The monks, draped in orange robes, sat side-by-side in the gathering hall of the Thai Buddhist Center of Minnesota, an arrangement of flowers displayed in front of each one.
Visitors, each holding a bowl of water, slowly moved toward the monks. They poured water on their palms, and it dribbled onto the flowers below.
For the Thai, the water ceremony is a symbolic acceptance of the monks' blessings. It was one of many traditions celebrated Sunday at the center's Thai New Year festival, the first event held in the community's new temple, a former Lutheran church in the Birchwood neighborhood of St. Louis Park.
The temple is a major upgrade for the Thai Buddhist Center — also known as Wat Thai of Minnesota — which until last year operated out of a rambler in the Elk River woods. Its members hope the building becomes a home not just for Buddhist meditation, but for Thai culture in the Twin Cities.
"We want to use this [as a] place ... where people can come learn Thai," said Yin Srichoochat, program manager for the center. "Thai food, Thai dancing, Thai language, Thai instruments. Because they don't have any location to dedicate to this."
It's not the only religious institution in the area: Just across Hwy. 100 are Beth El, a synagogue, and Benilde-St. Margaret's, a Catholic prep school. The chance to build interfaith relations is not lost on them.
"I think we could set up a really good example for people if the leadership between all these different churches and faiths showed acceptance, warmth and interest in each other," said Tracy Schultz, Wat Thai's program coordinator.
A new home
Wat Thai of Minnesota was founded in 2003, the first of three Thai Buddhist sects in and around the metro area, co-founder Sutape Ple-Plakon said. Its first temple was a house in Becker; the congregation moved to Elk River in 2006. It has 20 to 30 primary members, although hundreds more attend its cultural offerings, many from the metro area's Hmong population.