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Thai woman’s cremation stopped as knocking on coffin heard, temple staff say

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
November 25, 2025
in International
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Thai woman’s cremation stopped as knocking on coffin heard, temple staff say
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A woman thought to be dead, who was about to be cremated at a Buddhist temple in the outskirts of Bangkok, Thailand, has been found alive by staff.

Pairat Soodthoop, general manager of the Wat Rat Prakhong Tham temple, was “startled” to hear a faint knock from the coffin, he told the Associated Press news agency.

Mr Soodthoop said he asked for the coffin to be opened and saw the woman “opening her eyes slightly and knocking on the side of the coffin”. “She must have been knocking for quite some time,” he added.

The brother of the 65-year-old woman said local officials told him his sister had died. However, the temple’s manager said the brother did not have a death certificate.

As Mr Soodthoop tried to explain to the brother how to obtain a death certificate, the temple’s staff heard a faint knock coming from inside the coffin.

Once it became clear the woman was alive, the temple’s abbot (head of a Buddhist monastery) said the woman should be taken to hospital immediately.

A doctor later confirmed that the woman had been experiencing severe hypoglycaemia – a condition where blood sugar levels get critically low, local reports said.

The doctor ruled out the possibility that she had suffered respiratory failure or cardiac arrest, according to the reports.

The brother said his sibling had been bedridden for the last two years and, as her health deteriorated, she appeared to have stopped breathing on Saturday, according to the temple’s manager.

The family had travelled nearly 500km (311 mile) from the province of Phitsanulok in Thailand for the cremation ceremony.

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