Thailand’s gender dynamics have shifted dramatically over
the past few decades to where women fulfill many of the major roles in society.
The majority of university enrollees are women, the breadwinners in many
families are women, corporate executives and civil servants are women, the
majority of new entrepreneurial start-ups are undertaken by women, and even
many farmers are women.
But even with general acceptance about the emerging
importance of the matriarchal role of women in society today, there is still
one last bastion – the Buddhist monkhood, something that has been strictly
taboo for women in Thailand for the last seven centuries. Although women were
given the right to vote back in 1932, they were never given the right to
ordination as monks.
There is nothing in the Thai constitution forbidding women
becoming monks. However the governing Sangha, or ruling religious council,
continues to maintain, based on 1928 rules, that only men can enter the
monkhood. The Theravada Bhikkhuni order, or fully ordained female ministry, has
never been officially established in Thailand, although it exists in both
Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
There is a growing movement to seek ordination for women,
however, in a religion that appears to sorely need it. The male-dominated
Buddhist religion in Thailand is in crisis, reeling from a series of sexual and
other scandals including that of the 33-year-old Wirapol Sukphol, who shocked
the county in July with daily stories of lavish excess, promiscuity and alleged
crimes ranging from statutory rape to manslaughter. In 2011, monks were exposed
for donning wigs and attending karaoke bars for donning wigs and attending
karaoke bars while others were charged with rape, phone sex and one was charged
with murder and dumping the woman’s body in s rubbish bin.
The absence of women in the ministry over the past century
has led to the perception among many Thais that women are not meant to play a
monastic role in life other than being lay followers, or becoming Mae Ji
or nuns. Although a Mae Ji is higher than a lay person, this place within the
monastic hierarchy is regarded as subservient to monks. In addition, monks
receive free public transport, reserved seats in public places, and government
identity cards, which Mae Ji, just aren't entitled to.
This restricts women in the monastic hierarchy to only
participating in activities of obtaining merit through collective rituals and
undertaking temple housekeeping activities. Basically the perception is that
they are there to serve the monks.
A common perception is that while they are robed in white,
women are most probably present in the temple because they have no other place
to go, suffer from a broken relationship, have a psychotic disorder, or have
very little education. Consequently robed nuns tend to be looked down upon out
of a too-general belief that women are of less value than their male
counterparts in monastic life.
A small number of women who have become Mae ji aspire for
full ordination, even though that would potentially make them official social
outcasts in risk of civil prosecution for impersonating monks.
Nonetheless, some women have dared to break the gender
barrier despite the risk of opprobrium. The pioneer who led the way for women
to be ordained as monks was the professor, controversial author and TV host
Chatsumarn Kabilsingh, now known as Dhammananda Bhikkhuni. She is the abbess of
Wat Songhammakalyani in Nakkon Pathom, just north of Bangkok. Dhammananda
Bhikkhuni slipped away to Sri Lanka back in 2001 to return an ordained monk, a
very controversial move at the time.
Wat Songhammakalyan has differentiated itself from male
dominated monasteries in that the Bhikkuni have developed strong rapport with
the communities around them, and an exemplary empathy and ability to address
the needs of the local residents. The bhikkuni directly engage the community, not
just helping in their spiritual needs, but rendering assistance in many other
ways, especially to the needy, sick, and infirmed. The Bhikkhuni were there
giving assistance when floods hit their community a couple of years ago.
According to Dhammakamala Bhikkhuni, wherever and whenever
people come into contact with the Bhikkuni, they very quickly become accepting
and are generally happy to see them. Many of the male Sangha now also accept
the Bhikkhuni and in some parts of Thailand it is now not unusual to see male
and female monks jointly participating in prayers and other rituals.
Over a number of visits to Bhikkhuni temples, stark
differences emerge in comparison to conventional temples. The Bhikkhuni seem to
share a much stronger sense of community, than their more individualistic male
counterparts. There also seems to be a strong sense of mission about what they
are doing. Although the dhamma, or scripture espoused is along the similar
modernist themes as Sulak Sivaraksa, Thich Nhat Hahn, and Buddhadasa Bikkhu,
the Bhikkhuni's method of practice and dissemination is very different. There
is warmth, empathy, and "a sense of personalization" in their
approach to counseling and teaching of dhamma.
The Bhikkhuni have a nurturing approach based upon their various
personal experiences before they were ordained, which has given many of them
the ability to frame dhamma teachings in a practical way, which can be easily
understood by people. The Bhikkhuni have managed to take scripture and turn it
into something pragmatic that can be understood and used as "everyday
dhamma", or socially engaged Buddhism.
According to Dhammakamala Bhikkhuni, the most important
contribution the Bhikkhuni are making is their open approach to issues
concerning women that are very difficult for males to discuss with females.
