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Difference between revisions of "Buddhism’s Disappearance from India"

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<poem>
 
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  Vinay Lal
 
  Vinay Lal
  
One of the supreme ironies of the [[history of Buddhism]] in [[India]] is the question of how [[Buddhism]] came to disappear from the land of its [[birth]].  Many [[scholars]] of [[Buddhism]], [[Hinduism]], [[Indian]] history, and of [[religion]] more generally have been devoted to unraveling this puzzle.  There is no [[absolute]] consensus on this {{Wiki|matter}}, and a few [[scholars]] have even contended that [[Buddhism]] never disappeared as such from [[India]].  On this [[view]], [[Buddhism]] simply changed [[form]], or was absorbed into [[Hindu]] practices.  Such an argument is, in fact, a variation of the [[view]], which perhaps has more {{Wiki|adherents}} than any other, that [[Buddhism]] disappeared, not on account of persecution by [[Hindus]], but because of the ascendancy of reformed [[Hinduism]].  However, the [[view]] that [[Buddhists]] were persecuted by [[Brahmins]], who were keen to assert their [[caste]] supremacy, still has some {{Wiki|adherents}}, and in recent years has been championed not only by some Dalit writers and their sympathizers but by at least a handful of [[scholars]] of pre-modern [[Indian]] history. [1]  
+
One of the supreme ironies of the [[history of Buddhism]] in [[India]] is the question of how [[Buddhism]] came to disappear from the land of its [[birth]].  Many [[scholars]] of [[Buddhism]], [[Hinduism]], [[Indian]] history, and of [[religion]] more generally have been devoted to unraveling this puzzle.  There is no [[absolute]] consensus on this {{Wiki|matter}}, and a few [[scholars]] have even contended that [[Buddhism]] never disappeared as such from [[India]].  On this [[view]], [[Buddhism]] simply changed [[form]], or was absorbed into [[Hindu]] practices.  Such an argument is, in fact, a variation of the [[view]], which perhaps has more {{Wiki|adherents}} than any other, that [[Buddhism]] disappeared, not on account of persecution by [[Hindus]], but because of the ascendancy of reformed [[Hinduism]].  However, the [[view]] that [[Buddhists]] were persecuted by [[Brahmins]], who were keen to assert their [[caste]] supremacy, still has some {{Wiki|adherents}}, and in recent years has been championed not only by some [[Dalit]] writers and their sympathizers but by at least a handful of [[scholars]] of pre-modern [[Indian]] history. [1]  
  
