- U569 Modern Inner Mongolia
- Lecture, Tuesday, Week 3
- Buddhism: general remarks
- Objections of Chinese, Western observers (e.g. Owen Lattimore)
- From radical Protestant and deist/rationalist polemics against
Catholicism
- From Confucian objections to Buddhism (since time of Han Yu)
- Objections not to "abuses" of Buddhism but to its essence
- Against: any idea that holiness …
morality
- Against: celibacy, withdrawal from world
- Against: any church that controls access to sacred
- Against: any church that owns property, has subjects
- Religion serves aims of the state, not the other way around
- Myths and Realities
- Myth 1: Buddhism totally unworldly by nature
- Truth: From earliest times, three aims of Buddhism:
- Achieving enlightenment for self and others: monastic
elite
- Achieving human rebirth through karma: mass aim
- Protection from harm, preservation of current life: mass
aim
- Myth 2: Tibeto-Mongolian "Lamaism" = real Buddhism +
shamanism
- Truth: Most of the 'funky,' superstitious,' stuff actually
Indian
- Tibetan Buddhism closer to Indian schools than Chinese
- Truth: Lamas did not take the place of shamans, but of
elders
- Humphrey typology: elders, women, shamans
(trans-gendered)
- Lamas occupy elders' space (oboo, fire cult, etc.)
- Myth 3: Half of all Mongol men were celibate lamas living in
temples
- Truth: Most 'registered' lamas living at home, 'common-law'
marriage
- Typical life cycle: monastic education, lay adulthood
- Monasteries: center of wholesale trade, handicrafts (ger
frames)
- Myth 4: Manchus use Buddhism to dope up the Mongols with
pacifism
- Truth: Buddhism often militaristic
- Galdan Boshugtu Khan wages Buddhists holy war on Qing
- Truth: Early Qing wanted Mongols as soldiers
- Hong Taiji, Shunzhi emperor worried about excessive Buddhism
- Most monasteries built by local Mongol princes, not Qing
- Khoyar yosu "two customs"
- Monasteries needed for aim of liberation
- Rulers fund, support, purge monasteries
- Myth 5: Mongolian Buddhism solely in Tibetan, no influence on
lay life
- Monks build merit through visualizations, applicable to whole
society
- Truth: lamas vigorously circulated didactic poetry, very
popular
- Against: liquor, tobacco, animal sacrifice, hunting,
unfiliality, lack of alms