[1][2]Origins of Buddhism in SEA[3][4][5][6][7]
Buddhism is also thought to have entered Southeast Asia from trade with India, China and Sri Lanka during the 1st, 2nd and 3rd centuries[5][3][1]. One of the earliest accounts of Buddhism in Southeast Asia was of a Theravada Buddhist mission sent by the Indian emperor Ashoka to modern-day Burma in 250 BCE[5]. The mission was received by the Mon kingdom and many people were converted to Buddhism[5]. Via this early encounter with Buddhism, as well as others due to the continuous regional trade between Southeast Asia, China and South Asia, Buddhism spread throughout Southeast Asia[3]. After the initial arrival in modern-day Burma, Buddhism spread throughout mainland Southeast Asia and into the islands of modern-day Malaysia and Indonesia[1]. There are two primary forms of Buddhism found in Southeast Asia, Theravada and Mahayana. Theravada Buddhism spread from India to Sri Lanka then into the region as outlined above, and primarily took hold in the modern states of Burma, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and southern Vietnam[7]. Mahayana Buddhism is thought to have spread from both China and India during the first and second century into Southeast Asia[6]. Mahayana took root primarily in maritime Southeast Asia, although there was also a strong influence in Vietnam, in part due to their connection with China[6]
Political Power and Resistance
Buddhism has long been characterized by some scholars as an other-worldly religion, that is not rooted in economic and political activity[7]. That is in part due to the influence of German sociologist, Max Weber, who was a prominent scholar of religion that has had a significant impact on the way Southeast Asian Buddhism is studied[7]. Many contemporary scholars of Buddhism in Southeast Buddhism are starting to move away from the Weberian school of thought and identifying the role Buddhism has played in economic, political and every-day life in the region[7]. Buddhism has also played a role in the consolidation of power and political resistance to throughout history, dating back to as early as the 10th and 11th century[4][7]. Buddhist resistance has been a part of many significant historical moments, from the resistance to colonization and colonial powers, the creation of nation-states and the consolidation of political power within kingdoms and states. Some of the earliest accounts of religious conflict that trace back to the 11th century took place in modern-day Burma[4]. There was tension between Buddhist kings looking to create a more uniform religion and different sects of Buddhist worship[4]. In particular, there was resistance from the cult of Nat worship, a religious practice that predates Buddhism in Burma[4]. Buddhist kings of the time attempted to unify the different sects of Buddhism by the elimination of heretical movements[4]. This was done so in order to maintain their power over their people and in an effort to purify the faith[4]. During the Nguyen dynasty of Vietnam in the 19th and 20th century, there was a strain between Confucian rulers and practitioners of Buddhism monks during the early unification of the empire[4]. The rulers had a fear of potential rebellions emerging from monastic sites in the countryside and heavily criticized the spiritual practices of Buddhist sects, including a belief in invulnerability based on merit[4]. After an attempt to de-legitimize Buddhist faith in the eyes of Vietnamese people through this criticism of their practices, they declared a war on Buddhism to squash any resistance to the consolidation of their empire [4] During the late 19th century and early 20th century, there were Buddhist resistance movements in the kingdom of Siam[4]. These resistance movements were led by holy men or phu mi bun who had great power due to a high accumulation of merit[4][8]. Some of these men claimed to have powers of invulnerability to enemy bullets and shared their powers through bathing others in holy water[4]. An early phu mi bun rebellion was led by a former Buddhist monk, Phaya Phap, who resisted increased taxes in the province of Chiang Mai and proclaimed he would be the new, ideal Buddhist king of the region. These movements were not associated with mainstream Buddhism of the time, but many of the leaders had been ordained monks and utilized some Buddhist symbolism and philosophies[2]. Buddhist resistance also played a role in anti-colonialism movements[4]. During the British colonization of Burma in the 19th century, there was intense Buddhist militarization and resistance against the colonial occupiers in an effort to restore the ideal Buddhist monarchy[4]. There have also been more recent Buddhist resistance movements in Southeast Asia[2]. After the communist takeover of Laos in 1975, some Buddhist monks feared that Buddhism was threatened by the Pathet Lao government[2]. Many monks fled from Laos to Thailand and helped fund resistance movements from across the border[2]. Monks who stayed in Laos supported resistance fighters with food and medical supplies[2]. Another act of Buddhist resistance took place in Saigon in 1963 when a Mahayana Buddhist monk, Thic Quang Duc, self-emulated in the middle of a busy intersection[9]. This self-emulation was an act of protest of the South Vietnamese Diem’s pro-catholic regime that persecuted Buddhists[9].
- ^ a b c Ancient History Encyclopedia. 2014. “Buddhism.” Retrieved Oct 9th, 2016. (http://www.ancient.eu/buddhism/).
- ^ a b c d e f Baird, Ian G. 2012. “Lao Buddhist Monks' Involvement in Political and Military Resistance to the Lao People's Democratic Republic Government since 1975” The Journal of Asian Studies. 71 (3): 655-677.
- ^ a b c Buswell, R. 2004. Encyclopedia of Buddhism. New York: Macmillan Reference, USA.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ileto, R. 1993. “Religion and Anti-Colonial Movements” The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 197–248.
- ^ a b c d Reat, N. 1994. Buddhism : A History. Berkeley, CA: Asian Humanities Press.
- ^ a b c Tarling, N., & Cambridge University Press. 1992. The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia. Cambridge, UK ; New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
- ^ a b c d e f Kitiarsa, Pattana. 2009. "Beyond the Weberian Trails. An Essay on the Anthropology of Southeast Asian Buddhism." Religion Compass 3(2): 200-224.
- ^ Keyes, Charles. 2014. Finding Their Voice: Northeastern Villagers and the Thai State. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books
- ^ a b "The burning monk, 1963". rarehistoricalphotos.com. Retrieved 2016-10-12.