What is not disputed is the [[gradual]] {{Wiki|decline}} of [[Buddhism in India]], as the testimony of the {{Wiki|Chinese}} traveler, [[Hsuan Tsang]], amply demonstrates.  Though [[Buddhism]] had been the dominant [[religion]] in much of the Gangetic plains in the early part of the {{Wiki|Christian}} {{Wiki|era}}, [[Hsuan Tsang]], traveling in [[India]] in the early years of the 7th century, witnessed something quite different.  In {{Wiki|Prayag}}, or Allahabad as it is known to many, [[Hsuan Tsang]] encountered mainly {{Wiki|heretics}}, or non-Buddhists, but that is not surprising given the importance of {{Wiki|Prayag}} as a [[pilgrimage]] site for [[Brahmins]].  But, even in [[Sravasti]], the {{Wiki|capital city}} of the Lichhavis, a [[north]] [[Indian]] {{Wiki|clan}} that came to power around 200 AD, established their capital in Pasupathinath, and in a long and glorious period of reign extending through the early part of the ninth century endowed a large number of both [[Hindu]] and [[Buddhist]] monuments and [[monasteries]], [[Hsuan Tsang]] witnessed a much greater number of “[[Hindus]]” (ie, non-Buddhists, such as [[Jains]] and {{Wiki|Saivites}}) than [[Buddhists]].  Kusinagar, the small village some 52 kilometres from Gorakhpur where the [[Buddha]] had gone into [[mahaparinirvana]], was in a rather dilapidated state and [[Hsuan Tsang]] found few [[Buddhists]].  In [[Varanasi]], to be sure, [[Hsuan Tsang]] found some 3000 [[Bhikkus]] or [[Buddhist]] [[monks]], but they were outshadowed by more than 10,000 non-Buddhists.    There is scarcely any question that [[Hsuan Tsang]] arrived in [[India]] at a [[time]] when [[Buddhism]] was entering into a state of precipitous {{Wiki|decline}}, and by the 13th century [[Buddhism]], as a formal [[religion]], had altogether disappeared from [[India]]. [2] But even as [[Buddhism]] went into {{Wiki|decline}}, it is remarkable that the great seat of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|learning}}, [[Nalanda]], continued to flourish, retaining its importance until the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invasions of the second millennium.  Moreover, it is from [[Nalanda]] that [[Padmasambhava]] carried [[Buddhism]] to [[Tibet]] in the eighth century.  Consequently, even the story of [[Buddhism in India]] cannot be unequivocally written in a single register of {{Wiki|decline}}.
+
What is not disputed is the [[gradual]] {{Wiki|decline}} of [[Buddhism in India]], as the testimony of the {{Wiki|Chinese}} traveler, [[Hsuan Tsang]], amply demonstrates.  Though [[Buddhism]] had been the dominant [[religion]] in much of the Gangetic plains in the early part of the {{Wiki|Christian}} {{Wiki|era}}, [[Hsuan Tsang]], traveling in [[India]] in the early years of the 7th century, witnessed something quite different.  In {{Wiki|Prayag}}, or [[Allahabad]] as it is known to many, [[Hsuan Tsang]] encountered mainly {{Wiki|heretics}}, or non-Buddhists, but that is not surprising given the importance of {{Wiki|Prayag}} as a [[pilgrimage]] site for [[Brahmins]].  But, even in [[Sravasti]], the {{Wiki|capital city}} of the Lichhavis, a [[north]] [[Indian]] {{Wiki|clan}} that came to power around 200 AD, established their capital in Pasupathinath, and in a long and glorious period of reign extending through the early part of the ninth century endowed a large number of both [[Hindu]] and [[Buddhist]] monuments and [[monasteries]], [[Hsuan Tsang]] witnessed a much greater number of “[[Hindus]]” (ie, non-Buddhists, such as [[Jains]] and {{Wiki|Saivites}}) than [[Buddhists]].  [[Kusinagar]], the small village some 52 kilometres from Gorakhpur where the [[Buddha]] had gone into [[mahaparinirvana]], was in a rather dilapidated [[state]] and [[Hsuan Tsang]] found few [[Buddhists]].  In [[Varanasi]], to be sure, [[Hsuan Tsang]] found some 3000 [[Bhikkus]] or [[Buddhist]] [[monks]], but they were outshadowed by more than 10,000 non-Buddhists.    There is scarcely any question that [[Hsuan Tsang]] arrived in [[India]] at a [[time]] when [[Buddhism]] was entering into a [[state]] of precipitous {{Wiki|decline}}, and by the 13th century [[Buddhism]], as a formal [[religion]], had altogether disappeared from [[India]]. [2] But even as [[Buddhism]] went into {{Wiki|decline}}, it is remarkable that the great seat of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|learning}}, [[Nalanda]], continued to flourish, retaining its importance until the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invasions of the second millennium.  Moreover, it is from [[Nalanda]] that [[Padmasambhava]] carried [[Buddhism]] to [[Tibet]] in the eighth century.  Consequently, even the story of [[Buddhism in India]] cannot be unequivocally written in a single register of {{Wiki|decline}}.
  
 
To consider the question somewhat more systematically, we might wish to consider in serial order the various [[reasons]] advanced for [[Buddhism’s]] {{Wiki|decline}} and [[disappearance]] from [[India]].  The various arguments can be grouped under the following headings:  {{Wiki|sectarian}} and internal histories, focusing on {{Wiki|schisms}} within the [[Buddhist]] [[faith]], the widening differences between the {{Wiki|clergy}}, [[Bhikkus]], and laity, and the growing corruption within the [[sangha]]; histories focused on [[Buddhism’s]] relations with [[Brahmanism]], dwelling on the alleged persecution of [[Buddhists]] by [[Brahmins]], the defeat of the [[Buddhists]] by the great {{Wiki|theologian}} [[Shankara]] in public [[debates]], as well as on the supposedly [[characteristic]] tendency of [[Hinduism]], or rather [[Brahmanism]], to absorb its opponents; and, finally, {{Wiki|secular}} and {{Wiki|political}} histories, which {{Wiki|emphasize}} the withdrawal of {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}} from [[Buddhism]] and, later, the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invasions which had the effect of driving into [[extinction]] an already debilitated [[faith]].
 
To consider the question somewhat more systematically, we might wish to consider in serial order the various [[reasons]] advanced for [[Buddhism’s]] {{Wiki|decline}} and [[disappearance]] from [[India]].  The various arguments can be grouped under the following headings:  {{Wiki|sectarian}} and internal histories, focusing on {{Wiki|schisms}} within the [[Buddhist]] [[faith]], the widening differences between the {{Wiki|clergy}}, [[Bhikkus]], and laity, and the growing corruption within the [[sangha]]; histories focused on [[Buddhism’s]] relations with [[Brahmanism]], dwelling on the alleged persecution of [[Buddhists]] by [[Brahmins]], the defeat of the [[Buddhists]] by the great {{Wiki|theologian}} [[Shankara]] in public [[debates]], as well as on the supposedly [[characteristic]] tendency of [[Hinduism]], or rather [[Brahmanism]], to absorb its opponents; and, finally, {{Wiki|secular}} and {{Wiki|political}} histories, which {{Wiki|emphasize}} the withdrawal of {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}} from [[Buddhism]] and, later, the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invasions which had the effect of driving into [[extinction]] an already debilitated [[faith]].
  
