Superstition in Thailand - Dolls that bring luck—and drugs- A craze for haunted dolls starts a moral panic
Superstition in Thailand - Dolls that
bring luck—and drugs- A craze for haunted dolls starts a moral panic
Payau’s doll is not a toy but a luk
thep, or “child angel” —a factory-moulded moppet which some believe can be
imbued, through a blessing, with the spirit of a child.
DOWN a buzzing lane in Bangkok’s Chinatown, a child is being born. Payau, a
middle-aged lady perched on a stool, has just finished assembling a plastic
doll which she has dressed in silk and adorned with pink lipstick. She will
take 4,000 baht ($110) for it, she says, while brushing tangles from its hair.
Payau’s doll is not a toy but a luk thep, or “child angel” —a
factory-moulded moppet which some believe can be imbued, through a blessing,
with the spirit of a child.
Luk thep are increasingly being seen out and about
in Bangkok, the capital, with their grown-up owners, who feed, water and dress
them in the hope of receiving good fortune in return. The fad has not amused
Prayuth Chan-ocha, the former general who leads Thailand’s nannying government,
which came to power in a coup in May 2014. He implied on January 25th that
adults ought not to waste money on plastic kids.
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