Buddhism in Thailand
Buddhism is the national religion of Thailand.
About 95% of Thai citizens are Buddhists.
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Buddhism
The Thais are a deeply religious people.
For the Buddhist majority it underlies all
activities and is the backbone of the Thai
culture - a culture that has survived intact
and independent for so long largely because
of the principles of the Buddhist faith.
Ninety percent of the population are Theravada
Buddhists. |
The
Theravada school of Buddhism is based more purely
on the teachings of Gotama Siddartha (Buddha)
without the refinements added on by later monks.
Buddhist believe that existence is suffering,
suffering is caused by desire, so the elimination
of desire leads to a state of perfect non suffering
and non existence called nibbana (nirvana).
It
is non individualistic philosophy which preaches
that the suppression and eventual extinction
of the ego are the only way to be content. Almost
all Thais believe in reincarnation., hopefully
to a higher form of life, leading ultimately
to the achievement of nibbana. To this end they
make merit by doing good deeds. Ways to make
merit include giving money to beggars, releasing
caged birds and giving food to monks who do
their early morning alms round, most males will
do a spell (although generally only a few weeks)
as novices in a temple. This brings merit to
the family, and is expected of all boys once
they reach the age of eighteen. Within the temple,
they will be trained in Buddhist history and
philosophy, the paths to enlightenment and the
principles of meditation.
There
are two sects of Buddhist monks in Thailand,
the orange robed Mahanikai and the stricter,
more academic red-brown robed Thammayut who
can eat only one meal a day (before noon), provided
for them by those who wish to make merit. They
cannot touch money.
The
services of monks are requested for every occasion.
New houses or cars should be blessed to bring
good luck nine monks are required for a marriage,
and three days of chanting mantras by a group
of monks is normal at a funeral.
Underlying
Buddhism in Northern Thailand is Animism - a
belief that all things, such as trees, stones
and rivers, have living souls, Spirit houses
outside all building in Thailand are made attractive
to any possibly harmful spirit so that it will
not haunt the humans living nearby. Buddhism
has managed to mould itself onto Animism in
Thailand, producing a blend of moral philosophy
and superstition.
Christianity, introduced recently by missionaries,
has gained many converts in the hill tribes.
Up to 50% of Karen claim to be Christians. Their
legends are very similar to Christianity, and
since the Karen may have originate in the Middle
East, it is possible that the two religions
were once connected. Most hill tribe people,
though, are Animist, with some converts to Buddhism
and Christianity. Many Yao people, who originated
in Southern China, are Taoist, practicing a
primitive form of Taoism which was known in
China 600 years ago.
There
is no such thing as a good Buddhist or a bad
Buddhist, viewed in the same context as someone
being considered a good or bad Christian. Buddhism,
is more of a personal philosophy than a group
religion. An individual following the middle
path, the long road to enlightenment encounters
and overcomes the obstacles at his own pace.
How good a Buddhist he is, or how far along
the path he has traveled, is unimportant to
anyone other than himself.
Where
Christian religions preach that one must have
blind faith in the aspects of the doctrine that
you may have trouble accepting, Buddhism teaches
that you should question everything until you
find an answer that satisfies you.
Buddhism
not only teaches tolerance, it practices it.
It does not claim that other religions are false,
it encourages you to make your own judgments.
There is no hard sell, and no requirement for
monks to save a quota of souls.
The
live of Lord Buddha
In tracing the long life of Siddartha Gotama
from birth to enlightenment, and then from Buddha
hood to death, one must rely on sources that
conjoin fact with fable, legend with history,
the myth with the man.
For
primary source one turns to the Buddhas own
words as recorded in his discourses, to the
word of his disciples, and to the Buddhist scriptures.
Secondary sources were written several hundred
years after the Buddhas death, and often reflect
the particular religious convictions of the
writer.
To
people who, as in the case of Hindus, believed
in gods and goddesses, to the animists who believed
in spirits, to the Buddhists who believed in
celestial beings and the several abodes of heaven
and hell, it was only natural to impute to the
Buddha supernatural and god-like qualities.
He could perform miracles, communicate with
the gods, transport himself to heaven, and so
on.
