|
History
of the Informal Northern Thai Group
The Informal Northern Thai
Group came into being on the evening of Saturday, December 15th
1984, when eleven Chiang Mai residents met, discussed its formation,
and heard
the first lecture.
Founding a group had been
talked about for some years, but an earlier planning meeting had come
to
nothing as participants differed radically on how it would function. In
the
Seventies, the INTG's predecessor, the Northern Thai Society, [see
p.3], had a
brief and eventful life but although interest was keen and attendance
high,
problems of organization and registration led to its demise. It was
decided at
the December 1984 meeting that the extraordinarily varied research
being done
in and around Northern Thailand
made
it worth
trying again to arrange regular talks. The participants also agreed
that the
group's best chance of longevity lay in making its organization
flexible and
informal.
In the minutes issued after
the first meeting, it was noted that there was a wish to found "a
small
informal group, mainly of professionals; anthropologists, sociologists,
naturalists, etc., with interests in Northern Thai
culture,
with the aim
of meeting to exchange information and ideas, attend and discuss talks,
pool or
make available materials [mainly written] concerned with matters of
mutual
interest centering on Northern Thailand but extending to Thailand as a
whole
and Southeast Asia."
As time passed, 'membership’
of the group became open to anyone attending its meetings. No fee was
charged;
expenses in the early years were covered by a small sum [Baht 20]
contributed
by those attending the talks. The Group has been run by a committee of
volunteers, with the post of Convenor held by whoever can be persuaded
to take
it. The Treasurer and Archivist, on the other hand, have continued in
office
throughout the Group's twenty-one years.
Meetings are usually held on
the second Tuesday of each month, exceptionally at the American Alumni
Association and Payap University
plus other
venues, but otherwise at the location the Group has come to regard as
its home,
the Alliance Française on Charoen Prathet Road.
Thanks to
the donation of funds
originally contributed to the Northern Thai Society, the Group has been
able to
buy a few electronic media aids. It has also collected a complete set
of Siam
Society Journals, almost certainly the only one in Chiang Mai, and this
is now
being held at the Payap University Archives on Keonavarat Road.
The Founding Fathers and Mother of the INTG were: Hans Bänziger, John
Cadet, Louis Gabaude, Garnet Hoyes, Harald Hundius, Ingrid Hundius,
Richard Lando, Hans Penth, Howard Radley, Ron Renard, and John Shaw.
For a lively interview with some INTG informal committee members, see: Talking for 30 Years: The Informal Northern Thai GroupThe current committee members include: Hans and Saengdao Bänziger
[Treasurer and Accountant], John Cadet, Louis Gabaude [Secretary], Ken
Kampe, Reinhard Hohler, Ron Renard, Gary Suwannarat, and Rebecca Weldon
[Convenor]. The INTG website has been first generously created and run
by Daniel Peterson, then run by Brian Hubbard [former Convenor], Daniel
again, and now by Clarence Shettlesworth. The Group intends to continue
to offer talks that will contribute to a better understanding of the
region's cultural heritage and ongoing development, and warmly invites
researchers and others wishing to share their knowledge to contact the
Convenor, Rebecca Weldon < [email protected]>, and/or the
Secretary, Louis Gabaude < [email protected]>, or any other
committee member.
A
Note on the Northern Thai Society: 1972-74*
The original idea for the
foundation of the Northern Thai Society [NTS] came from Roy Hudson in
1972, by
then a resident of Chiang Mai for twelve years. He realized that he had
met
many other residents socially, but hardly knew anything of the
work any of
them were engaged in. Major Hudson thought it might be possible to form
a
society and invite members, other residents, and interesting visitors
to give
talks about their work or subjects concerning Northern
Thailand. An informal meeting was held at his home on
July 7th
1972, and a committee was nominated to go ahead with the drafting of
rules for
an association similar to that of the Siam Society. The committee
consisted of:
Col. Phoon Asanachinda [Chair], Major Akhom Pattiya [Vice Chair], Major
Roy
Hudson [Secretary], Dr. Tom Scovel [Treasurer], Dr. Hans Penth and
Dr. Malcolm
Shouls [Journal Editors], and Dr. Thaemsook Numnonda.
One indication of the
interest the group generated was its membership, 163 persons comprising
some
twelve nationalities, all willing to pay Baht 200 annually for the
privilege,
at a time when the Society could provide accommodation for one of its
visiting
speakers in the city's best hotel, the Rincome, for Baht 198 a night.
