THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE BUDDHIST MONKS
So far we have
discussed the contiributino of Brahmin to the early transmission of Indian
culture to southeast Asia. Buddhist monks, however, were at least as important
in this respect. Two characteristic features of Buddhism enabled it to make a
specific impact on southeast Asia, First Buddhist were imbued with a atrong
missionary zeal, and second, they ignored the caste system and did not
emphasize the idea of ritual purity. By his teaching as well as by the orginzation
of his monastic order (Sangha) Gautama Buddha had given rise to this missionary
zeal, which had then been fostered by Ashoka's dispatch of Buddhist
missionaries to Western Asia, Greece, Central Asia, Sri lanka and Burma.
Buddhism's freedom
from ritual restrictions and the spirit of the unity of all adherents enabled
Buddhist monsk to establish contacts with people abroad, as well as to welcome
them in India when they came to visit the sacred places of Buddhism, Chinese
sources record 162 visits to India of Chinese of Buddhist monsk for the period
from the 5th to the eigth century AD. Many more may have trvelled without
having left a trace in such official records. This was an amazing international
scholarly exchange programme for that day and age.
In the early centuries
AD the center of Buddhist scholarship was the University of Taxila (near the
present city of Islamabad),but in the fifth century AD when the University of
Nalanda was founded not far from Bodh Gaya, Bihar the center of Buddhist
scholarship shifted to eastern India. This university always had a large
contingent of students from southeast Asia. There they spent many years close
the holy places of Buddhism, copying and translating texts before returing
home. Nalanda was a cenre of Mahayana Buddhism, which became of increasing
importance of Southeast Asia. We mentioned above that King Balaputa of
Shrivijaya established a monastery for students of his realm at Nalanda around
860 AD which was then endowed with land grants by King Devepala of Bengal. But
the Sumatran empire of Shrivijaya had acquired a good reputation in tis own
right among Buddhist scholars and from the late seventh century AD attracted
resident Chinese and Indian monks. The Chinese monk I-tsing stopped over at
Shrivijaya capital (present day Palembang) for six months in 671 AD in order to
learn Sanskrit Grammer. He then proceeded to India, where he spent 14 years,
and on his retun journey he stayed another four years at Palembang so that he
could translate the many texts which he had collected. In this period he went
to China for a few months in 689 AD to recruit assistance for his great
translation project (completed only 695 AD). On his return to China he
explicitly recommended that other chiense Buddhists proceeding to India break
journey in Shrivijaya, where a thousand monks lived by the same rulers as those
prevailing in India. In subsequent years many Chinese Buddhists
conscientitously followed this advice.
Prominent Indian
Buddhists Scholars similarly made a point to visit Shrivijaya. Towards the end
of Seventh century AD Dharmapala of Nalanda is supposed to have visited
Suvarnadvipa (Java and Sumattra). In the beginning of the eighth century AD the
south Indian monk Vajrabodhi spent five months in Shrivijaya on his way to China.
He and his disciple Amoghvajra, whom he met in Java, are credited with having
indroduced Buddhist Tantrism to China. Atisha, who later became know as the
great reformer of Tibeta Buddhism, is said to have studied for twelve years in
Survarnadvipa in the early eleventh century AD. The high standard of Buddhist
learning which prevailed in Indonasia for many centuries was one of the
important precodition for that great work of art, the Borobudur, whose many
reliefs are a pictorial compendium the Buddhist lore, a tribute both to the
craftsman ship of Indonasia artists and to the knowledge of Indonasia Buddhist
Scholars.
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