Turning our [[attention]] to what I have described as {{Wiki|sectarian}} histories, it is generally conceded that the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|clergy}} paid insufficient [[attention]] to its laity.  [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|mendicants}} kept their distance from non-mendicants, and as [[scholars]] of [[Buddhism]] have noted, no manual for the conduct of the laity was produced until the 11th century.  Non-mendicants may not have felt particularly invested in their [[religion]], and as the venues where the {{Wiki|mendicants}} and non-mendicants intersected gradually disappeared, the laity might have felt distanced from the [[faith]].  The contrast, in this [[respect]], with [[Jainism]] is marked.  Some [[scholars]] have also emphasized the {{Wiki|narrative}} of [[decay]] and corruption within a [[faith]] where the [[monks]] had come to embrace a rather easy-going and even indolent lifestyle, quite mindless of the [[Buddha’s]] insistence on aparigraha, or non-possession.  The [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] are sometimes described as repositories of great [[wealth]].
+
Turning our [[attention]] to what I have described as {{Wiki|sectarian}} histories, it is generally conceded that the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|clergy}} paid insufficient [[attention]] to its laity.  [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|mendicants}} kept their distance from non-mendicants, and as [[scholars]] of [[Buddhism]] have noted, no manual for the conduct of the laity was produced until the 11th century.  Non-mendicants may not have felt particularly invested in their [[religion]], and as the venues where the {{Wiki|mendicants}} and non-mendicants intersected gradually disappeared, the laity might have felt distanced from the [[faith]].  The contrast, in this [[respect]], with [[Jainism]] is marked.  Some [[scholars]] have also emphasized the {{Wiki|narrative}} of [[decay]] and corruption within a [[faith]] where the [[monks]] had come to embrace a rather easy-going and even indolent [[lifestyle]], quite mindless of the [[Buddha’s]] insistence on aparigraha, or [[non-possession]].  The [[Buddhist]] [[monasteries]] are sometimes described as repositories of great [[wealth]].
  
The {{Wiki|secular}} and {{Wiki|political}} histories adopt rather different arguments. It has been argued that {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}} shifted from [[Buddhist]] to [[Hindu]] [[religious]] {{Wiki|institutions}}.  Under the Kushanas, indeed even under the Guptas (325-497 AD), both [[Buddhists]] and {{Wiki|adherents}} of [[Brahmanism]] received {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}}, but as [[Brahmanism]] veered off, so to speak, into [[Vaishnavism]] and [[Saivism]], and regional {{Wiki|kingdoms}} developed into the major sites of power, [[Buddhism]] began to [[suffer]] a {{Wiki|decline}}.  The itinerant [[Buddhist monk]], if one may put it this way, gave way to [[forms]] of [[life]] less more conducive to settled {{Wiki|agriculture}}.  The [[Palas]] of {{Wiki|Bengal}}, though they had been hospitable to [[Vaishnavism]] and [[Saivism]], were nonetheless major supporters of [[Buddhism]].  However, when {{Wiki|Bengal}} came under the rule of the Senas (1097-1223), [[Saivism]] was promulgated and [[Buddhism]] was pushed out -- towards [[Tibet]].  
+
The {{Wiki|secular}} and {{Wiki|political}} histories adopt rather different arguments. It has been argued that {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}} shifted from [[Buddhist]] to [[Hindu]] [[religious]] {{Wiki|institutions}}.  Under the [[Kushanas]], indeed even under the [[Guptas]] (325-497 AD), both [[Buddhists]] and {{Wiki|adherents}} of [[Brahmanism]] received {{Wiki|royal}} {{Wiki|patronage}}, but as [[Brahmanism]] veered off, so to speak, into [[Vaishnavism]] and [[Saivism]], and regional {{Wiki|kingdoms}} developed into the major sites of power, [[Buddhism]] began to [[suffer]] a {{Wiki|decline}}.  The itinerant [[Buddhist monk]], if one may put it this way, gave way to [[forms]] of [[life]] less more conducive to settled {{Wiki|agriculture}}.  The [[Palas]] of {{Wiki|Bengal}}, though they had been hospitable to [[Vaishnavism]] and [[Saivism]], were nonetheless major supporters of [[Buddhism]].  However, when {{Wiki|Bengal}} came under the {{Wiki|rule}} of the Senas (1097-1223), [[Saivism]] was promulgated and [[Buddhism]] was pushed out -- towards [[Tibet]].  
  
