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Sangduen Lek Chailert's Elephant Nature Foundation - P1/2 (In Thai)
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Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
will be presented
in Thai and English,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Japanese,
Korean, Malay,
Mongolian, Persian,
Portuguese, Russian,
Spanish and Thai.
This is Thailand,
and the nature park
where I live is way up in
the north of the country,
near a city called
Chiang Mai.
Welcome, friendly viewers,
to today’s edition
of Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants,
featuring the first
in a two-part series on
the Elephant Nature Park
in northern Thailand
where rescued elephants
live freely in beautiful
natural surroundings.
They leave behind
their previous harsh lives
where they were forced
to do hard labor,
circus tricks, or other
degrading activities often
while being chained.
The sanctuary,
which includes
“Elephant Haven”
a separate natural area
a few hours away from
the Park, has gained
worldwide recognition.
In 2005, Ms. Sangduen
“Lek” Chailert,
the vegan founder
of the Elephant Nature
Foundation which
created the Park,
was named
“Asian Hero of the Year”
by the respected
news periodical
TIME Magazine.
The Park has also
received attention from
other international media
outlets, appearing
in publications such as
National Geographic
magazine and being the
subject of documentaries
by the Discovery Channel,
the National
Geographic Channel,
Animal Planet,
the BBC, CNN,
KTV, RAI, and major
Thai TV channels.
During childhood
Sangduen became friends
with an elephant called
Togkum or Golden One.
Togkum was given
to her grandfather, who
was a traditional healer,
by a patient as
an expression of gratitude
for saving his life.
As chance would have it,
Ms. Chailert had
the opportunity to care
for many elephants
during her teens and
this led her to decide
to dedicate her life
to these gentle giants.
Actually I didn’t plan
for this, however I have
always loved animals.
One day when I was
in senior high school,
a group of missionaries
were looking for volunteers
to help with translation
of the local language.
As I wanted to learn
English and I could
speak the local dialect,
I volunteered and the
missionaries helped me
get up into the mountain.
It must have been fate,
as I traveled to
the Karen villages
where the logging industry
was taking place.
I met some elephants
and I was shocked
by the maltreatment of
the elephants which were
working dragging logs.
Some of the elephants
were blind in both eyes,
crippled, with sores
all over their body and
were still forced to drag
the logs time and again.
After I left that day
the images were still clear
in my mind and
it was heart wrenching.
It was like it was a plea
for help which
wouldn’t leave me
even when I ate or slept.
Anything I did,
I saw the images.
So I decided to get a job
when I was 16 and buy
medicine for the elephants.
I went with
the missionaries again
up the mountain
to deliver the medicine.
But after a while
the more I went
into the jungle,
the more elephants I saw.
I decided to become
a volunteer and come out
to work so that I could
get medicine for them
and then I would go back
into the jungle
to look after them.
This was how
I started this work.
Then one day when
I was administering the
medicine and there were
so many of them I started
to think that this
would be never-ending.
I wasn’t a veterinarian
so I thought the only way
was to find a home for them.
How was I going to find
a home for them when
I was just
a mountain person?
I always thought
to myself that if I had
the opportunity I would
make a home for them.
Ms. Chailert kept the
dream alive in her heart
of making a refuge
so she could ensure
the well-being of the
magnificent elephants.
Through the help of
a friend from the USA,
her noble vision to create
an elephant haven
was realized in 1995.
In 2003, the Park shifted
to a larger site
in the Mae Taeng valley.
One day this friend
of mine told me that
he knew someone
who would buy land and
donate it to the elephants.
In 1992 I bought
my first elephant;
I had to get someone to
look after her as I didn’t
have a place of my own.
Then in 2003 after a very
long time a rich man
in Texas (USA)
bought this land for us.
So it started from there.
Before I had nine elephants
and I took them
to the national park
however the officials
always told us to leave.
But now as we have
someone who bought
the land for us,
they have a permanent
home and the elephants
have a place to live.
Today
the sanctuary houses
34 rescued elephants
from all over Thailand.
We have helped over
200 elephants.
Most of them
we can’t bring here.
We help the owners look
after them for a while
and return them
to their owners.
Most of the severely
injured elephants were
in the logging industry,
elephants which
walk the streets,
homeless beggar elephants,
performing elephants
and elephants which
give tours in the jungle.
These elephants
before they came here
had mental problems.
In addition to
physical abuse,
our biggest problem
is mental health.
At this point we need
a lot of time for
mental health treatment.
The treatment uses
nature and the giving of
love and compassion.
Family is the most
important thing
to elephants.
And in the wild,
we stick together
in groups called herds.
Although most of
the elephants here at
the Park are not related,
we want to be part of
a family like you.
