hope for the future of wildlife," he told crowds watching the ceremonies.

Thai Consul-General Khun Kiattikhun was among those watching.

Taronga's elephants arrived from Thailand in 2006.

Luk Chai, born on July 4, is the first elephant to be successfully bred in Australia.

He remains a crowd pleaser and is said to regularly turn the water hose on his keepers during bath time.

Two of the other elephants in the herd are expected to give birth in 2010 and 2011.

AAP"

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