An Ongoing Womanist Buddhist Project: Reading between the Times
Abstract
:1. Introduction and Inspiration
Do not think that the knowledge you presently possess is changeless, absolute truth. Avoid being narrow-minded and bound to present views. Learn and practice non-attachment from views in order to be open to receive others’ viewpoints. Truth is found in life and not merely in conceptual knowledge. Be ready to learn throughout your entire life and to observe reality in yourself and in the world at all times (Hanh 1987).-Thich Nhat Hanh, Vietnamese Buddhist monk1
2. Womanist Buddhist Voices
A social change perspective rooted in Black women’s and other women of color’s everyday experiences and everyday methods of problem solving in everyday spaces, extended to the problem of ending all forms of oppression for all people, restoring the balance between people and the environment/nature, and reconciling human life with the spiritual dimension.
3. Contextualizing the Lives of the Nuns
A millennium and a half ago there lived in China some remarkable women who cast aside the fetters of the world to become Buddhist nuns. Lives of the Nuns preserves the memory of their lives and deeds and gives us a look into a world that is foreign, exotic, and now vanished; yet, that world is far less alien that we might first think, for it is peopled with men and women who express the same emotions—the same desires, aspirations, or longings for spiritual enlightenment—as those found in all times and in all places. Furthermore, the character of these nuns who lived during dangerous and chaotic times can instruct us who also live in such times.
Because we have little evidence on nuns outside of the accounts in the Lives, use of the Lives as a source for historical events is particularly precarious. We are on firmer ground if we read the Lives as a reflection of mentalities of the sixth century, when the collection was compiled. This in turn raises the question of just whose mentality the collection reflects. The compiler of the collection was a monk, not a nun, and when compiling the biographies, he drew in part on accounts composted by literati.
Fifty-three of the sixty-five biographies mention the woman’s ability to read and write. Traditional Chinese society did not encourage literacy among women, and education for girls was ordinarily restricted to the domestic arts. Therefore, the very high rate of literacy among our select group of nuns is noteworthy. The biographies suggest that some women may have gone into the monastic life to be able to follow scholarly pursuits, a vocation that might otherwise have been denied them.
4. Between the Times: Similarities, Differences, and Intersections
4.1. Similarities and Intersections
Meditation forces me to be brutally honest with myself. If I’m impatient to note my twenty-eight points, in a hurry to be somewhere else, and neglect the time to note all my thoughts, I don’t get results. If I see that the goal is in the process itself, I will do it skillfully, I won’t forget the points, and concentration will deepen and deepen. There’s no reason to try to fool anyone or take shortcuts. The goal is in the practice. The good is in the practice. The god is in the practice (Adiele 2004, p. 137).-Faith Adiele, Black Buddhist nun
Later, the nun Hui-kuo and the other nuns met the foreign nun Tessara and her companions when they arrived in China. In the eleventh year of the yuan-chia reign period (434) [of the Sung Dynasty], the [Chinese nuns] once again received the full monastic obligation from the Indian missionary monk Sanghavarman on the ceremonial platform at Southern Grove Monastery, and this time both the Assembly of Monks and the Assembly of Nuns [comprising the women from Sri Lanka] were present. [Thus the lineage and tradition of the monastic obligation for women from the time of the Buddha’s stepmother had finally been properly transmitted to China.] [Gunavarman] had not said that the first transmission to China, from the Assembly of Monks only, was invalid. He had said, rather, that the second transmission [that included the Assembly of Nuns] was augmenting the good value of the obligation that had already been received.
When Black women enter the academy, they bring with them different kinds of lives—lives shaped by the ubiquitous and historically inescapable fact of triple oppression. All Black women, regardless of their social background, have had to formulate themselves in response to this fact. It becomes inevitable, then, that when Black women enter academe, they bring with them all of the knowledge and expertise that has accrued around this particular fact of their existence. Black women’s lives are not, however, defined by the fact of triple oppression; Black women also bring with them intergenerationally transmitted experiential and metatheoretical frameworks based on their ancient African origins and what it meant to be a woman in Black Africa. Together, these two facts: triple oppression and African origins—generate unique thematic concerns and interpretive frameworks that, when brought in by Black women, enrich the academy, further humanize it, and make it more accessible to a wider segment of humanity, including, but not limited to, Black women.
While traditional White men’s scholarship presumes to have a monopoly on content as well as method, Black women’s scholarship underscores the fallacy and pomposity of such a presumption. Ironically, universality emerges not from the imposition of sameness and the enforced proclamation that “we’re all just human underneath it all”, but from the careful and respectful acknowledgment that both individuals and groups have experiences that generate differences in both vision and concern and the recognition that these differences can contribute to the robustness and optimal functioning of the human race as a whole.
4.2. Differences and Intersections
How do I begin to explain that, though I lived the role more seriously than anything in my life, being a Buddhist nun actually had little to do with being a Buddhist or with being a nun? It was about hacking a difficult path through the jungle, clawing my way from one paradigm to another. The change was the journey itself, and anyone can get there, down any trail.