Detailed records of the
Society's activities have been mislaid, but the Secretary
remembers that an
estimated 20 lectures were given, with topics such as:
- Wat Phra Yuen in Lamphun [Alexander Griswold]
- Western gate of Chiang Saen [Hans Penth]
- House construction in a hilltribe village [Richard
Davis]
- An unrecalled historical theme [Kraisri
Nimmanahaeminda]
- Spirit Cave in Mae Hong Son [Chester Gorman]
- The Lahu [Robert & Eugene Morse]
- Three states stolen from Siam by Great Britain
[Kachorn Sukhabanij]
- Foreign words adopted into the Thai language [Tom
Scovel]
- Buddhism [Venerable Phra Nyanyavachiro]
- Meo New Year, a color film [William Geddes]
- Family planning in a Mae Chaem village [Christine
Dunster]
- Blood-sucking moths [Hans Bänziger]
The Northern Thai Society
became
inactive
in 1975
due to the lengthy procedures and difficulties in registration, as well
as the
departure of some of the committee, and personal time constraints. The
final
talk was given by Hans Bänziger. The NTS funds deposited in a bank
account
continued to accrue compound interest over a period of many years. With
the
knowledge and consent of some of the original members still resident in
Chiang
Mai, it was agreed that the balance of Baht 84,918.62 should be
donated
to the
Informal
Northern Thai Group, a body with similar aims, through the office of
the
Honorary British Consul in Chiang Mai, John Shaw.
__________________________________________________
* This brief account of the
Society's foundation and activities derives from
notes kindly supplied by its initiator and secretary, Major Roy Hudson.
27
years of Talks at the Informal
Northern Thai Group
Few parts of the world
provide as rich a field for research as Southeast
Asia,
which makes selecting a handful of talks to give the flavor of the
evenings the
Group has enjoyed in the past twenty-one years rather difficult.
Regular participants are
likely to remember particular meetings for different reasons. At
first glance,
for example, the question of how Thai children learn their classifiers
doesn't
seem inviting, as the size of the audience - six or seven persons -
indicated.
Yet that demonstration of how the problem of data gathering was
approached and
dealt with provided an evening of exceptional interest. On the other
hand,
journalist Bertil Lintner's description of his unique journey across
war-torn Upper Burma
with wife and
newborn baby was obviously
going to be out of the ordinary. And that was the experience a
standing-room
only audience was treated to. Intriguing, too, to hear the latest on
Bronze Age
Ban Chiang in Udon ThaniProvince,
with Joyce White - a student of the late and regretted Chet Gorman -
treading
delicately around the controversial subject of that scholar's datings.
Of course, from time to time
we've been taken out of our immediate area - to hear a surprisingly
relaxed
survey of life under the
then-living Great Leader of North Korea; to
see a film
about the interior of Borneo, made by a woman who had not initially
intended to
go there, she just stepped off a tour boat and into a pirogue and there
she
was, so to speak, for the next couple of years; and rather more
recently, out
to Africa to take a look at the wildlife in Botswana.
Other talks which took us
beyond the remit of our stated regional interests have included -
‘My
Car-isma’, a study of car culture in modern Japan, ‘Transvestism,
transexuality and sex-change operations’, delivered to a
standing-room only
audience by the occupant of the world's only Chair in Transexuality,
‘The
Catholic Church and the Sexual Abuse Dilemma’, and ‘Intervention
Radiology as a Substitute for Surgery’. At least no one can
complain about
the narrowness of the range of subjects offered.
Notwithstanding these
occasional digressions, the scope of the research being done in the
region has
been well represented:
- Illegal hilltop
burial site excavations in Tak [the first talk]
- The Northern Thai
village of Ku Daeng
- Problems of
studying Northern Thai history
- Wats in Lanna
- Bio-diversity and
conservation on Doi Suthep
- Olde Chiang Mai
days
- Phra Malai and
Thai Buddhism
- Lisu actors and
foreign film makers
- Teaching
philosophy in a Thai university
- The Expedition
Mekong 2002 in perspective
Here is a
chronological
list of the topics
and speakers for all INTG talks from December 1984. All records have
been grouped in decades. 1984 - 1989, 1990 - 1999, 2000 - 2009, 2010 -
to date.
Click on one of the dates below to
see the list of talks for that period of time.
|