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Questions of faith. .


Keeping the Faith' chronicles the effects of a changing world on Thai Buddhism Jim Taylor This article is about the NFL football player. For other uses, see Jim Taylor (disambiguation).

James Charles "Jim" Taylor (born September 20, 1935) is a former professional football player. Taylor played for ten NFL seasons, from 1958-67.
 KEEPING THE FAITH: Thai Buddhism at the Crossroads By Sanitsuda Ekachai. Edited by Nick Wilgus. Post Books, 326 pages, 350 baht baht  
n. pl. bahts or baht
See Table at currency.



[Thai bt.]

Noun 1.
 Sanitsuda Ekachai's new book. is a collection of short, critical articles and commentaries on various aspects of contemporary Thai Buddhism, arranged under eight sub-headings with a short introduction. An appealing feature of this ensemble is that "other" voices are heard with reader-friendly and short, insightful comments over debates concerning the relevance and place of contemporary Thai Buddhism, especially monasticism monasticism (mənăs`tĭsĭzəm, mō–), form of religious life, usually conducted in a community under a common rule. . The author uses few words and some broad brush-strokes to construct some extraordinarily vivid frames of everyday religious life in Buddhist Thailand. In reviewing a book such as this on Thai Buddhism, we need to ask ourselves what is this religion, not always in accordance with the texts, that most Thais seem to follow and identify with to some extent. The imagination, itsel f a social fact, is important as, a means of informing the way we think, feel and act, in this case in relation to religion. It also accounts for the many expressions of Thai Buddhism that we see around us. Perhaps also these days we need to venture outside the monasteries to experience living religion and what it means in the constructions of everyday contemporary life in the villages, towns and cities. Lest we forget Lest We Forget is a phrase popularised in 1887, by Rudyard Kipling; it formed the refrain of his poem Recessional.

As a title, it may refer to any of:
  • The Ode of Remembrance
, Thailand is still one of the few remaining Buddhist countries where the Arahant (self-accomplished "saint") ideal and its liberating possibilities remains alive, and well in the collective imagination. Not so any longer for the wellspring well·spring  
n.
1. The source of a stream or spring.

2. A source: a wellspring of ideas.


wellspring
Noun
 of Theravada Buddhism Theravada Buddhism: see Buddhism. , Sri Lanka Sri Lanka (srē läng`kə) [Sinhalese,=resplendent land], formerly Ceylon, ancient Taprobane, officially Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, island republic (2005 est. pop. , and doubtful in neighbouring Burma, Cambodia and Laos. It seems to me that many Thais are now asking the question: if these "acclaimed" exemplars or monastic teachers are still around, where are they to be found? Modern Buddhists would seem to claim that what is needed these days is a system of standardisation as a requiremen t for continued monastic registration. Imagine, if you will, a Situation in this period of globalisation where each monastery (and monks), like many businesses in Thailand, would carry an "ISO (1) See ISO speed.

(2) (International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, www.iso.ch) An organization that sets international standards, founded in 1946. The U.S. member body is ANSI.
" classification engraved en·grave  
tr.v. en·graved, en·grav·ing, en·graves
1. To carve, cut, or etch into a material: engraved the champion's name on the trophy.

2.
 over the front gate;. for those "good monasteries" able to show that they have adhered to "best practice standards". But, more seriously, who would determine what is "best practice" monks or laity? As an expression of diversity, Thai monasticism, we are told, needs to recognise the contribution of monk-activists engaged in this world, in as much as it recognises the normative spiritual achievement of the reclusive re·clu·sive  
adj.
1. Seeking or preferring seclusion or isolation.

2. Providing seclusion: a reclusive hut.
, disengaged dis·en·gage  
v. dis·en·gaged, dis·en·gag·ing, dis·en·gag·es

v.tr.
1. To release from something that holds fast, connects, or entangles. See Synonyms at extricate.

2.
 meditative "Path" questers (to be found among the remaining forests enclaves). This is certainly a theological mute point. These modern activist-exemplars are to be found in urban monasteries, places of teaching and learning, various refuges, rural community centres, conservation sites and hospices. Importantly, as the author says, while encouraging a worldly engagement we should not forget the all-important questions of monastic discipline. In the past decade or so we have been overwhelmed by media accounts of serious monastic infringements, abuses of monastic privilege and power. These are the "other" images of Thai Buddhism that are not usually affixed af·fix  
tr.v. af·fixed, af·fix·ing, af·fix·es
1. To secure to something; attach: affix a label to a package.

