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Encyclopedia of Buddhism Volume One A -L Robert E. Buswell

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L AITY<br />

to reciting Amitabha’s name, and strong conviction <strong>of</strong><br />

the certain rebirth in the Western Pure Land.<br />

Monks receive alms from lay Buddhists at Phra Dhammakaya<br />

Monastery near Bangkok, Thailand, 1991. © Don Farber 2003.<br />

All rights reserved. Reproduced by permission.<br />

During the Edo period (1600–1868), the entire population<br />

was legally required to affiliate with a Buddhist<br />

monastery. These inalterable, exclusive affiliations<br />

were established by family units and passed down<br />

through generations. In return for supporting the<br />

monasteries and their priests, the priests performed the<br />

family’s funerals and periodic ancestral rites. Although<br />

the legal obligation <strong>of</strong> monastery affiliation dissolved<br />

in the 1870s, the fact <strong>of</strong> family graves and records being<br />

kept by the monasteries means that these affiliations<br />

have largely been preserved.<br />

Laity established associations for pilgrimage and for<br />

the recitation <strong>of</strong> Amitabha’s name or the title <strong>of</strong> the<br />

LOTUS SU TRA (SADDHARMAPUN D ARIKA-SU TRA). Stories<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ideal layperson, based on historical individuals,<br />

were published by the True Pure Land sect during the<br />

Edo period in collections called o jo den (tales <strong>of</strong> rebirth<br />

[in the pure land]). These tales vividly illustrated valued<br />

traits: filial piety, honesty, compassion, devotion<br />

Laity and modernization<br />

The modernization <strong>of</strong> Buddhist societies has brought<br />

sweeping changes. The extension <strong>of</strong> the franchise and<br />

expanded political participation in secular life colored<br />

religious life, creating the expectation that laity should<br />

be able to influence the character <strong>of</strong> Buddhist institutions.<br />

The spread <strong>of</strong> literacy has enabled laity to read<br />

and interpret sacred scripture with increasing independence<br />

from the ordained. Higher education hones<br />

a critical spirit and encourages skepticism regarding<br />

clergy’s preeminence over the laity and their monopoly<br />

over funerals and other rituals. The prestige <strong>of</strong> science<br />

and rationality in modernizing societies further<br />

nurtures a critical view <strong>of</strong> traditional religious beliefs,<br />

practices, and institutions.<br />

The encounter with Christian missionaries and<br />

Western imperialism was an important catalyst to Buddhist<br />

revival movements, and laymen have frequently<br />

played significant roles. The lay branch <strong>of</strong> the Buddhist<br />

Theosophical Society, founded in Sri Lanka in 1880,<br />

created a press, the Buddhist English School (later<br />

Ananda College), and a newspaper, The Buddhist.<br />

Prominent laity like ANAGARIKA DHARMAPALA (born<br />

David Hewavitarne, 1864–1933) acquired their first experience<br />

<strong>of</strong> activism in the Buddhist Theosophical Society<br />

and in the Young Men’s Buddhist Association<br />

(later renamed the All-Ceylon Buddhist Congress),<br />

founded in Colombo in 1898 by C. S. Dissanayake.<br />

Dharmapala founded the first international Buddhist<br />

organization, Mahabodhi Society, in Colombo in<br />

1891, later starting a revival <strong>of</strong> <strong>Buddhism</strong> in India, beginning<br />

with a project to restore BODH GAYA. Dharmapala<br />

linked his support for <strong>Buddhism</strong> to the struggle<br />

for Indian independence, so that Buddhist advocacy<br />

was inseparable from the call for political independence.<br />

The Indian Buddhist revival did not become a<br />

mass movement, however, until the leadership <strong>of</strong><br />

Bhimrao Ramji AMBEDKAR (1891–1956), an attorney<br />

trained in the United States and Britain who worked<br />

for the legal emancipation <strong>of</strong> the Untouchables. Despairing<br />

<strong>of</strong> integrating the Untouchables into Hindu<br />

caste society, he converted to <strong>Buddhism</strong> in 1950. When<br />

he called on all Untouchables to convert, mass conversions<br />

followed in several Indian states.<br />

In late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century<br />

Japan, Buddhist reform movements arose, frequently<br />

448 E NCYCLOPEDIA OF B UDDHISM

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