This is very important as around 90 percent of people visiting temples for
dhamma instruction are now females. The Bhikkhuni see gender as an essential
bridge to women.
The Bhikkhuni are heavily involved in family counseling,
assisting in solving everyday problems that are facing people in society today,
particularly in regards to child and family issues. They are enabling dhamma to
be used as a means to live by for the benefit of the individual, family, and
community. Many supporting the case of the Bhikkhuni in Thailand believe that
it is this group who are maintaining contemporary relevance of dhamma to
everyday life. In this way the Bhikkhuni are performing a major role in
maintaining Buddhism as a useable guide to everyday life.
With many of the Bhikkhuni coming from professional and
higher education backgrounds, many modern teaching methods have been adopted to
help disseminate dhamma teachings to the young within communities and schools
around their temples.
The Bhikkhuni appear to be realists and have not relied upon
donations to survive. They are not totally dependent on outside food donations
and grow some of their own food. They even engage in enterprise and sell their
surpluses. Practicality, self-reliance, and a collective action orientation are
signatures that the Bhikkhuni display to the rest of society in the manner of
their dealings with outsiders. This manifests itself in an aura of strong will
and motivation that is inspiring to many of those who come into contact with
them.
There have been a number of scandals involving male monks of
late, creating a small crisis in public trust. In addition, a large part of the
Sangha is focused on doctrine and tradition, rather than the needs of their
followers. Some would argue that if things don't change the Sangha may only be
able to play a more limited role in society in the future, perhaps just
restricted to performing the rites and rituals on formal occasions.
The Bhikkhuni approach to dhamma may be able to rebuild
trust and maintain the relevance of Buddhism to society.
What appears to be one of the important aspirations forwomen
who want to be fully ordained as monks is to be ordained in Thailand in front
of their peers, rather than run away to another country and then return to
proclaim themselves as Bhikkhuni. This is now possible where a member of the
Sri Lanka Sangha travels to Thailand for the ordination and a number of Thai
Bhikkhu or male monks are willing to make up the necessary quorum of five Bhikkhu
being present at the ordination. They feel it is symbolically important that
ordinations are carried out in Thailand.
The Bhikkhuni struggle highlights gender discrimination in
Thailand. As a farang or westerner, it would be too tempting to
interpret what Dhammakamala Bhikkhuni told me during our interview as an
expression of feminism. However, their aspirations probably more likely have
something to do with their feeling of the need to serve society in the way they
believe is best. The Bhikkhuni's commitment to the cause of developing a strong
Bhikkhuni Sangha in Thailand has more to do with a personal commitment to love
and compassion towards the community around them, their love of the dhamma, and
humility, rather than the expression of any political or social statement.
There is no anger present among the Bhikkhuni. Rather they
seem to employ empathy and compassion as their driving energy. They see their
devotion to their cause as the important thing, and official recognition is not
their highest priority. Dhammakamala Bhikkhuni probably best sums their
feelings up when she said "we don't ask for what can't be done right
now".
The ordination of Bhikkhuni has not been a major issue of
discussion for over a decade. However with the regular ordination of women
occurring in the near future, a planned ordination is scheduled for Nov. 29,
2014, it is likely that the issue will be debated once again. The biggest
barrier to the ordination of women may lie in that it is a total affront to
what is, and consequently seen as a threat to the establishment, which has
existed under the same structure for over a century. Consequently conservatism
rules to maintain the status quo rather than consider 'what could be'.
Institutionally, the only consolidation is that the current
small number of Bhikkhuni are generally left alone and have not been
prosecuted.
However Buddhism in Thailand according to some needs some
revitalization and effort made to regain the confidence of the people after
some of the scandals of late. The whole question of getting the dhamma across
to a rapidly changing society needs a rethink. This requires some
reconsideration about the entry of women to the Sangha or monkhood.
If Thailand is going to retain its leadership in the
development and dissemination of dhamma, then it needs to appeal to all
segments of the populace. These are challenges facing the Sangha Council which
must address the institution of Bhikkhuni to maintain its relevance to society
and prevent itself from becoming an institutional relic.
Unrecognized and unacknowledged women monks are at the
forefront in dealing with Thailand's social problems, if even on the small
scale, while many of their male counterparts have withdrawn themselves from
society to stay within Thailand’s temples of Thailand.
Ironically this issue appears to be as hard to solve as the
ongoing political turmoil playing out on the streets in Bangkok. However the
Bhikkhuni have a secret weapon with their charm and devotion that is winning
the hearts and minds of many who come into contact with them.
The emergence of the Bhikkhuni phenomenon is a strong wind
of change blowing across both the social and spiritual aspects of Thai society.
Society may not be able to resist this idea, as its time may have come.
Thailand is changing quicker than many would want to acknowledge. ‘Asia
Sentinel’
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