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Temple staff reveal dramatic moment grandmother knocked from inside coffin seconds before cremation

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Temple staff described the shocking moment a Thai grandmother allegedly came back to life just moments before her cremation.

Chonthirot Sakulkhu, 65, was declared dead at her home in Phitsanulok, northern Thailand, in the early hours of Sunday morning, November 23.

Believing she had passed peacefully, her family placed her in a small coffin and began the four-hour 225-mile drive to a temple in Nonthaburi that provides free cremation and funeral services to the impoverished.

But the 'lifeless' grandmother was said to have woken up inside her own coffin, stunning relatives when she began knocking on the wood. Footage showed a wispy Chonthirot moving around in the casket and wiping flies from her face as her family looked on in disbelief.

Temple worker Thammanoon, 27, said he was about to move the wooden box into the temple for the funeral when he heard a faint knocking coming from inside.

He said: 'I peeled back the cloth covering her and froze when I saw she was still moving. She was conscious, breathing weakly, and nodding her head, but she was unable to speak. I was stunned because I'd never experienced anything like this before.'

Chonthirot's younger brother, Mongkol, 57, said she had been bedridden for two years due to brain cancer and dementia, and was allegedly found dead at 2 am local time. He added that he had even signed paperwork confirming her death, which he handed to the Buddhist monk who was due to perform the service.

He said: 'I was shocked, surprised, and happy that my sister is still alive. I nearly collapsed from surprise. It's a miracle that she woke up.'

He added that Chonthirot's body was initially supposed to be donated to King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, but the hospital turned it away 'due to an incorrect purpose'.

Following the baffling 'resurrection', an ambulance later arrived to take Chonthirot to the Bang Yai Hospital. The Wat Rat Prakhong Tham temple said it would cover her medical expenses.

Temple abbot Phra Kitti Wachirathada said he had never witnessed such an incident in his years at the temple, adding that he was happy for the family, who had been given a second chance with Chonthirot.

In February, an 85-year-old grandmother also 'came back to life' after being dead for 40 minutes in northeast Thailand.

Pua Sriphueng was allegedly found without a pulse at her home in Buriram province.

But as her family were moving her body for funeral rites, she reportedly sat up with eyes wide open.

Relatives said she later behaved childishly, demanded sweets, and has since embraced religious rituals she once avoided.

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