2.
 to glossy tourist brochures and postcards to send back home; media representations, circulated and consumed widely through both print and electronic media (Thai and English). These images have not been favourable to defining a respectable "place" for Buddhism in modern Thai society. At this point we may ask ourselves, what, f anything, has gone wrong with Thai Buddhism in recent times? Or has the media had a greater influence than we realise? There is not much talk around about "good monks", as these persons are in any case hardly "newsworthy" (unless the reader believes there are no exam play practicing monks left any more which I do not believe, and clearly neither does the author though we may differ on what constitutes an "ideal" monk). Sanitsuda Ekachai attempts to capture this complexity, while at the same time show us that there are "other" religious possibilities, mainly from the social interstices. At the same time the author shares the concerns, of many educated Thais in suggesting that Thai Buddhism needs to be linked to the wider processes of democratic reform so that internal change can likewise occur in the Sangha sangha: see Buddhism.
sangha

Buddhist monastic order, traditionally composed of four groups: monks, nuns, laymen, and laywomen. Established by the Buddha, it is the world's oldest body of celibate clerics.
 (male and female monastic orders). The assumption is that Thai Buddhism is in state of "crisis" needing serious structural attention and that little trust can be placed in the monastic elders who, we are told, are unaware of current social realities. The position throughout (insofar in·so·far  
adv.
To such an extent.

Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice
 as it is possible to identify a consistent thread) starts on the premise that the forces of modernisation in Thailand have destroyed the fundamental basis of tradition, especially cultural forms such as religion. This has lead to a new materialistic and individuated society based on consumption. Thais, it would appear, clearly l ike to go shopping instead of going to the monastery, or in a manner of speaking, the Buddha has been "relocated" in the shopping centres and arcades. Thus said, we need to be careful in assuming cultures are static, without any capacity to change through internal and external influences. Thai Buddhism has always been contested and changing (is this not one of the fundamental tenants of Buddhism?) and, in going with historic flows, this has accounted for. its continuities. It is from global realities that Thailand struggles to find a new identity It is from this scenario, as the author makes another important thematic point, that Theravada Buddhism in Thailand has re-established a new "relevance" for "modern Thai life and problems" (p.10): a religion that is, contrary to contemporary images, "still alive and well in the Thai Psyche" (p.11). The responses from the Sangha to the conditions of modernity have been mixed and not without tensions and contradictions involving various actors. Everyone, it seems, has something to say concerning "problems" over discipline, monastic training and the maintenance of religious sanctity. Many of the case studies in this book received media attention over the past decade or so due, in no small part, to the author herself writing on social issues for the Bangkok Post The Bangkok Post is a broadsheet English-language daily newspaper published in Bangkok, Thailand. The first issue came out on August 1, 1946. It was four pages and cost 1 baht. . The reader is taken through some depressing scenarios of monastic. corruption and scandals on the one hand, and tales of hope and promise on the other. The compilation (even if the reader has read some of these accounts penned by the author before) gives a broad overview of a modern society in change. especially through the confused and traumatic social and economic crisis of the late 1990s. However, unfortunately, the events of 1997 were not clearly factored into the discussions and implications for Thai Buddhist practices. Although "other" voices are heard in the text, the author also makes her own position clear, as in support for the reform Dhamma heritage of the late modernist scholar-monk Buddhadasa Bhikkhu A Bhikkhu (Pāli) or Bhiksu (Sanskrit) is a fully ordained male Buddhist monastic. Female monastics are called Bhikkhunis. Bhikkhus and Bhikkhunis keep many precepts: they live by the vinaya's framework of monastic discipline, the basic rules of which are called the  an d, correspondingly, an active, engaged monastic order (male and female). This engaged "here-and-now" Buddhism (espoused by the well-known Sulak Sivaraksa Sulak Sivaraksa (Thai: สุลักษณ์ ศิวรักษ์ ) confronts contemporary concerns and issues (women's rights The effort to secure equal rights for women and to remove gender discrimination from laws, institutions, and behavioral patterns.