And
yet there are facts: His birth, his renunciation,
his studies with gurus, his period of asceticism,
his long period of intense meditation leading
to enlightenment, his forty-five years devoted
to teaching disciples, his establishment of
the Sangha (the worlds oldest monastic order),
his discourses - these are some of the facts
that we know of the Buddhas life.
These
facts speak to the mind, the legends to the
heart. Together they form a glorious story of
a man who twenty-five centuries after his death
is revered by millions world wide, not just
in Asia, but in ever-increasing numbers in the
western world.
Birth
of the Buddha
The
birth place of the Buddha - to be was Kapilavastu,
now part of Nepal, located close to its southern-most
border. Kapilavastu was home of the Sakyas,
a small Aryan tribe of the Gotama clan, ruled
by his father, Suddhodana. His mother was Maha
Maya, splendid, beautiful and steadfast, of
the neighboring tribe of Koliya.
As
was the custom of the day, when Maha Maya approached
the time for delivery, she wanted to return
to her parental home. On their way to Koliya,
Maya and her courtiers found themselves in Lumpini
Grove, where she suddenly went into labor and
gave birth to a son, in what was said to be
a painless delivery. She died seven days later,
and her younger sister, Prajapati, also wife
to King Suddhodana, took on the responsibility
of bringing up the child.
Soon
after the birth, a sage and prophet named Asita
came to see the boy, an declared that he was
destined to be either a great king or great
spiritual leader. Suddhodana then named his
son Siddartha, meaning he who has accomplished
all his aims, and to make sure that he would
be a great king and not a great spiritual leader,
he resolved to keep the boy always at home,
in luxurious, palatial surroundings, with amusements
and diversions to keep him happily occupied
Why
the Prince Siddartha left the Palace
At the age of sixteen, just after his demonstration
of extraordinary martial skills, Siddartha married
his first cousin Yasodhara. For the next thirteen
years the young prince lived in luxury surrounded
by the melodious music of sensuous female attendants,
sumptuous food, and every possible pleasure
and delight that he could wish for.
At
the age of twenty-nine Siddartha Gotama ventured
out of the palace grounds for the first time.
As he rode forth into an unknown world, his
eyes came upon four sights that were to change
the course of his world : The first was a old
man, his hair was gray, his back bent, teeth
broken, supporting himself on a cane and trembling.
The second was a sick man, body diseased and
infected. The third sight was the corpse of
a dead man, and the fourth, a religious mendicant,
a Brahmin monk who had left the world and adopted
a homeless life in order to seek salvation.
Siddartha
enquired of his charioteer, Channa, just what
these sights were, and after he was told the
meaning of old age, sickness and death, he knew
what he must do.
Modern
historians and scholars view these four passing
sights as a way to impute supra mundane happenings
to mundane events. The Buddha-to-be may be presumed
to have had a sensitive nature, a probing mind,
and extraordinary intelligence. By the age of
twenty-nine he must have witnessed old age,
sickness and death, despite the attempts by
his father to insulate him, and he would have
been so distressed by these manifestations of
human suffering that he would have resolved
to seek the cause and the cure.
So
at the age of twenty-nine Prince Siddartha Gotama
left his world of luxury, foregoing his inheritance
and his future ascension to the ruler ship of
the Sakyar, his beautiful wife and child, his
concubines and worldly pleasures, and went forth
to seek knowledge and truth.
The
Search for Truth
On the night of his departure he went into Yasodharas
chamber, saw her sleeping with her hand on his
son Rahulas head, and although he sorely wished
to raise her hand so he might gaze on his beloved
sons visage, he left without doing so, lest
he wake his wife and risk being dissuaded by
her from parting.
He
then summoned Channa and told him to saddle
his favorite horse, stealthily departing from
the palace, the reached the river Anoma, beyond
the territory of the Koliya. Siddartha dismounted,
exchanged his princely clothes and ornaments
for the rags of a passer by, and told Channa
to return to the palace and inform his father
and wife that he had gone forth into the homeless
life.
Siddartha
Gotama then cut off his hair and went alone
into the forests seeking those ascetic and teachers
who might help him in his search. The first
of these was Alara Kalama, a renowned Brahmin
monk who resided at present - day Rajgir, his
teaching were based on the belief in an eternal
soul with out which there could be no salvation.