When we return,
we’ll learn about
the compassionate
Jumbo Express project
set up by the Elephant
Nature Foundation.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for our program featuring
the loving Elephant
Nature Park
in northern Thailand’s
Chiang Mai province.
Including a separate area
called Elephant Haven;
the Park provides
a 386 hectare refuge
for 34 rescued elephants
from all parts of Thailand,
who now live peacefully
in a river valley amidst
forested mountains.
Also since 1995,
the Jumbo Express,
a free mobile health clinic
operated by the Elephant
Nature Foundation
which created the Park,
has visited 100 villages
populated by the native
hill peoples, various
Thai communities, and
refugee camps in the area
from the Thailand-Burma
border up to
the Laos-China border
to treat elephants.
This originated from
when I traveled into
the jungle to hand out
medicine, so the elephant
ambulance was created.
Another treatment
for elephants is the
prevention of illnesses
and the only way for this
to work is to train
the elephant carers on
the way to care for them.
We can’t just go
and talk to the carers.
We have to show them
that we care for them also,
so we also give medicines
to people.
Sometimes we will
hire doctors from the
hospitals to come with us.
We use some of our funds
to hire doctors
who will help distribute
medicines to the people.
We also have healthcare
projects that don’t
involve doctors.
Indigenous hill peoples
live in remote areas
and it takes a lot of
traveling time
to come see a doctor.
When our mobile
health clinic goes to visit
the indigenous hill peoples,
lots of children will run
and follow our vehicle –
a stream of red
as Karen hill people
like to wear red.
It is a wonderful feeling.
We see a lot of
disadvantaged villagers,
sometimes we end up
coming back with no shoes.
When we see that
they do not have shoes,
we take ours off
and give it to them.
The kids tell us it’s good
that you do not return
in just your underwear.
We come and give
everything and this is
a really satisfying feeling.
Sometimes we give them
the shirt that we are
wearing and love very much
but they are without.
It is a really satisfying
feeling; I can’t explain it.
When we go there
everything that we do
has so much meaning.
Each new elephant
to the Park is warmly
welcomed by
the existing residents,
a touching start to
the lifelong friendships
that form between
the marvelous beings
that live there.
When we receive
a new elephant,
they come individually.
They come at
different times and under
different circumstances.
Some elephants we
rescue from the jungle,
others from the roads.
When the new elephants
arrive,
it is an amazing scene.
When the elephant arrives
and comes out of
the truck, we will
take him to be introduced
to the others.
There will be a very loud
welcoming reception.
They will come to interview,
to touch and will talk
for many hours.
They will talk very loud.
If anyone hasn’t seen
elephants talking
together they will see it now.
It is absolutely magnificent.
They will ask questions
and answer questions.
When the new one arrives
there will be
approximately 20 trunks
pointing in that direction
asking questions.
After asking the question,
the other will answer.
We don’t know what
they are asking
but we know they are
communicating.
Once they meet each other,
no matter who it is,
where they come from,
once they arrive
at this home
they receive only love.
They will love
and accept each other.
For example Jokia,
a blind elephant
and Mother Perm.
Mother Perm came first;
she was the first elephant
at this center. Jokia was
the second elephant.
Once they met each other,
they started talking
immediately.
They talked to each other,
they hugged each other.
Once they lived together
for awhile and they used
their trunks to hug
and greet each other.
After a while they stayed
together and did not
leave one another.
Mother Perm
has good eyesight
and will eat grass.
Jokia will use his trunk
to find the grass but
he will be a bit slower.
Once Mother Perm is
about 50 meters away,
Jokia will call her.
Mother Perm will then
quickly come and
hug and talk to him.
It’s like she would
apologize for being
too far away and that
she will come back.
A lot of people
come here to film
documentaries.
When they have finished
filming they will
take pictures.
Jokia will then ask what
is happening at the front.
Mother Perm will tell him,
“It’s all right,
I will go have a look,”
as elephant vision
is not very good.
They can’t see very far.
So Mother Perm
will walk forward.
So we have to tell the
cameraman not to come
too close to this pair
of elephants as they are
very protective.
They will tell each other
what is happening.
Indeed, elephants are
remarkable beings who
truly deserve our respect
and protection.
May Heaven bless
the souls of these
incredibly loving,
soft-hearted vegan giants!
Join us again tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
to discover more about
the lives of the elephants
at the Elephant
Nature Park
and their moving stories,
as well as to see
the presentation of
Shining World
Compassion Award
to Ms. Sangduen
“Lek” Chailert.
For more details on the
Elephant Nature Park,
please visit
or
Thank you
cherished viewers
for your company
on today’s program.
Up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May we always feel the
love and light of Heaven.
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