Though [[Buddhism]] had already entered into something of a {{Wiki|decline}} by the [[time]] of Hsuan Tsang’s visit to [[India]] during the reign of [[Harsha]] of Kanauj in the early seventh century, it has also been argued that its further demise, particularly in the early part of the second millennium AD, was hastened by the arrival of {{Wiki|Islam}}.  On this [[view]], [[Buddhism]] found competition in {{Wiki|Islam}} for converts among low-caste [[Hindus]].  Even [[Ambedkar]], whose [[animosity]] towards [[Hinduism]] is palpable, was nonetheless firmly of the [[view]] that {{Wiki|Islam}} dealt [[Buddhism]] a [[death]] blow.  As he was to put it, “[[brahmanism]] beaten and battered by the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders could look to the rulers for support and [[sustenance]] and get it.  [[Buddhism]] beaten and battered by the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders had no such {{Wiki|hope}}.  It was uncared for orphan and it withered in the cold blast of the native rulers and was consumed in the [[fire]] lit up by the conquerors.”  [[Ambedkar]] was quite certain that this was “the greatest {{Wiki|disaster}} that befell the [[religion]] of [[Buddha]] in [[India]].”  We thus find Ambekdar embracing the “sword of {{Wiki|Islam}} {{Wiki|thesis}}”:  “The sword of {{Wiki|Islam}} fell heavily upon the priestly class.  It perished or it fled outside [[India]].  Nobody remained alive to keep the flame of [[Buddhism]] burning.”  [3]  There are, of course, many problems with this [[view]].  The “sword of {{Wiki|Islam}}” {{Wiki|thesis}} remains controversial, at best, and many reputable {{Wiki|historians}} are inclined to dismiss it outright.  {{Wiki|Islam}} was, moreover, a late entrant into [[India]], and [[Buddhism]] was showing unmistakable [[signs]] of its {{Wiki|decline}} long before {{Wiki|Islam}} became established in the Gangetic plains, central [[India]], and the northern end of present-day Andhra and [[Karnataka]].
+
Though [[Buddhism]] had already entered into something of a {{Wiki|decline}} by the [[time]] of Hsuan Tsang’s visit to [[India]] during the reign of [[Harsha]] of [[Kanauj]] in the early seventh century, it has also been argued that its further demise, particularly in the early part of the second millennium AD, was hastened by the arrival of {{Wiki|Islam}}.  On this [[view]], [[Buddhism]] found competition in {{Wiki|Islam}} for converts among low-caste [[Hindus]].  Even [[Ambedkar]], whose [[animosity]] towards [[Hinduism]] is palpable, was nonetheless firmly of the [[view]] that {{Wiki|Islam}} dealt [[Buddhism]] a [[death]] blow.  As he was to put it, “[[brahmanism]] beaten and battered by the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders could look to the rulers for support and [[sustenance]] and get it.  [[Buddhism]] beaten and battered by the {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders had no such {{Wiki|hope}}.  It was uncared for orphan and it withered in the cold blast of the native rulers and was consumed in the [[fire]] lit up by the conquerors.”  [[Ambedkar]] was quite certain that this was “the greatest {{Wiki|disaster}} that befell the [[religion]] of [[Buddha]] in [[India]].”  We thus find Ambekdar embracing the “sword of {{Wiki|Islam}} {{Wiki|thesis}}”:  “The sword of {{Wiki|Islam}} fell heavily upon the priestly class.  It perished or it fled outside [[India]].  Nobody remained alive to keep the flame of [[Buddhism]] burning.”  [3]  There are, of course, many problems with this [[view]].  The “sword of {{Wiki|Islam}}” {{Wiki|thesis}} remains controversial, at best, and many reputable {{Wiki|historians}} are inclined to dismiss it outright.  {{Wiki|Islam}} was, moreover, a late entrant into [[India]], and [[Buddhism]] was showing unmistakable [[signs]] of its {{Wiki|decline}} long before {{Wiki|Islam}} became established in the Gangetic plains, central [[India]], and the northern end of present-day [[Andhra]] and [[Karnataka]].
  