The women's rights movement began in the nineteenth century with the demand by some women reformers for the right to vote, known as suffrage, and
, environment and conservation, social equity, justice, etc), reaching out to a society clearly much in need of spiritual nourishment. The proviso is that these "concerned" monks keep to the disciplinary charter; though how they do this while at the same time are encouraged to become more "engaged" and "this-worldly" is not fully addressed as are the inherent contradictions in this proposition. Monks gain respect and veneration precisely because of a ritual., separation from society at large, where the temptations of ordinary life are minimised. Even Buddhadasa Bhikkhu particularly popular among the Thai middle class preferred a forest hermitage for his contemplation and scholastic pursuits. The very problems confronting modern monks have been a blurring of spatial boundaries with the gradual attriti on from the simple, distanced, reclusive life. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, the increasing worldliness of monks has created its own problems as it did in the West among Protestant and Catholic clergy. There was even talk of whether Buddhist monks should be allowed to marry if they are going to be more engaged in the world. In the matter of "keeping the faith", the modern-day problems are indeed complicated, but the solution is simple if we go back (forward?) to the essence of (timeless) dhamma practice. In the present "crisis" we need to understand the practical implications of the monastic discipline, and its limitations on worldly engagement. It is not possible to have it both ways. The Theravada monastic discipline is to ensure that being a monk, even these days, is unambiguous and without hindrance. It is in ambiguous situations that confusion arises. For most ordinands, keeping the minutiae mi·nu·ti·a  
n. pl. mi·nu·ti·ae
A small or trivial detail: "the minutiae of experimental and mathematical procedure" Frederick Turner.
 of the discipline is not easily done and disciplinary infractions occur with increasing frequency because monks, after all, are human. There are many Thais who have fallen into a crisis in "faith" over the condition of the contemporary Bhikkhu Sangha. Some even believe that most of the remaining good monastic teachers have now established branch monasteries outside the country, especially in the West, while one or two alleged monastic miscreants were forced to flee the country out the back door for fear of facing criminal proceedings. But, looking at the situation overall, these cases were few and far between. In regard to the question of women in Thai Buddhism, the author is most articulate: "It boils down to power: the male-dominated order wants to continue excluding women from entering and sharing monks' sphere of authority" (p.287). It is not that the author is necessarily incorrect in her moral assessments it is more a question of whether all concerns. even more conservative ones, have been adequately considered. The progressive position is that if the Sangha's administrative structure (and its geriatric monk-administrators) is n ot in accordance with modern norms and values, it should be changed. After all, Thailand is rapidly changing. The same argument is heard over the necessity of providing secular education Secular education is a term that refers to the system of public education in countries with a secular government or separation between religion and state.

While it is considered an important part of a democratic and free society, some may oppose secular education on the
 to monks to enable them to keep abreast Verb 1. keep abreast - keep informed; "He kept up on his country's foreign policies"
keep up, follow

trace, follow - follow, discover, or ascertain the course of development of something; "We must follow closely the economic development is Cuba" ; "trace the
 with the informational world-in-change, especially IT, though issuing bachelor's degrees to ambitious monks, or a new digital monastic order ("Cyber-Sangha") does not, in itself, ensure a "better fit" monastic order, or a body of monks more able to respond to contemporary social needs. There would be little to disagree about the subtext sub·text  
n.
1. The implicit meaning or theme of a literary text.

2. The underlying personality of a dramatic character as implied or indicated by a script or text and interpreted by an actor in performance.
 in the book, with its concerns for much-needed reform, which also seeks connection back to the untainted origins of the teachings. The book is about the concern in making "faith" work in the present; making the varieties of Thai Buddhism relevant and meaningful in today's world in order to "keep faith". Thai Buddhism, in a sense, may be at a "crossroads' but to my mind it all depends on perspectives, ways of seeing and understanding, and which particular road one is looking down.

Dr. Jim Taylor is a senior lecturer senior lecturer
n. Chiefly British
A university teacher, especially one ranking next below a reader.
 at the Department of Anthropology, University of Adelaide Its main campus is located on the cultural boulevard of North Terrace in the city-centre alongside prominent institutions such as the Art Gallery of South Australia, the South Australian Museum and the State Library of South Australia. , South Australia South Australia, state (1991 pop. 1,236,623), 380,070 sq mi (984,381 sq km), S central Australia. It is bounded on the S by the Indian Ocean. Kangaroo Island and many smaller islands off the south coast are included in the state. .
COPYRIGHT 2003 NIBWA-Newsletter on International Buddhist Women
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Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Keeping the Faith: Thai Buddhism at the Crossroads
Author:Taylor, Dr. Jim
Publication:Yasodhara-Newsletter on International Buddhist Women's Activities
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Apr 1, 2003
Words:1815
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