Boon Tuan Boon-Itt

Boon Tuan Boon-Itt (Thai: บุญต๋วน บุญอิต; RTGS: Buntuan Bun-it, July 18, 1865 – May 8, 1903) was a respected leader in the early Thai Protestant Christian community, and is the first Thai Christian to establish a church in Thailand.[1] Boon-Itt also founded Padoongrasdra School (Thai: โรงเรียนผดุงราษฎร์) in Phitsanulok province.[2]

Boon Tuan Boon-Itt
BornJuly 18, 1865 (1865-07-18)
Ratchaburi, Thailand
DiedMay 8, 1903 (1903-05-09)
Bangkok, Thailand

Early life and education

Boon Tuan was born on July 18, 1865 in the village of Bang-Pa, Ratchaburi province, Thailand. After the death of his father, Boon Tuan's family moved to Bangkok, where Boon Tuan and his brother Boon Yee were enrolled at the Christian school at Samray. At eleven years old, Boon Tuan was taken to the United States by the pioneer medical missionary Dr Samuel Reynolds House[3] and his wife. In 1881, Boon Tuan was enrolled in Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Massachusetts. At this school, and then later at Williams College, Boon Tuan excelled in academics and athletics. As a student at Williams, Boon Tuan had an evangelical Christian conversion experience and worked with YMCA at the college. Boon Tuan graduated from Williams in 1889 and then enrolled in Auburn Theological Seminary to study for the Christian ministry.

Career

In 1893, Boon Tuan returned to Siam (now Thailand) to begin Christian ministry work in his native country. Boon Tuan married his cousin, Maa Kim Hock, on September 23, 1897. The newly married couple moved to Phitsanulok, Thailand to begin Christian work in the province. In 1899, he founded a school for boys which is currently called Padoongrasdra School.

In 1902, Boon was asked by the American Presbyterian Mission Board to come to Bangkok to start a new church for young educated men who were graduating from mission schools and coming into the city in large numbers. Boon Tuan accepted this call to plant a church in Bangkok. He founded the church which is now called Suebsampantawong Church (Thai: คริสตจักรสืบสัมพันธวงศ์), the fourth Presbyterian church to be started in the city of Bangkok, and the first church in Thailand to be established and support entirely by Thai Christians themselves, apart from assistance from foreign missionaries.[1]

Death and legacy

Grave of Boon Tuan Boon-Itt at Samray Presbyterian Church Cemetery

Boon Tuan died of cholera in Bangkok, Thailand on May 8, 1903. In remembrance of Boon-Itt, Prince Damrong of Thailand's royal family stated, "Boon-Itt was a true Christian. You may not know that I offered him a position which would have led to high titles of nobility from the King of Siam, to the governorship of a large province, and to a large increase in his income. Yet he declined these honors and financial benefits that he might continue in the service of Jesus Christ."[4] The school and church Boon Tuan founded still exist.

References

  1. "About Us". Sueb Sampantawong Church. Archived from the original on December 20, 2013. Retrieved December 19, 2013.
  2. "School Data". Padoongrasdra School. Archived from the original on December 20, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  3. Feltus, George Haws, Samuel Reynolds House of Siam: Pioneer Medical Missionary 1847-1876, Revell, 1924
  4. Brain, Belle M., Boon-Itt, A Christian Leader of Asia Missionary Review of the World, May 1912, p.335

Bibliography

  • "Boon Tuan Boon Itt" in A Dictionary of Asian Christianity, ed. Scott Sunquist, Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, 2001, p. 90.
  • Brain, Belle M., Boon-Itt, A Christian Leader of Asia, Missionary Review of the World, May 1912, p. 327-335
  • McFarland, George, ed. Historical Sketch of Protestant Missions in Siam 1828-1928, White Lotus Press, Bangkok, Thailand, 2008, p. 290-295.
  • Eakin, John A., Boon-It in Siam. New York: Women's Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, n.d.
  • Kim Heng Mungkrphun, "A Short Biography of Kru Boon Itt," Church News 1 (Nov 1932) (in Thai)
  • Wattana Wittaya Academy School Museum, Along the Road: From Wanglang School to Wattana Wittaya Academy
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