 
Many {{Wiki|narrative}} accounts of [[Buddhism’s]] {{Wiki|decline}} and eventual [[disappearance]] from the land of its [[faith]] have been focused on [[Buddhism’s]] relations with [[Hinduism]] or [[Brahmanism]].  Nearly 20 years ago the historian S. R. Goyal wrote that "according to
 
Many {{Wiki|narrative}} accounts of [[Buddhism’s]] {{Wiki|decline}} and eventual [[disappearance]] from the land of its [[faith]] have been focused on [[Buddhism’s]] relations with [[Hinduism]] or [[Brahmanism]].  Nearly 20 years ago the historian S. R. Goyal wrote that "according to
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many [[scholars]] {{Wiki|hostility}} of the [[Brahmanas]] was one of the major [[causes]] of the {{Wiki|decline}} of [[Buddhism in India]]."  The {{Wiki|Saivite}} [[king]], Shashanka, invariably appears in such histories as a ferocious oppressor of the [[Buddhists]], though the single original source for all subsequent [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] about Shashanka’s ruinous conduct towards [[Buddhists]] remains [[Hsuan Tsang]].  Shashanka is reported to have destroyed the [[Bodhi tree]] and ordered the destruction of [[Buddhist]] images.  [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|nationalists}} appear to think that many {{Wiki|Muslim}} monuments were once {{Wiki|Hindu temples}}, but partisans of [[Buddhism]] are inclined to the [[view]] that {{Wiki|Hindu temples}} were often built on the site of [[Buddhist]] [[shrines]].  
 
many [[scholars]] {{Wiki|hostility}} of the [[Brahmanas]] was one of the major [[causes]] of the {{Wiki|decline}} of [[Buddhism in India]]."  The {{Wiki|Saivite}} [[king]], Shashanka, invariably appears in such histories as a ferocious oppressor of the [[Buddhists]], though the single original source for all subsequent [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]] about Shashanka’s ruinous conduct towards [[Buddhists]] remains [[Hsuan Tsang]].  Shashanka is reported to have destroyed the [[Bodhi tree]] and ordered the destruction of [[Buddhist]] images.  [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|nationalists}} appear to think that many {{Wiki|Muslim}} monuments were once {{Wiki|Hindu temples}}, but partisans of [[Buddhism]] are inclined to the [[view]] that {{Wiki|Hindu temples}} were often built on the site of [[Buddhist]] [[shrines]].  
  
If some [[scholars]] focus on outright persecution, others speak of a long process during which [[Buddhist practices]] became absorbed into [[Hinduism]].  The [[doctrine]] of [[ahimsa]] may have originated with the [[Buddha]], and certainly found its greatest [[exposition]] in the [[Buddha’s teachings]], but by the second half of the 1st millennium AD it had become part of [[Hindu]] teachings.  The great [[Brahmin]] [[philosopher]], [[Shankaracharya]] (c. 788-820 AD), is said to have engaged the [[Buddhists]] in public [[debates]] and each [[time]] he emerged triumphant.  [[Monastic]] practices had once been unknown in {{Wiki|Brahminism}}, but over [[time]] this changed.  [[Shankaracharya]] himself established maths or [[monasteries]] at Badrinath in the [[north]], Dwarka in the [[west]], Sringeri in the [[south]], and Puri in the [[east]].  The [[Buddha]] had, as is commonly noticed, been [[transformed]] into an [[avatara]] (descent) of [[Vishnu]].  The tendency of [[Hinduism]] to absorb rival [[faiths]] has been commented upon by many, though one could speak equally of the [[elements]] from other [[faiths]] that have gone into the making of [[Hinduism]].  Was [[Buddha]] absorbed into the [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|pantheon}} so that [[Buddhism]] might become defanged, or is it the case that [[Buddhism]] stood for certain values that [[Hinduism]] was eager to embrace as its own?  
+
If some [[scholars]] focus on outright persecution, others speak of a long process during which [[Buddhist practices]] became absorbed into [[Hinduism]].  The [[doctrine]] of [[ahimsa]] may have originated with the [[Buddha]], and certainly found its greatest [[exposition]] in the [[Buddha’s teachings]], but by the second half of the 1st millennium AD it had become part of [[Hindu]] teachings.  The great [[Brahmin]] [[philosopher]], [[Shankaracharya]] (c. 788-820 AD), is said to have engaged the [[Buddhists]] in public [[debates]] and each [[time]] he emerged triumphant.  [[Monastic]] practices had once been unknown in {{Wiki|Brahminism}}, but over [[time]] this changed.  [[Shankaracharya]] himself established maths or [[monasteries]] at [[Badrinath]] in the [[north]], Dwarka in the [[west]], Sringeri in the [[south]], and [[Puri]] in the [[east]].  The [[Buddha]] had, as is commonly noticed, been [[transformed]] into an [[avatara]] (descent) of [[Vishnu]].  The tendency of [[Hinduism]] to absorb rival [[faiths]] has been commented upon by many, though one could speak equally of the [[elements]] from other [[faiths]] that have gone into the making of [[Hinduism]].  Was [[Buddha]] absorbed into the [[Hindu]] {{Wiki|pantheon}} so that [[Buddhism]] might become defanged, or is it the case that [[Buddhism]] stood for certain values that [[Hinduism]] was eager to embrace as its [[own]]?  
  