This did not appear to the Buddha-to-be to be
the truth, so he left Alara, and turned to another
renowned Brahmin monk, Udraka Ramaputra.
Udaka
expounded on the effects of karma and the transmigration
of souls, and although Siddartha believed in
the doctrine of Karma - the concept of cause
and effect that transcends individual lifetimes
- he questioned the existence of and eternal
soul. Nevertheless, through his studies with
Udraka, as well as with Alar, he absorbed considerable
knowledge of Brahmin-Hindu beliefs, some of
which he retained in his own later teaching.
He felt that even though they had laughed at
him everything they knew and believed, they
had left many of his questions unanswered-especially
his questions about suffering, how it came about
and how it could be eliminated. And so he continued
his search elsewhere.
In
the jungles of Uruvela, near present-day Bodhgaya,
he came across five ascetics who were keeping
their senses in check, subduing their passions,
and practising severe penance. For the next
six years, in the company of the five ascetics,
Siddartha applied himself to self-mortification
and the most severe penance. He ate so little
that his body wasted away. And when he put his
hand on his abdomen he could feel his spine.
Enlightenment
One day, after he had bathed himself in the
river he was so weak that he could barely rise
from the water, he had learned that just as
over-indulgence is not the path to truth, neither
is austere asceticism, but rather the path to
death which would have put a permanent end to
his striving for enlightenment. Therefore he
determined to begin nourishing his body again,
and when he announced his decision, the five
ascetics renounced him and abandoned him.
A
local girl named Sujata saw the starving Siddartha
and prepared a meal of special rice-milk and
offered it to him in a golden bowl. Revived
by Sujatas rice-milk, he recalled the meditation
he had experienced when he was seven years old
and decided that would now sit and meditate
intensely, concentrating uninterruptedly on
the nature of life, the nature of reality, the
nature of self, and especially on the nature
of suffering, its cause and its elimination.
He walked to the nearby town of Bodhgaya and
sat down under a Bodhi tree.
How
long he meditated is not truly known. Some commentaries
say seven days, some as many as forty-nine days.
However long his meditation might have lasted
he arose at last as the Buddha, the Enlightened
One.
So
great an event later inspired wonderful legends:
The most famous concerns the re-appearance of
Mara, the Evil One, who came to the future Buddha
as he sat under the Bodhi tree, and summoned
all his forces to attack him. Storms, hot rocks,
burning coals, sand, mud were all hurled at
the Buddha but with no effect. Then Mara summoned
his daughters, Desire, Discontent, and Passion,
but their efforts were in vain.
And
then, touching his finger to the ground before
him, Gotama asked the earth to bear witness
to his rightful struggle for enlightenment,
whereupon the earth responded with a frightful
roar, and the Earth Goddess created a monstrous
flood drowning all of Maras demon legions.
As
dawn was breaking on the day of the full moon
of Visakha (the same day as his birth and eventual
death) Gotama achieved full enlightenment. Later,
the Buddha was to say that at the moment of
his enlightenment, there arose in him the knowledge
of his emancipation, the realization that the
cycle of rebirth was ended for him. Ignorance
was dispelled, and knowledge arose. Darkness
was dispelled and light arose. And in the same
discourse he said enlightenment comes similarly
to anyone who is vigilant, strenuous and resolute
in their practice of the Dharma.
What
the Buddha Taught - the Meaning of Enlightenment
Two extremes are to be avoided : the extreme
of indulgence in sensuality and worldly pleasures,
and the extremes of austerity, mortification
and self-torture. Austerities produce confusion
and sickly thoughts, while sensuality is enervating
and makes man a slave of his passions. One should
follow the Middle Path which keeps aloof from
both extremes. One should satisfy the necessities
of life, and keep ones body in good health and
ones mind strong in order to comprehend the
Four Noble Truths :
The
first Noble Truth is the existence of suffering
: Birth is suffering, sickness is suffering,
old age is suffering, death is suffering, Sorrow,
dejection and despair are suffering. Contact
with unpleasant things, not getting what one
wants are suffering. Suffering must be comprehended,
and its cause given up.
