进步
媒介行动主义
装货…
| 记数器 | 失去的密码? | 时事通讯
密码将被邮寄对您。 注册 | 失去的密码?
电子邮件将被送到您。 注册 | 记数器
翻译:
Translate to EnglishÜbersetzen Sie zum Deutsch/GermanПереведите к русскому/RussianΜεταφράστε στα ελληνικά/GreekVertaal aan het Nederlands/Dutchترجمة الى العربية/Arabic中文翻译/Chinese Traditional中文翻译/Chinese Simplified한국어에게 번역하십시오/Korean日本語に翻訳しなさい /JapaneseTraduza ao Português/PortugueseTraduca ad Italiano/ItalianTraduisez au Français/FrenchTraduzca al Español/Spanish

工具: 新闻 | 岗位评论 | 打印机版本 | 电子邮件对朋友

星期一, 2008年3月31日

西藏修士抗议反射增长的行动主义

分享这篇文章:

这些像与社会按书签的站点连接,读者能分享和发现新的网页。
  • Digg
  • Slashdot
  • Technorati
  • StumbleUpon
  • del.icio.us
  • feedmelinks
  • Furl
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • YahooMyWeb
  • De.lirio.us
  • blogmarks
  • Spurl
  • 斑点
  • Fark

和尚,可能尼姑到反叛反对不公道,压迫。

曼谷,泰国-用力投掷岩石在汉语在西藏或者平安地集合反对缅甸的军事的和尚,能触击刺激的笔记。

这些场面奔跑与避开政治和接受相反甚而仇敌佛教的哲学-信念遵守了对的事,有一些喧嚣的例外,通过它的2,500年历史。

当他们不同地奋斗反对外国控制权、压迫政权、社会不公道和环境破坏,但政治行动主义和暴力的偶尔的爆发变得越来越共同在亚洲的佛教社会。

更多修士和尼姑搬出他们的修道院和入贫民窟和稻田-和有时入街道充满催泪弹和炮火。

“In modern times, preaching is not enough. Monks must act to improve society, to remove evil,” says Samdhong Rinpoche, prime minister of the Tibetan government-in-exile and a high-ranking lama.

“There is the responsibility of every individual, monks and lay people, to act for the betterment of society,” he told The Associated Press in Dharmsala, India, discussing protests in Tibet this month that were initiated by monks.

In widespread protests over the past three weeks, crimson-robed monks — some charging helmeted troops and throwing rocks — have joined with ordinary citizens who unfurled Tibetan flags and demanded independence from China. Beijing’s official death toll from the rioting in Lhasa is 22, but the exiled government of the Dalai Lama says 140 Tibetans were killed there and in Tibetan communities in western China.

Bloodshed also stained last fall’s pro-democracy uprising in Myanmar, dubbed the “Saffron Revolution” after the color of the robes of monks who led nonviolent protests against the country’s oppressive military regime.

In Thailand, followers of a Buddhist sect took part in street demonstrations that led to the ouster of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra two years ago.

In Sri Lanka, the ultra-nationalist Jathika Hela Urumaya party, led by monks, has pushed for using brute force against the country’s Tamil rebels. In 1959 a monk assassinated a prime minister over a law giving some protection to the Tamil language.

Activism is another side of Buddhist history
Despite the faith’s image of passivity, an aggressive strain has long existed, especially in the Mahayana school of Buddhism, practiced in Japan, Korea, China and Tibet.

The sohei, monks in Japan, fought pitched battles with one another and with secular clans for over 600 years until around 1600. China’s Shaolin Temple, a martial arts center to this day, was allowed to retain warrior monks from the 7th century by emperors who sometimes used them to put down rebellions and banditry.

The monk Saya San became a national hero in the 1930s in Myanmar — then Burma — by leading a revolt. The British colonials hanged him after fielding 12,000 troops to suppress his peasant army.

The self-immolation of monk Thich Quang Duc on a Saigon street became an iconic image of protest against the Vietnam War.

Before China’s takeover of Tibet in 1959, warrior monks sometimes wielded more power — and weaponry — than the army. Lhasa’s Sera monastery, a hotbed of the recent protests, was particularly noted for its elite fighters, the “Dob-Dobs,” who in 1947 took part in a rebellion that took 300 lives.

“Use peaceful means where they are appropriate, but where they are not appropriate, do not hesitate to resort to more forceful means,” said the previous, now deceased Dalai Lama when Tibet fought the Chinese in the 1930s.

‘Mundane Awakening’
Christopher Queen, an expert on Buddhism at Harvard University, says the new trend among some of the world’s 350 million faithful is expanding from individual spiritual liberation to attacking problems such as poverty and environmental blight that affect whole communities or nations.

Sri Lanka’s Sarvodaya Shramadana, or “Mundane Awakening,” provides safe drinking water and basic housing in more than 11,000 poor villages. And in India, Buddhist groups are fighting for the rights of “the untouchables,” the lowest caste.

Global and loosely affiliated, originating at the grass roots rather than atop religious hierarchies and more muscular than meditative, this movement is widely known as Engaged Buddhism.

“Engaged Buddhists are looking at the social, economic, and political causes of human misery in the world and organizing to address them. The role of social service and activism is clearly growing in all parts of the Buddhist world,” Queen said in an interview.

While not immune to spilling blood, Queen says “the Buddhist tradition is rightly known for the systematic practice of nonviolence.” That leads scholars to doubt it will turn to terrorism or sustained violence other than occasional spontaneous outbursts. They note that Buddhism doesn’t advocate killing heretics or otherwise spreading the faith by force.

Indeed, the Dalai Lama has decried the recent violence while supporting peoples’ rights to peaceful protest. And Samdhong, the prime minister-in-exile, adds: “If (monks) want to fight, they have to disrobe and join the fighters.”

The Associated Press

 Section has more related reports

Help keep RINF going..

Comment on 'Tibetan monk protests reflect growing activism' :

RSS TrackBack URL

Related News:

  • Dalai Lama accuses China of cultural genocide
  • Brown promises to meet Dalai Lama
  • China premier attacks Dalai Lama
  • On Frontlines in Tibet, Protestors ‘Shot Like Dogs’
  • Monk dies from Chinese food blockade

  • This entry was posted on Monday, March 31st, 2008 at 3:17 am and is filed under Activism, Political . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

    Fair use notice

    This website contains some copyrighted material that has not been specifically authorised by the copy right owner. RINF is making such material available in our efforts to advance public understanding of poverty alleviation, political economy, popular democracy and social justice issues both in Scotland and overseas. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material provided under US Copyright Law.

    © RINF.COM Underground Gateway. All rights reserved.
    Send Alternative News And Breaking News To: Editor @ rinf.com
    There Are 589 Users Online Right Now

    Breaking News