Though many Dalit and other anti-Brahminical writers would like to represent {{Wiki|Brahminism}} as a tyrannical [[faith]] that wrought massive destruction upon the [[Buddhists]] [see www.dalistan.org], the {{Wiki|matter}} is more complicated.  A recent study of the {{Wiki|Bengal}} {{Wiki|Puranas}} indubitably shows that the [[Buddhists]] were mocked, cast as mischievous and malicious in {{Wiki|Brahminical}} [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]], and subjected to immense [[Wikipedia:Rhetoric|rhetorical]] [[violence]].  But [[Wikipedia:Rhetoric|rhetorical]] [[violence]] is not necessarily to be read as [[physical]] [[violence]] perpetrated upon the [[Buddhists]], any more than accounts of thousands of {{Wiki|Hindu temples}} destroyed at the hands of {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders are to be read literally.  Similarly, the [[absorption]] of the [[Buddha]] into Vishnu’s {{Wiki|pantheon}} may have represented something of a compromise between the [[Brahmins]] and [[Buddhists]]:  since so much of what [[Buddhism]] stood for had been incorporated into certain [[strands]] of {{Wiki|Brahminism}}, the [[Buddha]] was at least to be given his just dues.  This [[anxiety]] of [[absorption]] continues down to the {{Wiki|present}} day, and one of the more curious {{Wiki|expressions}} of this [[anxiety]] must surely be a [[letter]] from the All [[India]] [[Bhikkhu]] [[Sangha]] to the-then Prime [[Minister]] of [[India]], P. V. [[Narasimha]] Rao.  In his [[letter]] of 23 February 1995, the President of the [[Sangha]] complained that the actor Arun Govil, who had played {{Wiki|Rama}} in the TV serial [[Ramayana]], had been chosen to play the [[Buddha]] in the TV serial by the same [[name]].  Could anyone really play the [[Buddha]]?  “As you know,” the [[letter]] reminds Rao, “the [[Buddha]] was never a [[mythological]] figure as {{Wiki|Rama}} & [[Hanuman]] but very much a historical figure.”  [5] If nothing else, we might at least read the [[disappearance]] of [[Buddhism]] from [[India]] as a [[parable]] about how [[myth]] always outlives history.
+
Though many [[Dalit]] and other anti-Brahminical writers would like to represent {{Wiki|Brahminism}} as a tyrannical [[faith]] that wrought massive destruction upon the [[Buddhists]] [see www.dalistan.org], the {{Wiki|matter}} is more complicated.  A recent study of the {{Wiki|Bengal}} {{Wiki|Puranas}} indubitably shows that the [[Buddhists]] were mocked, cast as mischievous and malicious in {{Wiki|Brahminical}} [[Wikipedia:narrative|narratives]], and subjected to immense [[Wikipedia:Rhetoric|rhetorical]] [[violence]].  But [[Wikipedia:Rhetoric|rhetorical]] [[violence]] is not necessarily to be read as [[physical]] [[violence]] perpetrated upon the [[Buddhists]], any more than accounts of thousands of {{Wiki|Hindu temples}} destroyed at the hands of {{Wiki|Muslim}} invaders are to be read literally.  Similarly, the [[absorption]] of the [[Buddha]] into [[Vishnu’s]] {{Wiki|pantheon}} may have represented something of a compromise between the [[Brahmins]] and [[Buddhists]]:  since so much of what [[Buddhism]] stood for had been incorporated into certain [[strands]] of {{Wiki|Brahminism}}, the [[Buddha]] was at least to be given his just dues.  This [[anxiety]] of [[absorption]] continues down to the {{Wiki|present}} day, and one of the more curious {{Wiki|expressions}} of this [[anxiety]] must surely be a [[letter]] from the All [[India]] [[Bhikkhu]] [[Sangha]] to the-then Prime [[Minister]] of [[India]], P. V. [[Narasimha]] Rao.  In his [[letter]] of 23 February 1995, the [[President]] of the [[Sangha]] complained that the actor Arun Govil, who had played {{Wiki|Rama}} in the TV serial [[Ramayana]], had been chosen to play the [[Buddha]] in the TV serial by the same [[name]].  Could anyone really play the [[Buddha]]?  “As you know,” the [[letter]] reminds Rao, “the [[Buddha]] was never a [[mythological]] figure as {{Wiki|Rama}} & [[Hanuman]] but very much a historical figure.”  [5] If nothing else, we might at least read the [[disappearance]] of [[Buddhism]] from [[India]] as a [[parable]] about how [[myth]] always outlives history.
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}

