A group of monks in Phnom Penh make use of modern technology |
Cambodia
Pagoda problems: the decline of Buddhism in Cambodia
As Cambodia modernises and sex and drug scandals rock the
monkhood, the famed saffron robes no longer command the respect they
once did
Southeast Asia Globe | 1 February 2017
In 1959, May Mayko Ebihara became
the first American to write an anthropological dissertation on Cambodian
village life. Published in two volumes nearly a decade later, Svay: A Khmer Village in Cambodia
depicted a pre-modern agricultural idyll governed by family and
religion, in which monks were seen as the “living embodiments and
spiritual generators of Buddhism”.
However,
rapid economic development has led to a dramatic restructuring of
social relations within the Kingdom. Urbanisation is siphoning people
away from rural life, modernity is slowly consuming tradition, and more
and more Cambodians are turning their backs on the monkhood.
“Buddhism
is not strong like before,” said Bunsin Chuon, a monk since 1996 who
splits his time between the US and Wat Langka in Phnom Penh. “People
have happier lives now because technology is so advanced, and fewer
people want to become monks because to be a monk is not a happy life.”
Before
the Khmer Rouge, pagodas served as the moral, educational and cultural
hub of village life and thus enjoyed a prominent position within
society. Writing in Cambodge: The Cultivation of a Nation, 1860 – 1945, the historian Penny Edwards describes how the monkhood, or sangha,
“offered one of the few paths to power outside of birthright”, with
completion of at least one Buddhist Lent in the monastery considered a
male rite of passage. Boys would enter the monkhood as teenagers, learn
about Buddhism and Khmer culture, then return to adult life.
But
the growth of non-religious schools and universities in Cambodia has
seriously undermined the sangha’s social and cultural influence.
“Before, if anyone wanted to learn literature or any skill, they could
go to the temple – there was an incentive. But now they have a lot of
choice; they don’t need to go to the temple,” said Chuon, before
estimating that the number of monks at Wat Langka in Phnom Penh had
fallen from 300 to 100 in five years.
What’s
more, decades of robust economic growth have rewarded many Cambodians
with such material and technological advancement that the prospect of
joining the sangha has become even less appealing, according to Khy
Sovanratana, a monk of 27 years and vice-rector at Cambodia’s Preah
Sihanouk Raja Buddhist University. “There are more jobs outside the
monastery. Young boys can have a family and enjoy life, which they see
as more attractive than being quiet, circumspect and restrained,” he
said.
Sengkak Ly, a 20-year-old student at the National University of Management, laughed when Southeast Asia Globe
asked if he had ever considered joining the sangha. “I have no time to
be a monk,” he said. “I have to study so that I can get a good job. I’m
not really thinking about religion.”
The
idea of pursuing an ascetic life was also inconceivable for Rin Savath,
a 25-year-old finance student at Build Bright University. “I’ve never
been a monk, and I never want to be one, because when you become a monk
you lose all your freedom and are treated differently by society,” he
said.
The sangha is also contending with a worryingly high level of criminal activity among its ranks.
In
June 2016, Vong Chet, the head of a pagoda in Siem Reap’s Kralanh
district, was found guilty of raping more than ten young novices and
sentenced to 15 years in prison. The case was not an anomaly – two other
monks were charged with raping underaged girls and two more were jailed
for drug offences in the second half of 2015 alone.
Buddhist
authorities have long brushed off such acts as individual
transgressions, but this has failed to temper the public’s increasing
disdain for monks, who are supposed to serve as exemplars of Buddhist
behaviour.
Even those who do
join the sangha often don’t stay long. As a result, few monks learn the
scriptures to a level that enables them to effectively perform their
principal role as broadcasters of the Buddha’s teachings, or dhamma.
Sovanratana described the decline in the standards of monastic
education as “a major setback to the progress of Buddhism and the
standard of monastic life in the country”.
Concerns
about modern monks’ limited understanding of dhamma and their lack of
stringency in following the ten precepts, along with the perception that
many monks take up the saffron robes purely to gain a free education
and live off the generosity of others, appear to be gaining traction.
