Hua Hin Map
A new website offering Google's map technology and accurately marked accommodation, shops, services, bars, restaurants, golf courses and property. Don't get lost and take a look at the Hua Hin Map
Hua Hin Info
More information on the Hua Hin area can be found on these websites:
Tourism Hua Hin: tourist and travel info and guides
Hua Hin Expat: the town's first and original expat website.
Hua Hin Business Directory: free listings for Hua Hin companies.
Hua Hin Classifieds: free online classifieds for Hua Hin.
September 2008: HHAD welcomes new partners Stefano's offering fine Italian cuisine and the Sunset Boulevard with a nice place to chill out for a drink. We have also been notified of a new Thai forum and information site for the area: ยินดีต้อนรับสู่ หัวหินฟอร์ยู เว็บไซต์ของเราเป็นเว็บไซต์แรกที่ให้ข้อมูลเป็นภาษาไทย และ เว็บบอร์ดสำหรับเมืองหัวหิน » www.huahin4u.com

What Makes a Monk Mad?

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    HHAD Hua Hin Forum Index -> News
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
prcscct
Legend
Legend


Joined: 23 Mar 2004
Posts: 2947
Location: Looking for a moonlit buffet.

PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 8:23 pm    Post subject: What Makes a Monk Mad? Reply with quote

From the New York Times. This editorial says to me that we are just seeing the beginning of all this. Pete
__________________________
By SETH MYDANS
Published: September 30, 2007
BANGKOK

Myanmar, a devout society, paid attention when monks led protests.
As they marched through the streets of Myanmar’s cities last week leading the biggest anti government protests in two decades, some barefoot monks held their begging bowls before them. But instead of asking for their daily donations of food, they held the bowls upside down, the black lacquer surfaces reflecting the light.

It was a shocking image in the devoutly Buddhist nation. The monks were refusing to receive alms from the military rulers and their families — effectively excommunicating them from the religion that is at the core of Burmese culture.

That gesture is a key to understanding the power of the rebellion that shook Myanmar last week.

The country — the former Burma — has roughly as many monks as soldiers. The military rules by force, but the monks retain ultimate moral authority. The lowliest soldier depends on them for spiritual approval, and even the highest generals have felt a need to honor the clerical establishment. They claim to rule in its name.

Begging is a ritual that expresses a profound bond between the ordinary Buddhist and the monk. “The people are feeding the monks and the monks are helping the people make merit,” said Josef Silverstein, an expert on Myanmar at Rutgers University. “When you refuse to accept, you have broken the bond that has tied them for centuries together.”

Instead, the monks drew on a different and more fundamental bond with Myanmar’s population, leading huge demonstrations after the government tried to repress protests that began a month ago over a rise in fuel prices.

By last week, the country’s two largest and most established institutions were confronting each other, the monkhood and the military, both about 400,000 strong, both made up of young men, mostly from the poorer classes, who could well be brothers. Rejected by both its spiritual and popular bases, the junta that has ruled for 19 years had little to fall back on but force.

It unleashed its troops to shoot, beat, arrest and humiliate the men in brick-red robes, definitively alienating itself from the clergy whose support gives it legitimacy. Soldiers surrounded monasteries, preventing monks from leading further demonstrations — or from making their morning rounds to collect the alms that feed them.

In Myanmar and other Buddhist nations, many join the monkhood as a lifelong vocation, but many other young men become monks for shorter periods, ranging from a few months to a few years. These young monks remain closer to the lives and concerns of the people whose alms they receive.

Burmese monks have taken part in protests in the past, against British colonial rule and against a half-century of rule by military dictatorship. The most notable recent occasion was in 1990.

Their militant resistance to the British produced the most prominent political martyr of Burmese Buddhism, U Wisara, who died in prison in 1929 after a 166-day hunger strike.

His statue stands near the tall, golden Shwedagon Pagoda, the country’s holiest shrine, which was a rallying point for the recent demonstrations and the scene of the first violence against the monks last week.

That attack came as a shock to people who said the military would not turn violently against the monks, and it had the predictable effect of arousing the fury of a devout population.

But monks have not always been in the political front lines. It was students, for example, who led the mass demonstrations of 1988 that brought the current junta to power in a military massacre.

The monks’ power comes instead from their role in bestowing legitimacy on the rulers.

