打開我的閱讀記錄 ▼

The Amazing Resurgence Of Woman Sanghahood In Sri Lanka

  The amazing resurgence of woman Sanghahood in Sri Lanka

  Ven. Ani Jutima

  Editor”s note: This feature was first published in the now-retired Bodhi Journal, Issue 1, October 2006.

  After a hiatus of one thousand years, Theravādin women once more have the opportunity to be ordained as bhikkhunīs and thus become full members of the Saṅgha. Traditionally the Saṅgha is composed of fully ordained nuns (bhikkhunī), fully ordained monks (bhikkhu), novice nuns (samanerī), and novice monks (samanera).

  From the 3rd century BC when King Aśoka”s son, Mahinda, and daughter Saṅghamittā, brought the ordination lineages of both monks and nuns from India to Sri Lanka, there was a long, proud history of male and female monasticism on this island.

  In the 11th century, as a result of war, drought and famine, both the monks” and nuns” orders died out in Sri Lanka. The bhikkhu order was revived within one generation by inviting a group of bhikkhus from Siam(Thailand) who fulfilled the requirements for giving bhikkhu ordination. However, as the Bhikkhunī Order did not exist in any other Theravāda country, the requirement that a bhikkhunī receive her ordination from a group of ten bhikkhunīs of ten years standing followed by a further ceremony presided over by monks could not be met. Thus the bhikkhunīlineage lapsed.

  Hence, since the beginning of the 11th century, women wishing to commit themselves to the renunciate life have had only one option: ten lay precepts. Even the ten precepts of a samanerī have been denied them, since in the Theravāda tradition these can be given only by a bhikkhunī. The status of these ten precept nuns, known a dasa sil matas(literally Ten Precept Mothers), is ambiguous; they are considered neither proper monastics nor lay women either.

  The situation in the other Theravāda countries is even more difficult. It seems that in Thailand and Cambodia there never were bhikkhunīs, and although they were possibly present in Burma at one time, there too the lineage did not survive. In modern times, Burma has nuns with the ten lay precepts who, like the dasa sil matas in Sri Lanka, are not thought to be true nuns. In Thailand and Cambodia, even the ten lay precepts are denied women, and the nuns there are restricted to eight precepts with a corresponding diminishment of status.

  Thus the four-fold community of fully ordained nuns, fully ordained monks, lay women and lay men, which the Buddha clearly declared was integral to the success of the buddha-dhamma, has been absent from all Theravāda countries for one thousand years.

  Recently, however, after extensive research by a group of women fromSri Lanka and Europe, it was confirmed that the bhikkhunī lineage extant in Taiwan and Korea is actually of Sri Lankan origin and therefore could legitimately be used to ordain Theravāda nuns and restore the bhikkhunīorder.

  Although I received novice ordination in the Tibetan tradition in 1993, I decided to visit Sri Lanka to receive the samanerī vows of the Theravāda Vinaya school.

  Since the first ordination of Sri Lankan bhikkhunīs in 1996, which was conducted in Sarnath, India by Korean monks and nuns, there have been further ordination ceremonies in Bodh Gaya and in Sri Lanka. There are now over 200 fully ordained nuns as well as many novice nuns who are planning to receive the higher ordination, which they are eligible to do after having kept their samanerī vows for two years.

  Behind this amazing resurgence is an organization called Sakyadhita, Daughters of the Buddha, which was established at a conference of Buddhist women held in Bodh Gaya in 1987. Since then there have been six Sakyadhita conferences, including one held in Colombo, Sri Lanka in 1993. At the time of that conference there was strong opposition…

《The Amazing Resurgence Of Woman Sanghahood In Sri Lanka》全文未完,請進入下頁繼續閱讀…

菩提下 - 非贏利性佛教文化公益網站

Copyright © 2020 PuTiXia.Net