The
Second Noble Truth is that the cause of suffering
is craving or desire. Craving for pleasures,
wealth, power, even craving for rebirth, create
eventual suffering because of inherent greed
and lust.
The
Third Noble Truth is that anyone can eliminate
the cravings (and thereby, the suffering) on
his own, without the need of Gods and priests
to direct our beings.
The
Fourth Noble Truth is the path leading to cessation
of suffering. Known as The Eightfold Path it
consists of : Right View, Right Intention, Right
Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Right
Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Concentration.
Buddha
taught these fundamentals of what was to become
one of the worlds great religious philosophies
- a way of life towards individual salvation,
and a path that is today followed by countless
millions.
Teaching
the Truth
The Buddha spent two months at Bodhgaya continuing
his meditations, and then set off to find his
old teacher. At the Deer Park of Isipatana,
at Sarnath near Varasi, he came across the five
ascetics who had been his former companions.
At first they rebuffed him, but later, perceiving
that there was something special about this
man they had known a Siddartha Gotama, they
came to be convinced by the Buddhas message
and became the first five disciples of the Sangha,
the Buddhist monastic order.
For
the next fifty years the Buddha traveled the
length and breadth of what is now Northern India,
teaching the Dharma to anyone willing to listen,
from simple peasants to royalty including his
own family. He also instructed his monks to
teach respect for all religions.
The
spread of Buddhism for more than twenty-five
hundred years has occurred because many millions
of people have recognized in the Buddhas teachings
a truth intensely and personally meaningful
to them, a path to their self enlightenment.
The
Buddha Passes into Nirvana
In his eightieth year the Buddha was stricken
by a serious illness, the nature of which is
not known, and declared that he would pass away
in three months time. This sad news alarmed
Ananda, the Buddhas closest attendant, and he
wept. He asked the Buddha what would happen
to the Sangha after his death, whom could the
disciples turn to for instruction and inspiration?
The Buddha answered that the disciples had learned
form him everything he was able to teach them
and that now they should dwell as having refuge
in themselves and not elsewhere.
Ananda
then asked what those disciples should do who
had been accustomed to pay reverence to the
Buddha when the Rainy Season had ended. The
Buddha told him there were four places to which
a faithful disciple might go, places that would
rouse his devotion :LUMPINI GROVE, where the
Buddha was born ; BODHGAYA, where he attained
enlightenment ; SARNATH, where he delivered
his first discourse on the Turning of the Wheel
of the Doctrine, and KUSINARA (Kashinagar),
where he would soon attain complete nirvana.
On
what was to be the last day of his life and
still seriously ill, he stayed in the mango
grove of a smith named Cunda, who prepared for
him a meal accidentally contaminated with a
bacteria, which made the Buddha dreadfully sick,
causing violent pains. Through the force of
mindfulness and meditation the Buddha was able
to control the pains, and continued on to Kusinara
with Ananda.
Proceeding
to a quiet grove, the Buddha laid down for the
last time, his head pointing to the north, and
received devotees from the village. Asking the
five hundred assembled monks if any of them
had any doubts, misgivings, or questions about
any matter of the Dharma, all were silent.
With
his last breath, the Buddha addressed this final
advise to his disciples: Decay is inherent in
all compound things. Work on your salvation
with diligence. Then, as the founder of one
of the worlds great religions, the compassionate
teacher who showed mankind how to escape suffering,
entered nirvana, lotus blossoms fell from heaven
and covered his body.
Excerpts
taken from The Buddhas Life by Gerald Roscoe,
edited by Max Holland
Buddha Images
Thais are a deeply religious people who considered
all Buddhist images extremely sacred-no matter
their age or condition. Sacrilegious acts are
punishable by imprisonment-even when committed
by foreign visitors. The icons, churches, temples
and sacred places of any religious group should
always be respected by others on their travels.
Ignorance is scant excuse.
Buddhist
Monks
Buddhist monks must also be treated with respect.
Monks cannot touch or be touched by females,
or accept anything form the hand of a woman.
Rear seats in buses are reserved for monks;
other passengers should vacate these seats when
necessary. Never stand over a seated monk since
they should always remain at the highest elevations.
