Co-Sponsors
Somsak Bhitiyakul, M.D., and Ms. Preanphan Bhitiyakul
Co-Sponsors
Somsak Bhitiyakul, M.D., and Ms. Preanphan Bhitiyakul
The Bhitiyakuls have devoted their lives to medicine, community service, family, and the Buddhist faith. They bring to these a focus on excellence, optimism, and determination that has enabled them to better the lives of countless people and earned them the respect of their community.
A Life in Healing
Born and educated in Bangkok, Thailand, Dr. Somsak Bhitiyakul earned his medical degree from Chulalongkorn University in 1966 and completed a nephrology fellowship in the United States at Brown University in 1970. After relocating to Ulster County, New York, he opened the county’s first dialysis unit in 1977 and served as its Medical Director for 34 years. He also held leadership roles as Chief of Medicine and President of the Medical Staff at both Kingston and Benedictine Hospitals, and as President of the Mid-Hudson Society of Internal Medicine. A Fellow of the American College of Physicians, he received the College’s Ralph O. Claypoole Sr. Memorial Award in 2002 for a lifetime devoted to patient care. His book How Incurable Diseases Can Be Treated with Food Elimination (2020) reflects his belief in diet’s power to heal chronic illness.
Helping Your Home
Also born in Bangkok, Ms. Preawphan Bhitiyakul trained as a nurse before immigrating to the United States in 1967 with her husband. She has served on numerous community boards, including the Kingston and Benedictine Hospital Auxiliaries, the Rotary Club (as its first female board member), and the Girl Scouts, Red Cross, and American Cancer Society. Named Rotarian of the Year in 2007 and featured in Remarkable Women in New York State History (2013), she embodies her guiding principle: “This is your community—do something to help it!” Together, the Bhitiyakuls have also returned to Thailand many times to offer medical and humanitarian aid through international relief foundations.
Faith in Meditation and the Buddha’s Teachings
Dr. Bhitiyakul has long practiced meditation in the lineage of Phramongkolthepmuni (Luang Por Sodh Candasaro) of Wat Paknam Bhasicharoen, Thailand. He credits meditation with helping him manage stress to remain calm, clear, and happy in his medical career.
Ms. Bhitiyakul’s faith in Buddhism arises from her early life experience. As a young girl in Thailand, she suffered from serious illnesses and attributes her recovery to the compassion and healing power of Buddhist monks—first Luang Por Pring of Wat Prasat in Bangkok and later a monk at Wat Sothon Wararam Worawihan in Chachoengsao Province, home of the revered Buddha statue Luang Por Sothon.
Over the years, she and Dr. Bhitiyakul opened their serene property in Olivebridge, New York, to host visiting monastics and lay practitioners for retreats and ceremonies. One high point came in 2014, when they hosted an installation ceremony for a replica of the Luang Por Sothon statue that still oversees the main lawn with a smile.
Creating a Sacred Place for Future Generations
On May 14, 2025, the couple fulfilled Ms. Bhitiyakul’s wish to repay her debt of gratitude to the monastic sangha by selling their six-acre Olivebridge property to the Ashokan Meditation Center for one dollar. Thanks to them, this haven of peace in the wooded foothills of the Catskill Mountains will serve as a sanctuary for Buddhist practice for years to come.
Today, even in their eighties, the Bhitiyakuls are still serving and continue to practice their religion. They are active on the Ashokan Meditation Center’s Board of Directors, offer material support to the center and its monastics, and help maintain the grounds. Furthermore, they perform devotional observances before the Buddha and Avalokiteśvara statues with prayers, worship, flowers, and incense. Dr. Bhitiyakul also frequents the Center’s online meditation programs.
The Bhitiyakuls are the proud parents of two children.
Optimism and Determination
Ms. Bhitiyakul’s father taught her that time is short and we must do today all we can. No doubt her experience of illness early in life helped her to understand this and motivates her. When facing a challenge, she tells herself, "I can do it, we must do it."
And the lives of the Bhitiyakuls are testament to how much can be done.