“Legitimacy in Burma is not about regime performance, it’s not about human rights like the West,” said Ingrid Jordt, a professor of anthropology at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee and an expert on Burmese Buddhism. “It is something that comes from the potency and karma bestowed by the monks. That’s why the sangha is so important to the government,” she said, referring to the Buddhist hierarchy and the spiritual status that its monks can convey. “They are actually the source of power.”

The junta has gone to great lengths to identify itself with Buddhism. Like their predecessors through the centuries, the generals have been busy building temples, supporting monasteries and carrying out religiously symbolic acts. In 1999, they regilded the spire of the Shwedagon Pagoda, which now glitters with 53 tons of gold and 4,341 diamonds on the crowning orb.

The gilding of the spire was a high-risk ploy for an unpopular regime, an act permitted only to kings and legitimate rulers. When the two-ton, seven-tier finial was added and the spire was complete, the nation held its breath, waiting for the earth to send a signal of disapproval through lightning or thunder or floods, Ms. Jordt said. But nature remained indifferent.

“Aung pyi!” the generals shouted. “We won!”

But their grip on power has never been secure. They have ruled through a security service that keeps order through intimidation. They have arrested thousands of political prisoners and have held the pro-democracy leader, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, under house arrest for 12 of the last 18 years.

In that context, the huge street demonstrations were an act of courage and catharsis.

They started tentatively on Aug. 19 after a fuel price increase raised the costs of transportation and basic goods. Veterans of the student demonstrations of 1988 staged small protests, but most were quickly arrested or driven into hiding. The unrest was fading when security officers beat monks and fired shots into the air during a confrontation in the city of Pakokku on Sept. 5.

That became a spark that grew into a broad-based challenge to the government, culminating last week in the breach between those who hold moral authority and those who have the guns.

“This was not an accidental uprising,” said Zin Linn, a former editor and political prisoner who is now information minister for the National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma, an exile opposition group based in Washington. The transition in leadership in the protests — from militant former students to activist monks — was well planned, he said, through secret meetings among young men sharing similar grievances and aspirations for their country. For the most part, it was not the elders who backed the protests. Over the years, the junta has worked to co-opt the Buddhist hierarchy, placing chosen men in key positions just as they have done in every other institution, angering and alienating the younger monks.

After the military clampdown on the monasteries last week, the streets of Yangon were mostly empty of monks. But their gesture of rejection of the junta, and the junta’s violent response, had changed the dynamics of Burmese society in ways that had only begun to play out.

The junta’s action “shows how desperate they are,” Ms. Jordt said. “It shows that they are willing to do anything at this point in terms of violence. Once you’ve thrown your lot in against the monks, I think it will be impossible for the regime to go back to normal daily legitimacy.”
_________________
"What America needs is a huge hypodermic needle of morality." Alice Cooper 21 Sept. 2007
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
STEVE G
Legend
Legend


Joined: 03 Apr 2006
Posts: 2470
Location: HUA HIN/EUROPE

PostPosted: Mon Oct 01, 2007 10:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think it sums up the regime in Myanmar when you see in this sad photo following the shooting of the Japanese journalist, that the soldier who has been sent to do the junta’s dirty work hasn’t even been supplied with a pair of boots.http://mizzima.com/Foto-2007/Sep/27foto/japanbig.html
Back to top
View user's profile Send private message
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    HHAD Hua Hin Forum Index -> News All times are GMT + 7 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum


HHAD Bangsaphan Expat Hua Hin HHBD Hua Hin Blog Khao Takiab Hua Hin Sport Siam Hotels Hua Hin Golf Hua Hin Guest Houses
Hua Hin Report Classifieds Tourism Hua Hin Hua Hin Websites Web Design Hua Hin Accommodation Hua Hin Observer Hua Hin Taxi Hua Hin Media Hua Hin Property




Terms and Conditions | Common Topics | Search the Forums | Advertise | Contact HHAD

Marketed and developed by Digital Metrix & Hua Hin Media © 2002 - 2008 with technology by phpBB © 2008 phpBB Group
In memory of our friend David Geoffrey Boycott 1965 - 2007 RIP Dr Dave Soul Monsta.
© This website, all of its written content, and many of the images therein are copyright HHAD and Medianet Asia Co., Ltd.
In accordance with the 1998 The Digital Millennium Copyright Act any parties found duplicating content from this website will be subject to legal action.