Echoing the sentiments of other Cambodians Southeast Asia Globe
spoke to, Ren, a 26-year-old massage therapist from Phnom Penh, said
monks no longer fulfilled their purpose as spiritual leaders. “The monks
use monkhood as an occupation, but they don’t try to learn the
scriptures. We believe in this religion and we look up to them, and if
they don’t really know anything, then who do we look up to?”
Sovanratana
said preceptors – monks who are qualified to teach other monks – needed
to be more robust in checking the background of would-be monks in order
to prevent “troublemakers” from joining the sangha. “Once the name is
put forward, some preceptors just sign and perform their rituals. This
has led to some problems,” he said. “The preceptors must perform
background checks of candidates. Drug addicts are not easily changed.
It’s not like you can possess such a man and become a morally behaved
person immediately.”
With
increasing numbers of Cambodians eschewing the monastic life in order to
enjoy the fruits of capitalist expansion, and more still questioning
the authority of the sangha, it would be easy to conclude that
Buddhism’s influence is on the wane in Cambodia. But according to the
Ministry of Cults and Religion, 95% of the population still identifies
as Buddhist.
Philip Coggan, author of Spirit Worlds: Cambodia, the Buddha and the Naga,
believes the decline of the sangha has not greatly impacted Buddhism in
Cambodia because monks are simply seeking personal salvation and are
“almost irrelevant to most major-life passages”. Coggan believes
modernisation has had a far greater impact.
“A
booming economy brings consumerism (‘shiny objects’) and so the ethical
side of Buddhism (‘reject shiny objects’) takes a back seat to the
‘magical’ side, in which the spirit world is called on to channel
‘luck’, conceived in Buddhism as something real and malleable,” he told Southeast Asia Globe in an email. “Buddhism’s doing fine. People still turn out in huge crowds for Pchum Ben and [Khmer] New Year.”
But
Chuon believes that those who only go to the pagoda on holy days are
not following “real Buddhism”. “Many just go to the temple with their
parents during Pchum Ben or Khmer New Year. They are not practising,” he
said. “Going to the temple in order to dispel bad spirits when you have
a bad dream or have bad luck – this is not Buddhism.”
Savath
and Ly are prime examples of such Buddhists. Neither visit the pagoda
outside holy days – unless down on their luck – and neither follow the
five precepts of Buddhism, which are regarded by many monks, such as
Chuon, as the religion’s only non-negotiable ‘rules’. However, neither
Savath nor Ly believe these facts make them any less Buddhist, with
Savath claiming “it’s not necessary to follow all the five precepts, as
long as you don’t harm others” and Ly defending his beliefs by stating
that he still “respects the Buddha”.
Scott
Mitchell, who conducts research on Buddhist modernity at California’s
Institute of Buddhist Studies, said the debate over what constitutes a
‘practising’ Buddhist would likely never be resolved.
“In
general, most Buddhist cultures define a Buddhist (practising or not)
as one who has taken refuge in the three jewels of Buddhism – the
Buddha, the dhamma and the sangha – and/or holds the precepts to some
extent,” he wrote in an email. “Having said that, I believe it’s up to a
religious community to determine what it takes, so to speak, to be a
practising member of that community.”
Whether
Buddhism’s influence in Cambodia is weaker than it used to be largely
depends on how one chooses to define Buddhism. History has shown such
definitions to be fluid and, according to Mitchell, this is one of the
religion’s greatest strengths. “Buddhist institutions and communities
try to make the dhamma meaningful in whatever context they are located.
The goal is not, necessarily, to change the societies in which Buddhism
is located, but to direct individuals toward the dhamma,” he said.
The
fact that Buddhism survived the Khmer Rouge regime demonstrates that it
is nothing if not resilient, and Sovanratana believes it will continue
to exert a strong influence on Cambodian society. “The Buddhist
tradition in Cambodia is still very strong despite some bad happenings,”
he said. “Some may turn their backs on it temporarily, but they will
come back. Buddhism and Khmer culture are almost inseparable.”
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