It is not at all easy to revolutionize the question and to ask, What is it that nonacademic, everyday women bring to womanist scholarship in the academy? I am troubled by this question. Perhaps I am troubled because, as a predominantly white university-trained scholar of literature and literary history, I am disciplined to think all too often from the center—my center, my area of specialization, my research orientation, of what have you—and then to spiral out. More than this, I am troubled by what I perceive to be this question’s concealed ahistorical, elitist assumption … that the center of an aspiring womanist academic originates in academe. The question and its reverse seem, first, to propose that a kind of Demilitarized Zone distinguishes universities from the communities that surround them; then, that this Zone, once transgressed by Someone Like Me, morphs to an Ivory Curtain crashing down between the esoteric womanist scholars that Someone Like Me aspires to and the nonscholars, relevant and accountable, that Someone Like Me once resembled.
5. Conclusions and Call to Action
Simultaneously with our commitment to disrupting and dismantling structures that degrade humanity, a commitment to the practice of engaging the humanity of people wed to perpetuating those structures must co-exist. Whether by arrogance, ignorance, or fear, we must bear witness to their suffering as our own. Challenge what is unjust. Invest in their basic goodness. Always moving toward integration. Without this commitment and practice, we merely mirror the destructive forces of polarization and power (Williams et al. 2016, p. 203).-reverend angel Kyodo williams, Zen Buddhist Priest
they came because of the wailingthe wailing of so many voiceswho had a strong songbut were choking from the lack of airthey came because of the weepingthe weeping of so many tearsthat came so freelyon hot but determined facesthey came because of the hopingthe hoping of the beating heartthe fighting spiritthe mother wit tonguesthe dancing mindthe world in their eyesthey came because they had no choiceto form a wethat is many women strongand growing
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Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Specifically quote Thich Nhat Hanh and Engaged Buddhism (later) because he’s consistently referenced by Alice Walker, bell hooks, reverend angel Kyodo williams, Melanie Harris, Carolyn Jones Medine, and other Black Buddhists, Womanists, and/or social justice activists. Also, of note, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., nominated Nhat Hanh for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1967. Full letter: https://plumvillage.org/letter-from-dr-martin-luther-king-jr-nominating-thich-nhat-hanh-for-the-nobel-peace-prize-in-1967/ (accessed on 1 February 2022). |
2 | As designated by the World Health Organization (WHO) on 26 November 2021: https://www.who.int/news/item/28-11-2021-update-on-omicron (accessed on 1 February 2022). |
3 | “Audacious” used in the spirit of Alice Walker’s four-part definition of Womanist from In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens (1983), specifically part one. |
4 | For more on “Luxocracy,” see the Epilogue from The Womanist Idea (2012) by Layli Maparyan. |
5 | Note: Some of the authors included would label themselves “Womanist Buddhist,” (such as Alice Walker, reverend angel Kyodo williams, and Pamela Ayo Yetunde) while some label themselves, “Black Buddhist,” (such as Faith Adiele, Jan Willis, and bell hooks). Regardless of label, they remain relevant voices for the purposes proposed in this article. |
6 | In an interview with Bill Moyers in March 1990 for his television series, A World of Ideas, prophetic writer Toni Morrison explains the ‘master narrative’—that is, the ‘ideological script being imposed by the people in authority by everybody else.’ See: Morrison (1990). Transcript & video clip: https://billmoyers.com/content/toni-morrison-part-1/ (comes up about four minutes into this clip) (accessed on 1 November 2020). |
7 | For brief history and context concerning Engaged Buddhism, see Patricia Hunt-Perry and Lyn Fine, “All Buddhism is Engaged: Thich Nhat Hanh and the Order of Interbeing”, in Engaged Buddhism in the West ed. Christopher S. Queen (Somerville, MA: Wisdom Publications, 2000), pp. 35–66. |
8 | The phrase ‘lean into the pauses’ was inspired by Alice Walker’s Commencement Address to the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, California, in May 2002 (speech transcript published as “All Praises to the Pause; The Universal Moment of Reflection,” in We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For: Inner Light in a Time of Darkness, 2006). |
9 | See: We Are The Ones We Have Been Waiting For: Inner Light in a Time of Darkness (The New Press, 2006), Over-Coming Speechlessness: A Poet Encounters the Horror in Rwanda, Eastern Congo, and Palestine/Israel (Seven Stories Press, 2010), The Chicken Chronicles: Sitting with the Angels Who Have Returned with My Memories: Glorious, Rufus, Gertrude Stein, Splendor, Hortensia, Agnes of God, The Gladyses, & Babe, A Memoir (The New Press, 2012), The Cushion in the Road: Meditation and Wandering as the Whole World Awakens to Being in Harm’s Way (The New Press, 2013), The World Will Follow Joy: Turning Madness Into Flowers (The New Press, 2013), and the newest, Taking the Arrow Out of the Heart (37 Ink, 2018). |