Latest revision as of 18:07, 16 February 2024

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 Vinay Lal

One of the supreme ironies of the history of Buddhism in India is the question of how Buddhism came to disappear from the land of its birth. Many scholars of Buddhism, Hinduism, Indian history, and of religion more generally have been devoted to unraveling this puzzle. There is no absolute consensus on this matter, and a few scholars have even contended that Buddhism never disappeared as such from India. On this view, Buddhism simply changed form, or was absorbed into Hindu practices. Such an argument is, in fact, a variation of the view, which perhaps has more adherents than any other, that Buddhism disappeared, not on account of persecution by Hindus, but because of the ascendancy of reformed Hinduism. However, the view that Buddhists were persecuted by Brahmins, who were keen to assert their caste supremacy, still has some adherents, and in recent years has been championed not only by some Dalit writers and their sympathizers but by at least a handful of scholars of pre-modern Indian history. [1]

What is not disputed is the gradual decline of Buddhism in India, as the testimony of the Chinese traveler, Hsuan Tsang, amply demonstrates. Though Buddhism had been the dominant religion in much of the Gangetic plains in the early part of the Christian era, Hsuan Tsang, traveling in India in the early years of the 7th century, witnessed something quite different. In Prayag, or Allahabad as it is known to many, Hsuan Tsang encountered mainly heretics, or non-Buddhists, but that is not surprising given the importance of Prayag as a pilgrimage site for Brahmins. But, even in Sravasti, the capital city of the Lichhavis, a north Indian clan that came to power around 200 AD, established their capital in Pasupathinath, and in a long and glorious period of reign extending through the early part of the ninth century endowed a large number of both Hindu and Buddhist monuments and monasteries, Hsuan Tsang witnessed a much greater number of “Hindus” (ie, non-Buddhists, such as Jains and Saivites) than Buddhists. Kusinagar, the small village some 52 kilometres from Gorakhpur where the Buddha had gone into mahaparinirvana, was in a rather dilapidated state and Hsuan Tsang found few Buddhists. In Varanasi, to be sure, Hsuan Tsang found some 3000 Bhikkus or Buddhist monks, but they were outshadowed by more than 10,000 non-Buddhists. There is scarcely any question that Hsuan Tsang arrived in India at a time when Buddhism was entering into a state of precipitous decline, and by the 13th century Buddhism, as a formal religion, had altogether disappeared from India. [2] But even as Buddhism went into decline, it is remarkable that the great seat of Buddhist learning, Nalanda, continued to flourish, retaining its importance until the Muslim invasions of the second millennium. Moreover, it is from Nalanda that Padmasambhava carried Buddhism to Tibet in the eighth century. Consequently, even the story of Buddhism in India cannot be unequivocally written in a single register of decline.

To consider the question somewhat more systematically, we might wish to consider in serial order the various reasons advanced for Buddhism’s decline and disappearance from India. The various arguments can be grouped under the following headings: sectarian and internal histories, focusing on schisms within the Buddhist faith, the widening differences between the clergy, Bhikkus, and laity, and the growing corruption within the sangha; histories focused on Buddhism’s relations with Brahmanism, dwelling on the alleged persecution of Buddhists by Brahmins, the defeat of the Buddhists by the great theologian Shankara in public debates, as well as on the supposedly characteristic tendency of Hinduism, or rather Brahmanism, to absorb its opponents; and, finally, secular and political histories, which emphasize the withdrawal of royal patronage from Buddhism and, later, the Muslim invasions which had the effect of driving into extinction an already debilitated faith.

Turning our attention to what I have described as sectarian histories, it is generally conceded that the Buddhist clergy paid insufficient attention to its laity. Buddhist mendicants kept their distance from non-mendicants, and as scholars of Buddhism have noted, no manual for the conduct of the laity was produced until the 11th century. Non-mendicants may not have felt particularly invested in their religion, and as the venues where the mendicants and non-mendicants intersected gradually disappeared, the laity might have felt distanced from the faith. The contrast, in this respect, with Jainism is marked. Some scholars have also emphasized the narrative of decay and corruption within a faith where the monks had come to embrace a rather easy-going and even indolent lifestyle, quite mindless of the Buddha’s insistence on aparigraha, or non-possession. The Buddhist monasteries are sometimes described as repositories of great wealth.

The secular and political histories adopt rather different arguments. It has been argued that royal patronage shifted from Buddhist to Hindu religious institutions. Under the Kushanas, indeed even under the Guptas (325-497 AD), both Buddhists and adherents of Brahmanism received royal patronage, but as Brahmanism veered off, so to speak, into Vaishnavism and Saivism, and regional kingdoms developed into the major sites of power, Buddhism began to suffer a decline. The itinerant Buddhist monk, if one may put it this way, gave way to forms of life less more conducive to settled agriculture. The Palas of Bengal, though they had been hospitable to Vaishnavism and Saivism, were nonetheless major supporters of Buddhism. However, when Bengal came under the rule of the Senas (1097-1223), Saivism was promulgated and Buddhism was pushed out -- towards Tibet.

