The Development and Dissemination of Pro-Environmental Dharma among Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhists
Abstract
:1. Taiwan’s Buddhist Leaders Begin Promoting Environmentalism
Taichung is my hometown. I have a wish—I keep hoping that the purifying flow out of Tzu Chi could purify our society, especially my hometown. I have repeatedly emphasized that Taiwan should be a Pure Land because Taiwan is an island with such beautiful scenery. If we have the heart to clean it up, it will become even more beautiful.
In one day, the average person produces more than one kilogram of garbage. How can we get rid of it? This will require the strength of many people. I hope everyone will get together to call for the elimination of garbage.
… If the populace and the government work together we can purify our society.
I hope that all of you can use your clapping hands to begin the work of sorting garbage [to pull recyclable items out of the waste stream].
2. Introduction
3. Overview of Research Methods and Data
3.1. The Organizations in This Study
3.2. Analytical Considerations and Overview of Findings
4. Updating the Interpretation and Application of Buddhist Dharma in Response to “Terrestrial Strain”
5. Updating Popular Aspects of Chinese Humanistic Buddhist Dharma to Include Environmentalism
5.1. Keeping the Bodhisattva Precepts on the Path of the Bodhisattvas
In summary, the bodhisattva precepts are formed out of the Three Refuges, the Four Great Vows, the Three Sets of Pure Precepts and the Ten Virtues. These can be easily maintained by anyone. Therefore, everyone should receive the pure bodhisattva precepts.
5.2. Establishing a Pure Land on Earth
6. Blurring the Line between the Sacred and the Mundane with Integrated Teachings, Practices, and Behavioral Norms
6.1. Pro-Environmental Teachings, Practices, and Norms in Tzu Chi
6.2. Pro-Environmental Teachings, Practices, and Norms in Dharma Drum Mountain
Because selfishness and self-interest are deeply rooted in the human heart, even though we know that destroying the environment and creating pollution are actions that will harm ourselves and others, as soon as [protecting the environment] comes into conflict with our profit or when we have an opportunity to satisfy our private lust, then we easily forget the common good. Instead, we do not consider the far-off consequences and only think about how we can obtain our desires. … Human civilization’s technology harms the environment too quickly … to the extent that it is a severe disaster threatening the space for human existence. Therefore, we promote spiritual environmentalism, calling on the entire human race to use its principles to construct a healthy and proper attitude towards human life, which values benefitting both oneself and others, so that you and others can live healthy, happy, peaceful lives.
7. Disseminating the Pro-Environmental Dharma in Discourse That Resonates with Specific Audiences
7.1. The Buddhist Discourse System
7.2. The Confucian Discourse System
7.3. The Utilitarian Discourse System
8. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Translated by the author. |
2 | My primary method of research was participant observation. Over the four years of my research, I engaged in participant observation at least once a month for several hours, and most months I engaged in 30 h or more of participant observation. I conducted a total of 40 formal interviews, 20 at each group. I conducted informal interviews at each time of participant observation, and I conducted 50 people in the street interviews in Taiwan. |
3 | Scollon et al. (2012) define discourse systems as the set of symbols, ideologies, narratives, and social norms held by each group in a modern society. Religious groups each have their own discourse system, as do business organizations, ethnic groups, and even different nations. Discourse systems are frequently based on the philosophical and religious ideologies taught in a nation’s schools. The language and concepts of the philosophies enter the language and worldview of the people in the nation’s culture, but the people who use the discourse are usually not philosophers. For example, in Europe and the United States, our discourse is frequently connected to ideas from the Enlightenment that we learn in school, but most people who hold this worldview are not philosophers. |
4 | Social strain is a concept first developed by Robert Merton (1938). Merton theorized that unequal social structures prevent certain groups of people from achieving their goals by legitimate means, thus driving them to crime. An example from Merton’s time was the situation of African Americans under the “Jim Crow” laws that kept them from enjoying full rights of citizenship in the United States. Neil Smelser updated this theory in 1962 with his analysis of the social movements for equal rights in the Civil Rights era. Hence, social strain is a situation in society beyond an individual’s control that prevents the individual from enjoying the good life and that can impel disadvantaged groups to organize themselves and attempt to change society. In Taiwan of the 1980s and 1990s, the social strain was caused by the government’s failure to effectively develop structural mechanisms to deal with the increased waste produced by the transition to a consumer, capitalist economy. |
5 | “Funerary Buddhism” was the term the reformers used to characterize Buddhism’s “degraded role” in the late imperial era when Buddhism was mainly practiced during funeral rituals. |
6 | The early morning sutra teachings are available to active volunteers worldwide via an online link for local group cultivation, and a written Chinese version of an onsite Hualien member’s notes are circulated for those who do not understand the Taiwanese dialect. These talks are edited by Tzu Chi’s Da Ai TV station, rebroadcast later in the day, and posted on the TV’s YouTube channel as Wisdom at Dawn. I was told that the videos with English subtitles on the YouTube channel are about one year behind the daily talks. The videos of the morning talks with volunteers are edited, rebroadcast on Da Ai TV, and then posted online with English subtitles under the title Life Wisdom on the same day that they are given. The web version of each talk is considerably shorter than the original, giving Da Ai TV plenty of previously unscreened archival material to use when Master Cheng Yen is unable to personally minister. |
7 | See note 1 above. |
8 | Once other Buddhist groups also began offering these rituals, DDM ceased its heavy promotion of these events (field notes 2018). |
9 | Tzu Chi also provides a free sutra chanting service of eight hours for relatives of its members, staff, and commissioners. This chanting is usually performed by lay volunteers, as the Tzu Chi nuns all live in Hualien at the Abode of Still Thoughts Monastery. |
10 | The burial ground belongs to the government; it was given to the government by Dharma Drum Mountain, as public burial sites must be on government-owned land. |
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Zimmerman-Liu, T. The Development and Dissemination of Pro-Environmental Dharma among Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhists. Religions 2023, 14, 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020273
Zimmerman-Liu T. The Development and Dissemination of Pro-Environmental Dharma among Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhists. Religions. 2023; 14(2):273. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020273
Chicago/Turabian StyleZimmerman-Liu, Teresa. 2023. "The Development and Dissemination of Pro-Environmental Dharma among Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhists" Religions 14, no. 2: 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020273
APA StyleZimmerman-Liu, T. (2023). The Development and Dissemination of Pro-Environmental Dharma among Taiwan’s Humanistic Buddhists. Religions, 14(2), 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14020273