10 | Of particular note is the 1989 Roundtable Discussion: Christian Ethics and Theology in Womanist Perspective consisting of powerful Womanist scholars: Cheryl J. Sanders, Katie G. Cannon, Emilie M. Townes, M. Shawn Copeland, bell hooks, and Cheryl Townsend Gilkes. Published in: The Womanist Reader, edited by Layli Phillips (Maparyan), 2006. |
11 | For the purposes of this paper, I’m less concerned with articulating the waves of Womanist thought, except when noting that later ‘waves’ pick up on initial traces or ruptures from prior generations, carrying these ideas and practices forward, moving towards truly embracing all identities and experiences of humanity. For a history of waves of Womanist thought, Deeper Shades of Purple: Womanism in Religion and Society (2006), edited by Stacey Floyd-Thomas, remains an excellent resource. |
12 | For williams: consider being black: Zen and the Art of Living with Fearlessness and Grace (Viking Press, 2000) or Radical Dharma: Talking Race, Love, and Liberation (North Atlantic Books, 2016, co-authored by Lama Rod Owens & Jasmine Syedullah). For Willis: consider Dreaming Me: Black, Baptist, and Buddhist, One Woman’s Spiritual Journey (Wisdom Publications, 2008) or Dharma Matters: Women, Race, and Tantra (Wisdom Publications, 2020). For Yetunde: consider Black & Buddhist: What Buddhism Can Teach Us About Race, Resilience, Transformation, & Freedom (Shambhala, 2020). For hooks: consider killing rage: ending racism (Henry Holt & Company, LLC., 1995) & all about love: new visions (HarperCollins Books, 2001). For Adiele: consider Meeting Faith: The Forest Journals of a Black Buddhist Nun (W.W. Norton & Company Ltd., 2004). For Steele: consider Tending the Fire: Through War and the Path of Meditation (Sacred Life Publishers, 2014). |
13 | The Dedication pages (v–vi) of Black & Buddhist: What Buddhism Can Teach Us About Race, Resilience, Transformation, & Freedom (Edited by Pamela Ayo Yetunde and Cheryl A. Giles, 2020) contain an excellist list of Black Buddhist practitioners. |
14 | For more information regarding Christianity’s long and complicated relationship to racism and racist practices, including enslavement of Africans, consider reading Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America by Ibram X. Kendi (New York: Bold Type Books, 2016). |
15 | I’m indebted to bell hooks for my present understanding of white supremacist capitalist patriarchy, particularly from recent readings of: killing rage: ending racism (1995) and all about love: new visions (2001). |
16 | Worth noting that Toni Morrison’s 1996 National Book Foundation’s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters acceptance speech inspired townes’s articulation of a Womanist Dancing Mind. For full definition of “Womanist Dancing Mind,” see: emilie townes, “The Womanist Dancing Mind: Speaking to the Expansiveness of Womanist Discourse,” Deeper Shades of Purple: Womanism in Religion and Society, ed. Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas (New York: New York University Press, 2006), p. 237. |
17 | See table on pg. 231 of Lai’s article for helpful context. |
18 | For the purposes of this paper, I do not focus on racism in American Buddhist spaces. If interested in learning more, see: “The Challenges of Being POC in Largely White Sanghas,” a video by Harvard Divinity School during the 2nd “Buddhism & Race” conference, April 23, 2016, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qv3aI_fSSyk (accessed on 1 February 2022) and “Making the Invisible Visible: Healing Racism in Our Buddhist Community,” available on the Spirit Rock meditation center website and originally published as a teaching booklet, https://www.spiritrock.org/document.doc?id=9 (accessed on 1 February 2022). |
19 | See pg. 13 of the Lives for an excellent table of Dynasties and Kingdoms; also, see Appendix A of the Lives for information concerning the context of translations and sources. |
20 | For a recent example of such a critique, see: Adeana McNicholl’s article, “Being Buddha, Staying Woke: Racial Formation in Black Buddhist Writing,” from Journal of the American Academy of Religion, December 2018, Vol. 86, No. 4, pp. 883–911, https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/lfy019 (accessed on 1 February 2022). |
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Watts, C.J. An Ongoing Womanist Buddhist Project: Reading between the Times. Literature 2022, 2, 154-168. https://doi.org/10.3390/literature2030013
Watts CJ. An Ongoing Womanist Buddhist Project: Reading between the Times. Literature. 2022; 2(3):154-168. https://doi.org/10.3390/literature2030013
Chicago/Turabian StyleWatts, Chera Jo. 2022. "An Ongoing Womanist Buddhist Project: Reading between the Times" Literature 2, no. 3: 154-168. https://doi.org/10.3390/literature2030013
APA StyleWatts, C. J. (2022). An Ongoing Womanist Buddhist Project: Reading between the Times. Literature, 2(3), 154-168. https://doi.org/10.3390/literature2030013