The silence of 1976

Emma Larkin

Share:
Thongchai Winichakul at Thammasat University in 1976

Moments of Silence: The Unforgetting of the October 6, 1976, Massacre in Bangkok
Thongchai Winichakul
University of Hawai‘i Press: 2020
.

Meet Chair Guy, the subject of a black-and-white photograph taken on the morning of 6 October 1976, in Bangkok, Thailand. Though Chair Guy is smartly dressed—in a safari shirt and what appear to be matching trousers, neatly ironed—he is barefoot. The expression on his face is impossible to read: it could be anger, exhilaration or nothing more than the result of physical exertion. The camera has caught him mid-action as he leaps up and raises a metal folding chair over his head, preparing to bring it down with full force upon a dead body hanging from a tree.

A crowd of onlookers form a neat semicircle around the scene, as if they are watching some kind of outdoor circus performance. Most of them are casually dressed young men; their expressions are mixed, but a number of them appear to be smiling. One small boy’s face is lit up with what looks like a broad grin of sheer delight. Clearly visible in the background are the austere facade of the Supreme Court and the golden spires of the Grand Palace.

Though nearly forty-five years have passed, Thailand remains haunted by this image, and by Chair Guy.

To read the rest of this article, and to access all Mekong Review content, please subscribe.

More from Mekong Review

Previous Article

Hope and memory

Next Article

Made in Japan