Descendent of Lao royalty sells family jewels, silks for charity

Bangkok  - A descendent of the Lao royal family on Thursday kicked off a grand sale of her treasured collection of antique silks and jewelry to raise money for scholarships for Buddhist monks in Asia.

Chao Soymala In-ieum na Jampasak, 67, said proceeds from the sale of her 1,000-item century-old silks and jewelry collection would be used to help cover costs for Buddhist monks from Bhutan, Cambodia, Laos, Nepal and Vietnam to pursue religious studies at Thailand's Mahachulalongkornrajidyalaya University in Chiang Mai, 650 kilometres north of Bangkok.

"I need to raise at least a million dollars," Soymala said in a telephone interview.

The royal sale is to be conducted out of Soymala's home, situated about 20 kilometres outside Chiang Mai.

Soymala is a descendent of the royal family of Luang Prabang, the ancient capital of land-locked Laos.

When Laos opted for communist rule in 1975, Soymala fled to Thailand and took up residence in Chiang Mai, where she had studied as a young woman. She is married to a Thai university professor.

The Lao communist party ended the country's centuries-old monarchy shortly after coming to power, and the last royal ruler, Crown Prince Savang Vattana, died in a government detention camp in 1980. (dpa)

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