
Thai beauty contest
The population
of Thailand is 60.6 million, the growth rate 1.5%, infant
mortality 26 in 1,000 life births, and literacy 93.8%. With 60.6
million citizens, Thailand is less populous than Vietnam (74.6
million) and the Philippines (67.7 million) and much less populous
than Indonesia (196.5 million) but larger than any of its immediate
neighbors, Myanmar (46.7 million), Malaysia (20.1 million), Cambodia
(9.8 million) and Laos (4.8 million).
The population
growth rate is among the lowest in the region. Thailand's
1.5% are higher than China's 1.2% but lower than in Laos (2.9%),
the Philippines (2.3%), Malaysia (2.4%), Vietnam (2.3%), Cambodia
(2.5%), Myanmar (2.1%) and Indonesia (1.7%). The infant mortality
rate is lower than in all the above cited countries except
Malaysia. Thailand has the highest literacy rate among the countries
cited above. [Source: Asiaweek, edition of November 17, 1995]
Photo: Muslim children in South Thailand
There are
no ethnical conflicts worth mentioning in Thailand. The
only low-key internal conflict, in the southernmost provinces
of the kingdom, is based on a different religion and not
ethnically caused. The southernmost provinces are predominantly
Muslim, and the population there has Malay traits and many
speak a Malayan dialect aside from Thai. Although the relationship
between these southernmost provinces and Bangkok is sometimes
not exactly harmonious, there are no serious secessionist or separatist
tendencies.
The absence
of ethnically based conflicts leads observers to assume that the
Thailand is ethnically more coherent than is actually the case.
While there is indeed no single large ethnical minority (as for
example the Kurds in Iraq, Iran and Turkey), there is a very large
number of small ethnic groups with societies less civilized
than the mainstream Thai society. Most of these tribal societies
are found in the northern part of the country.
But even the
mainstream Thai society is far less coherent than, for
example, the Japanese society. Originally, the Thais lived in
what is today Yunnan Province in southern China, and indeed,
the Thai language is similar to and tonal like the Chinese (see
chapter Language for details). Only in the first centuries of
the second millennium A.D. did Thais in substantial numbers migrate
to what is today Thai territory. Thais mixed with a number
of peoples already inhabiting the region. Furthermore, substantial
relocations of large numbers of people occurred whenever a regional
power gained political and military predominance.
Thailand,
or rather Siam, also has a long tradition of granting political
asylum to groups from neighboring countries who fled their
homes because of religious or ethnically motivated persecution.
Vietnamese Christians, Mon people from Burma and
political dissidents from Cambodia have sought and received
shelter in Thailand not just after the Vietnam War but already
hundreds of years ago. And last not least, a large number of Chinese
has migrated to Thailand from times when the Thais themselves
only gained the territory of what today by and large is Thailand.
The Chinese, though, rather came for commercial than religious
or political reasons. The son of a Chinese father and a Thai mother,
Taksin, even was king of Thailand from 1767 to 1782.
Large sections
of northern Thailand have been under Burmese rule for many
centuries, and this not only resulted in a Burmese-influenced
architecture but also in an ethnical mix.
Therefore,
what gives the Thai citizenry its strong sense of identity
is rather of cultural, linguistic, religious and political than
ethnical nature. Though the Thai language is spoken quite
differently in the South, the North or the Northeast, the written
language is the same. A politically unifying influence of a scale
hard to underestimate is exerted by the monarchy, for decades
personalized by the extremely popular King Bhumiphol Adulyadej.