Temple
dress code
All Buddhist temples in Thailand have very strict
dress codes, similar to Christian churches in
the West. Shorts are not acceptable attire in
Buddhist temples-men should wear long pants
and a clean short-sleeved shirt. Woman are best
covered in either pants or a long skirt, and
shoulders should not be exposed. Leather sandals
are better than shoes since footwear must be
constantly removed. Rubber flip flops are considered
proper only in the bathroom, not religious shrines.
Buddhist temples are extremely sacred places;
common sense dictates that you dress appropriately
when visiting any place of worship..
Temples
In Thailand, a temple is much more than a place
to worship, The wat is the center of village
life, serving as a school, orphanage, theatre,
meeting hall, crematorium, youth club, playground
- even sometimes a market, political center
or restaurant. Although ones behavior must always
be correct and polite in a temple, there is
no feeling of remoteness or superiority in a
Thai wat it is a repository for all aspects
of the life and spirit, as well as the spirituality
of the community it serves.
Thais
love to make merit with Buddha by donation religious
objects to temples. These are always accepted,
which means that temples are cluttered with
religious bric-a-brac. The richer the populace
the more extensive and impressive the objects
donated. Recently, a poor lady won six million
baht in the national lottery. She spent all
the money on the building of a new temple, so
staying poor but making enough merit to assure
her of a good reincarnation at her death. Truly
a long term investment!.
Although
wats are exclusively Buddhist, there are elements
of pre-Buddhist, Hindu beliefs in most temples.
Hindu gods such as Shiva may have their statues
included, and Thais combine Buddhism with ancient
Animist beliefs so that temples have become
centers of local superstition as well as Buddhism.
For many visitors, wats can become too much.
Having seen a few, they merge in the minds eye
into an unfathomable riot of strange sculptures
and bright colors.
Without
some understanding of the design and function
of the various parts, the brain can switch off
and no more temples is the unfortunate response.
A
wat is a complex of several buildings. There
is no fixed pattern, but in general the largest
and most central building is the wiharn. This
building will have one or more Buddha statues
at the far end (Buddhas should always face east),
before a large open area for the general public.
In this area people come to worship, and to
receive instructions from the monks. The chief
monk ( or Abbot ) may have a special low dias
of ornamented wood to the left of the altar
area. The walls of the wiharn are usually decorated
with murals depicting the life of Buddha. These
vary from exquisite ancient depictions to ugly
modern ones.
To
one side of the wiharn there will usually be
one or more chedis. These conical structures
of brick, coated with plaster painted white
or covered in brass or gold, are said to resemble
piles of rice. When asked at his death how he
should be remembered, Buddha replied Make piles
of rice to remember me by. Chedis contain the
bones or other relics of religious leaders.
The most prestigious (giving the temple the
name of Wat Prathat or Wat Mahathat) contain
relics of Buddha himself. Many Thais, on cremation
have their remains interred into the side of
a chedi, identified by a small plaque set into
the surface.
The
bot is the building where monks are ordained.
It may contain the most sacred Buddha sculpture,
but is often closed when not in use, and the
building may be quite small, tucked away in
a corner. The area of consecrated ground is
marked by eight black stones around the corners
and axes of the bot.
Most
temples also contain a library, usually a decorated
wooden building raised on a podium, and a sala
where novice monks or orphaned children are
educated by ordained monks. It is customary
to have a bothi tree within the temple grounds.
It was under this thick trucked tree with heart
shaped leaves that Buddha became enlightened.
To one side of the temple grounds, identified
by the saffron robes hanging out of windows,
are the monks quarters. Monks administer, clean
and look after the wat, as well as teaching
and meditating in it.
All
temples are covered in small, highly reflective
mosaics of colored glass. Their significance
is to drive away evil spirits - if they approach
too close they will see their reflection and
be frightened away. There are other precautions
to ward off bad spirits, including the monster
figures often guarding doorways. Many temples
are approached by long flights of steps, guarded
at the base by pairs of fearsome serpent heads
(nagas) whose long scaly backs form the walls
on either side of the steps.
The
naga is a serpent which can change shape at
will. One guarded Buddha in the wilderness by
growing seven heads to form an umbrella over
Buddhas head, and promised to give his body
for use by Buddha for all time.