Though Buddhism had already entered into something of a decline by the time of Hsuan Tsang’s visit to India during the reign of Harsha of Kanauj in the early seventh century, it has also been argued that its further demise, particularly in the early part of the second millennium AD, was hastened by the arrival of Islam. On this view, Buddhism found competition in Islam for converts among low-caste Hindus. Even Ambedkar, whose animosity towards Hinduism is palpable, was nonetheless firmly of the view that Islam dealt Buddhism a death blow. As he was to put it, “brahmanism beaten and battered by the Muslim invaders could look to the rulers for support and sustenance and get it. Buddhism beaten and battered by the Muslim invaders had no such hope. It was uncared for orphan and it withered in the cold blast of the native rulers and was consumed in the fire lit up by the conquerors.” Ambedkar was quite certain that this was “the greatest disaster that befell the religion of Buddha in India.” We thus find Ambekdar embracing the “sword of Islam thesis”: “The sword of Islam fell heavily upon the priestly class. It perished or it fled outside India. Nobody remained alive to keep the flame of Buddhism burning.” [3] There are, of course, many problems with this view. The “sword of Islamthesis remains controversial, at best, and many reputable historians are inclined to dismiss it outright. Islam was, moreover, a late entrant into India, and Buddhism was showing unmistakable signs of its decline long before Islam became established in the Gangetic plains, central India, and the northern end of present-day Andhra and Karnataka.

Many narrative accounts of Buddhism’s decline and eventual disappearance from the land of its faith have been focused on Buddhism’s relations with Hinduism or Brahmanism. Nearly 20 years ago the historian S. R. Goyal wrote that "according to

many scholars hostility of the Brahmanas was one of the major causes of the decline of Buddhism in India." The Saivite king, Shashanka, invariably appears in such histories as a ferocious oppressor of the Buddhists, though the single original source for all subsequent narratives about Shashanka’s ruinous conduct towards Buddhists remains Hsuan Tsang. Shashanka is reported to have destroyed the Bodhi tree and ordered the destruction of Buddhist images. Hindu nationalists appear to think that many Muslim monuments were once Hindu temples, but partisans of Buddhism are inclined to the view that Hindu temples were often built on the site of Buddhist shrines.

If some scholars focus on outright persecution, others speak of a long process during which Buddhist practices became absorbed into Hinduism. The doctrine of ahimsa may have originated with the Buddha, and certainly found its greatest exposition in the Buddha’s teachings, but by the second half of the 1st millennium AD it had become part of Hindu teachings. The great Brahmin philosopher, Shankaracharya (c. 788-820 AD), is said to have engaged the Buddhists in public debates and each time he emerged triumphant. Monastic practices had once been unknown in Brahminism, but over time this changed. Shankaracharya himself established maths or monasteries at Badrinath in the north, Dwarka in the west, Sringeri in the south, and Puri in the east. The Buddha had, as is commonly noticed, been transformed into an avatara (descent) of Vishnu. The tendency of Hinduism to absorb rival faiths has been commented upon by many, though one could speak equally of the elements from other faiths that have gone into the making of Hinduism. Was Buddha absorbed into the Hindu pantheon so that Buddhism might become defanged, or is it the case that Buddhism stood for certain values that Hinduism was eager to embrace as its own?

Though many Dalit and other anti-Brahminical writers would like to represent Brahminism as a tyrannical faith that wrought massive destruction upon the Buddhists [see www.dalistan.org], the matter is more complicated. A recent study of the Bengal Puranas indubitably shows that the Buddhists were mocked, cast as mischievous and malicious in Brahminical narratives, and subjected to immense rhetorical violence. But rhetorical violence is not necessarily to be read as physical violence perpetrated upon the Buddhists, any more than accounts of thousands of Hindu temples destroyed at the hands of Muslim invaders are to be read literally. Similarly, the absorption of the Buddha into Vishnu’s pantheon may have represented something of a compromise between the Brahmins and Buddhists: since so much of what Buddhism stood for had been incorporated into certain strands of Brahminism, the Buddha was at least to be given his just dues. This anxiety of absorption continues down to the present day, and one of the more curious expressions of this anxiety must surely be a letter from the All India Bhikkhu Sangha to the-then Prime Minister of India, P. V. Narasimha Rao. In his letter of 23 February 1995, the President of the Sangha complained that the actor Arun Govil, who had played Rama in the TV serial Ramayana, had been chosen to play the Buddha in the TV serial by the same name. Could anyone really play the Buddha? “As you know,” the letter reminds Rao, “the Buddha was never a mythological figure as Rama & Hanuman but very much a historical figure.” [5] If nothing else, we might at least read the disappearance of Buddhism from India as a parable about how myth always outlives history.

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