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  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Exteriors of the Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815006.jpg
  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Exteriors of the Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815005.jpg
  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A statue of Mary and Baby Jesus in the sanctuary of Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815004.jpg
  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: A stained glass window at Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815003.jpg
  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Interior of Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815002.jpg
  • 14 AUGUST 2014 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Interior of Holy Rosary Church in the Talat Noi section of Bangkok. Holy Rosary Church, Wat Mae Phra Luk Prakham, is also known as Kalawar Church. The church was built with a land grant from King Rama I in 1786, about four years after Bangkok was established as Siam's capital. Many Catholic Vietnamese and Cambodians fled to Bangkok during the wars in Indochina and adopted this church as their main house of worship. It has been rebuilt twice. The present church was built in the late 1890s. The cream-colored church has a towering spire and European style stained-glass windows.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    ScenesofBangkok0815001.jpg
  • 06 MARCH 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray the rosary after being annointed with ashes at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in Bangkok on Ash Wednesday. There are about 300,000 Catholics in Thailand in about 430 Catholic parishes and about 660 Catholic priests in Thailand. Thais are tolerant of other religions and although Thailand is officially Buddhist, Catholics are allowed to freely practice and people who convert to Catholicism are not discriminated against.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKAshWednesday009.jpg
  • 06 MARCH 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray the rosary after being annointed with ashes at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in Bangkok on Ash Wednesday. There are about 300,000 Catholics in Thailand in about 430 Catholic parishes and about 660 Catholic priests in Thailand. Thais are tolerant of other religions and although Thailand is officially Buddhist, Catholics are allowed to freely practice and people who convert to Catholicism are not discriminated against.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKAshWednesday006.jpg
  • 06 MARCH 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray the rosary after being annointed with ashes at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in Bangkok on Ash Wednesday. There are about 300,000 Catholics in Thailand in about 430 Catholic parishes and about 660 Catholic priests in Thailand. Thais are tolerant of other religions and although Thailand is officially Buddhist, Catholics are allowed to freely practice and people who convert to Catholicism are not discriminated against.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKAshWednesday008.jpg
  • 06 MARCH 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: People pray the rosary after being annointed with ashes at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in Bangkok on Ash Wednesday. There are about 300,000 Catholics in Thailand in about 430 Catholic parishes and about 660 Catholic priests in Thailand. Thais are tolerant of other religions and although Thailand is officially Buddhist, Catholics are allowed to freely practice and people who convert to Catholicism are not discriminated against.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKAshWednesday007.jpg
  • 06 MARCH 2019 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: An elderly woman prays the rosary on Ash Wednesday at Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in Bangkok. There are about 300,000 Catholics in Thailand in about 430 Catholic parishes and about 660 Catholic priests in Thailand. Thais are tolerant of other religions and although Thailand is officially Buddhist, Catholics are allowed to freely practice and people who convert to Catholicism are not discriminated against.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    BKKAshWednesday011.jpg
  • 30 MARCH 2018 - BANGKOK, THAILAND: Thai Catholics pray the rosary during Good Friday observances at Santa Cruz Church in the Thonburi section of Bangkok. Santa Cruz Church is more than 350 years old and is one of the oldest Catholic churches in Thailand. Good Friday is the day that most Christians observe as the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Thailand has a small Catholic community.        PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    2018GoodFriday004.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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