Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part one Religion and religious studies: the irony of inheritance
- Part two Major theoretical problems
- Part three Methodological variations
- 12 Buddhism and violence
- 13 Practicing religions
- 14 The look of the sacred
- 15 Reforming culture: law and religion today
- 16 Sexing religion
- 17 Constituting ethical subjectivities
- 18 Neo-Pentecostalism and globalization
- 19 Religious criticism, secular critique, and the “critical study of religion”: lessons from the study of Islam
- Index
12 - Buddhism and violence
from Part three - Methodological variations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part one Religion and religious studies: the irony of inheritance
- Part two Major theoretical problems
- Part three Methodological variations
- 12 Buddhism and violence
- 13 Practicing religions
- 14 The look of the sacred
- 15 Reforming culture: law and religion today
- 16 Sexing religion
- 17 Constituting ethical subjectivities
- 18 Neo-Pentecostalism and globalization
- 19 Religious criticism, secular critique, and the “critical study of religion”: lessons from the study of Islam
- Index
Summary
With the rise of religious fundamentalisms, religion has had rather bad press. Yet this feeling of suspicion has apparently not yet reached Buddhism, which is usually presented as a nonviolent teaching founded on compassion. This is in large part owing to the influence of such figures as the Dalai Lama and the Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hahn, who are beloved by the media and who command large Western followings. It is also a result of the attempt among some scholars but more often among Western practitioners to differentiate Buddhism from other religions (and from religion in general) by claiming for it the title of “spirituality.” For that very reason, Western adherents of Buddhism see in it a teaching particularly needed for our time. Even when it is described as a religious phenomenon, Buddhism is considered to be the exception among the world religions. It is said to have had no crusades or holy wars, unlike Christianity or Islam. It is allegedly not attached to holy places, out of which it has expelled others, such as Judaism or militant Hinduism. Its name was not associated with an expansionist military ideology, such as Shinto.
The Sinhalese scholar Walpola Rahula is one of the Buddhist apologists who claim that there never was a “Buddhist war.” In a popular book entitled What the Buddha Taught, Rahula writes: “That spirit of tolerance and compassion has been one of the most highly regarded ideals of the Buddhist culture and civilization from the outset. This is why there is not one single example of persecution or one drop of blood shed either in the conversion of people to Buddhism or in the spread of Buddhism over its two thousand five hundred year history.”
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Religious Studies , pp. 255 - 272Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
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