Sharmini on Buddhism and Ritual
https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/sharmini-on-buddhism-and-ritual/
By- H.L. Seneviratne
I started this as a comment on
Sharmini Serasinghe’s “
Open Letter”, but it turned it to be too long for a comment. So I am asking CT to publish this as a separate piece.
My view of
Buddhism
is broadly similar to that of Sharmini, and there obviously are many
other non-ritualist Buddhists like Sharmini and me. But there is another
side. While the monks can fairly be accused of making a ritualism of
Buddhism, it is ritualism, and not the “philosophy” of the
Buddha,
that has enabled it to gain popularity and become a world religion.
Even in the modern west, Buddhism is often culticized by individuals and
groups, though free of the gross ritualism of the traditionally
Buddhist societies.
Thus, though a necessary condition for the popularity of Buddhism,
ritualism came at a price, that of tarnishing Buddhism by an excess of
it. The invention of ritual was a large-scale project that spread over
the centuries, and its nature varied from locality and time, with the
effect that in some places and at certain times, it was disciplined and
remained more or less compatible with the spirit of Buddhism, and in
others, took bizarre forms.
Had it not been for the ritualism that catered to the emotional needs
of the many, Buddhism may have remained a “philosophy”, as many
intellectual Buddhists claim it is. And the Buddha may have been not the
great teacher of world stature that he is, and has been for centuries,
but a philosopher like Socrates, unknown except to philosophy students.
This does not absolve the ritualist monks from the blame of making
Buddhism into a ritualism, because it is obvious that they have overdone
their use of ritual to popularize Buddhism, ignoring in the process its
ethical content. The failure of the monks is not that they ritualized
but that they failed to achieve the right mixture of ritual and ethics
that could have enabled Buddhism to remain true to its ethical core
while it spread across continents. Any cultural concessions the monks
made should have been made only after ensuring Buddhism’s ethical
autonomy.
Why did the monks overdo ritualization? They did it out of their
un-Buddhist craving for gaining more supporters among the laity. In
order to gain supporters, monks came up with rituals that they thought
were more appealing to the religiosity and needs of their clients. This
is a process that goes on today in front of our eyes, although we often
fail to notice it. Colored Pirit threads, monks leading a bride and bridegroom to the Poruva
and in other ways officiating in weddings, monks writing songs urging
soldiers to kill, Bodhi Pujas for gaining profit and power and
destroying enemies, holding a highly publicized Buddhist substitute for
Valentine’s Day, and television Buddhism, are all part of this.
The initial spread of Buddhism in India and along the trade routes
was made possible not by a vulgar ritualism but by the needs of the
emerging trading and other non-agricultural classes for a code of ethics
for success in their business, and its legitimization. This tells us
that degeneration into cultism is not necessary for the popularization
of Buddhism.
The above observations also mean that we cannot paint all monks with
the same brush stroke. There certainly were virtuous and intellectually
schooled monks, who fashioned rituals that remained true to the core
values and doctrines of Buddhism. Unfortunately the disciplined ritual
of those monks did not prevail, and what has prevailed is the kind of
ritualism that Sharmini righty criticizes.
The greatest historical failure of the Sangha is its failure to
encourage and achieve that mix of rationality and ethical religiosity
among the populations it ministered to. Such a mix would have infused
the society with an urbanity that would have accommodated ethnic and
religious difference, and a civility that would have minimized parochial
thought, laying the foundations for a healthy, prosperous and happy
society. The reason for this failure on the part of the Sangha is its
quite un-Buddhist greed for wealth, power and status, whether it’s at
the level of the village, or at the level of the political centre. This
is not confined to Lanka, but is common to all Buddhist societies.
In our bemoanings about the state of Buddhism today, we tend to
explicitly or implicitly posit a golden age of Buddhism in the ancient
period of our history. I doubt very much that there was any such. The
likelihood is that things were not very different from what they are
today. Tyrants like Dutugamunu used religion for purposes of gaining and
remaining in power, and as opium of the masses, and there were willing
supporters among the Sangha, as there are plenty that support the
tyranny of our own times.
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1 comment:
I personally think that the need to worship and pay obeisance to a higher being is in the DNA of a human being. Hence we find that even in the most remote and isolated corners of the world, tribes still worship a deity, offer sacrifices and pray for health etc. This is also the reason why many Buddhists also visit Kovils for certain rituals. The danger is that uncontrolled innovations could well be the death knell of the original philosophy/religion.
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