At the place where the red-brick corridor falls away, people find themselves stopping without quite knowing why. They stop searching for words, and simply stand. It takes a moment before you see it — an ancient bodhi tree, its roots spreading across the ground like reaching fingers, holding something in their embrace.
A head of the
Buddha, carved from sandstone. It rests among the roots. The face, with its downcast eyes, carries neither anger nor grief. There is only a deep and quiet stillness — the stillness that belongs solely to one who has passed through an immeasurable span of time. A face that was meant to be destroyed is now held, tenderly, by something alive.
No one knows for certain how the Buddha head came to rest here. In
[1767](https://woud.io/ayutthaya/en/ayutthaya_12), when
Burmese forces burned this royal capital to the ground, countless Buddha images were toppled and beheaded. One of those heads, fallen to the earth, was slowly, gently gathered up by the roots of a young bodhi tree as it grew — so the story goes. Over decades. Over centuries.
The
bodhi tree is the tree beneath which the Buddha attained enlightenment. And here, a tree of that same kind, without any human hand to guide it, through nothing more than the act of living, has lifted a shattered face back toward the sky. What hatred destroyed in a single night, life has spent three hundred years drawing close again.
[Wat Mahathat](https://woud.io/ayutthaya/en/ayutthaya_9) was once the spiritual heart of this kingdom. Kings came here to pray. Sacred relics were enshrined within its walls. Pilgrims crossed the sea to reach it. And when all that glory turned to ash, this tree alone asked nothing, said nothing — and simply refused to let go of the Buddha's face.
Destruction needs no reason. But to hold something close again — that takes three hundred years. Perhaps that is where the weight of this silence lives.
Location:
Wat Mahathat (within Ayutthaya Historical Park)
Founded: Late 14th century (early Ayutthaya period)
Highlights: Sandstone Buddha head cradled within bodhi tree roots; brick chedis and gallery ruins
Historical background:
The fall of Ayutthaya to Burmese forces in 1767 resulted in
the destruction of many Buddha images
Map:
Ayutthaya Historical Park Map
Note: When taking photographs near the Buddha head, it is considered respectful to keep your own head lower than that of the image
Official Site:
Tourism Authority of Thailand
Photo: Dominic Trier /
Unsplash (unsplash)