Novice nun Dhammarakhita (center), dressed in adobe-colored robe  after her  ordination in Sri Lanka,  gestures at  Songdharmakalyani Temple in Nakhon Pathom, Thailand in this 2002  file photo.  Formally known as Varangghana Vanavichayen, Ven. Dhammarakhita, a  mother of  two who divorced her husband to dedicate her life to  Buddhist practice, became  the first woman to be ordained as a monk in Thailand (AFP/Newscom File).A quiet campaign to grant female monks [nuns] legal recognition began this summer. Advocates hope that the minimal fanfare will help the bhikkhunis evade conservative religious opposition.
BANGKOK, Thailand - Ven. Dhammananda Bhikkhuni grips a wobbly stack of feminine hygiene products and sorts them on a long table. Her followers watch before mimicking her quick movements.
“We will bring these donations to women who are in the local prison,” explained Ven. Dhammananda. “If we don’t then who [will]?”
Bhikkhunis (bee-KOO-nees), ordained female monastics, in Thailand consider their gender to be an essential bridge to the women they help through charity work and spiritual guidance, since women are forbidden to be alone with male monks, known as bhikkhus (bee-KOOS).
But  Thai nuns have their own limitations, not just because they  number only 25 compared with approximately 200,000 monks here.  They lack legal recognition -- a denial that accompanies various  withholdings of public benefits -- and it highlights a persistent issue of  discrimination for women across the country. More