of the
Chin Haw. Thailand's Muslim population is diverse, with ethnic groups having migrated from as far as
China,
Pakistan,
Cambodia,
Bangladesh,
Philippines,
Malaysia, and
Indonesia, as well as including
ethnic Thais, while about two-thirds of Muslims in Thailand are
Thai Malays.
Thai Muslims Many Thai Muslims are ethnically and linguistically Thai, who are either hereditary Muslims, Muslims by intermarriage, or recent converts to the faith. Ethnic Thai Muslims live mainly in the central and southern provinces - varying from entire Muslim communities to mixed settlements. Former Commander-in-Chief of the
Royal Thai Army General
Sonthi Boonyaratglin is an example of an indigenous Thai Muslim. Sonthi is of remote Persian ancestry. His ancestor,
Sheikh Ahmad of
Qom, was an Iranian expatriate trader who lived in the
Ayutthaya Kingdom for 26 years. Many Thais, including those of the
Bunnag and
Ahmadchula families trace their ancestry back to him.
Sri Sulalai was a princess of the royal family of the
Sultanate of Singora.
Rama II of Siam took her as a concubine. In 1946 Prince
Bhumibol Adulyadej and
Ananda Mahidol, Rama VIII, toured the
Tonson Mosque.
Malay Muslims In the three southernmost border provinces, the vast majority of the local Muslim population is predominantly Malay, amounting to about 80 percent of the region's population. The high number of Malay origin inhabitants in the southern region is due to the historical nature of the area, which contains parts of the
Patani Kingdom, an Islamic Malay kingdom established in the 19th century, but later annexed to
Siam since the early
Ayutthaya Kingdom. Similarly, there is an ethnic Thai minority in northern Malaysia.
Chinese Muslims walking inside a mosque in
Pai District,
Northern Thailand '' at a
Chin Haw restaurant in
Chiang Mai In the far north, as well as in select central and southern urban areas, there are pockets of Thai Muslims of
Hui (ethnic Chinese Muslim) origin. Most Chinese Muslims belong to a group of people called
Chin Haw in Thai, although most Chin Haw are not Muslims. Some historians believe that the name Chin Haw can be explained to be a combination of "Chin" (China) and "Ho" (Hui). The Chin Haw thus can be seen as traders and émigrés who carried with them Hui traditions from China. One of the best known Chinese mosques is
Ban Ho Mosque in
Chiang Mai Province.
Cham Muslims Most of the Cham people live in
Bangkok, the capital of Thailand, also on the coast near the border with
Cambodia, and a small part in
southern Thailand near
Malaysia where they have assimilated with local
Thai Malays. Like most Chams in Cambodia, they follow
Sunni Islam. They trace their origins to the fall of the
Champa city-state in
central and
southern Vietnam and later fled to the
Kingdom of Ayutthaya in the 15th to 16th centuries and the 19th century. Also recent migration in the 1970s following the fall of the
Cambodian government to the
Khmer Rouge by
Pol Pot and the subsequent
Cambodian genocide.
Burmese Muslims Ethnic groups including the
Rohingya are found in Thailand's refugee camps, rural fishing villages, as well as in many small towns and cities close to the
Myanmar border. As well as being home to many Chinese Muslims, Northern Thailand is home to many Burmese and mixed Chinese-Burmese or
Pakistani-Burmese peoples.
Other Asian Muslim groups Other represented groups include Muslim
Chams, originally from
Vietnam since 15th century, who can be found between the mutual border and
Bangkok as well as the deep south. In the 1700s and 1800s Vietnam and Cambodia-based Chams settled in Bangkok. Other groups include
West Asians such as
Arabs and South Asians (especially
Indians,
Pakistanis and Bangladeshis) and
Indonesian Muslims, especially
Bugis,
Javanese and
Minangkabau. According to a 1685 account of a Persian diplomat as well as notes of the French traveller
Guy Tachard, there was a substantial Persian
Shi'i community in Thailand at the time, with ritual ''
ta'ziyeh'' performances subsidised by the king. There are Muslims of Persian origin that reside in the Bangkok area. ==Distinctiveness of Thai Islam==