Vietnam
Religion Part 1
The Constitution of
the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, adopted in 1980,
proclaims that "citizens enjoy freedom of worship,
and may practice or not practice a religion" but
that "no one may misuse religions to violate state
laws or policies." Despite the Constitution's
ostensible protection of the practice of the religion,
the status of such was precarious in Vietnam in late
1987.
Buddhism
Historically, most
Vietnamese have identified themselves with Buddhism,
which originated in what is now southern Nepal around
530 B.C. as an offshoot of Hinduism. Its founder was
Gautama, a prince who bridled at the formalism of
Hinduism as it was being interpreted by the priestly
caste of Brahmans. Gautama spent years meditating and
wandering as an ascetic until he discovered the path of
enlightenment to nirvana, the world of endless serenity
in which one is freed from the cycle of birth, death,
and rebirth. According to Buddhist thought, human
salvation lies in discovering the "four noble
truths"--that man is born to suffer in successive
lives, that the cause of this suffering is man's craving
for earthly pleasures and possessions, that the
suffering ceases upon his deliverance from this craving,
and that he achieves this deliverance by following
"the noble eightfold path." The foundation of
the Buddhist concept of morality and right behavior, the
eightfold path, consists of right views, or sincerity in
leading a religious life; right intention, or honesty in
judgment; right speech, or sincerity in speech; right
conduct, or sincerity in work; right livelihood, or
sincerity in making a living; right effort, or sincerity
in aspiration; right mindfulness, or sincerity in
memory; and right concentration, or sincerity in
meditation.
Buddhism spread first
from China to Vietnam's Red River Delta region in
approximately the second century A.D., and then from
India to the southern Mekong Delta area at some time
between the third and the sixth centuries. The Chinese
version, Mahayana Buddhism, became the faith of most
Vietnamese, whereas the Indian version, Theravada (or
Hinayana) Buddhism, was confined mostly to the southern
delta region. The doctrinal distinction between the two
consists of their differing views of Gautama Buddha: the
Mahayana school teaches that Gautama was only one of
many "enlightened ones" manifesting the
fundamental divine power of the universe; the Theravada
school teaches that Gautama was the one-and-only
enlightened one and the great teacher, but that he was
not divine. The Mahayana sect holds further that
laypersons can attain nirvana, whereas the Theravada
school believes that only ordained monks and nuns can do
so.
Few Vietnamese
outside the clergy, however, are acquainted with
Buddhism's elaborate cosmology. What appealed to them at
the time it was introduced was Mahayana ritual and
imagery. Mahayana ceremony easily conformed to
indigenous Vietnamese beliefs, which combined folklore
with Confucian and Taoist teachings, and Mahayana's
"enlightened ones" were often venerated
alongside various animist spirits.
Before the country
was unified under communism, Buddhism enjoyed an
autonomy from the state that was increasingly threatened
once the communists gained power. For pragmatic reasons,
however, the regime initially avoided overt hostility
toward Buddhism or any other organized religion.
Instead, it sought to separate real and potential
collaborators from opponents by co-optation and control.
For example, within months after winning the South, the
communist regime set up a front called the Patriotic
Buddhist Liaison Committee. The committee's purpose was
to promote the idea that all patriotic Buddhists had a
duty to participate in building a new society liberated
for the first time from the shackles of feudal and
neo-colonialist influences. The committee also tried to
show that most Buddhists, leaders and followers alike,
were indeed rallying behind the new regime and the
liaison committee. This strategy attempted to thwart the
power of the influential, independent groups of Buddhist
clergy, particularly the Unified Buddhist Church of
Vietnam, which had been a major pre-1975 critic of the
Saigon government and of the roughly twenty Buddhist
sects in Vietnam the most vocal in opposing the war.
Communists also
pressured monks and nuns to lead a secular life,
encouraging them to take part in productive agricultural
labor or to become actively involved in the work of the
Patriotic Buddhist Liaison Committee. For their refusal
to collaborate, some prominent clerical leaders in the
South were placed under house arrest or imprisoned,
their pagodas were converted to public use, and their
holdings were confiscated. Such activity closely
paralleled communist actions against Buddhists in the
North in the 1950s. In addition, the party prevented
Buddhist organizations from training monks and nuns in
schools that previously had been autonomous. In April
1980, a national committee of Buddhist groups throughout
the country was formed by the government. The
government-controlled Vietnam Buddhist Church was
established in November 1981, and it emerged as the only
officially sanctioned organization authorized to
represent all Buddhist groups both at home and abroad.
As a result of
communist policy, the observance of Buddhist ritual and
practice was drastically reduced. A 1979 study of a Red
River Delta commune, reported to be "overwhelmingly
Catholic," disclosed that the commune's two pagodas
were "maintained and frequented regularly by the
faithful (the majority of whom were old women),
especially on the Buddhist feast days." No monks or
nuns had been observed, however, and the study went on
to note that pagodas had been eliminated entirely in
nearby Hanoi. In 1987 occasional reports suggested that
the observance of Buddhist ritual continued in some
remote areas.
The
communist government's attitude toward Buddhism and
other faiths being practiced remained one of tolerance
as long as the clergy and faithful adhered strictly to
official guidelines. These guidelines inhibited the
growth of religious institutions, however, by
restricting the number of institutions approved to train
clergy and by preempting the time of potential
candidates among the youth whose daily routine might
require study, work, and participation in the activities
of communist youth organizations. In an apparent effort
to train a new generation of monks and nuns, the Vietnam
Buddhist Church reportedly set up one Buddhist academy
in Hanoi in November 1981 and another in Ho Chi Minh
City in December 1984 . These academies, however, served
as an arm of the state.
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