Buddhism in Vietnam (Đạo Phật or Phật Giáo in Vietnamese), as practised by the ethnic Vietnamese, is mainly of the Mahayana tradition. Buddhism may have first come to Vietnam as early as the 3rd or 2nd century BCE from the Indian subcontinent or from China in the 1st or 2nd century CE. Vietnamese Buddhism has had a syncretic relationship with certain elements of Taoism, Chinese spirituality and the Vietnamese folk religion.
History
- The One Pillar Pagoda is a historic Mahayana Buddhist temple in Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam.
- Bái Đính Temple is a complex of Mahayana Buddhist temples on Bai Dinh Mountain.
- Statue of Avalokiteśvara, lacquered and gilded wood at the Bút Tháp Temple, dating from the Restored Lê era with inscription "autumn of the year Bính Thân" (1656).
- Hải Đức Buddha, the 30 ft tall statue built in 1964 at Long Sơn Pagoda in Nha Trang.
Dynastic period
There
are conflicting theories regarding whether Buddhism first reached
Vietnam during the 3rd or 2nd century BCE via delegations from India, or
during the 1st or 2nd century from China.
In either case, by the end of the second century CE, Vietnam had
developed into a major regional Mahayana Buddhist center centering on Luy Lâu in modern Bắc Ninh Province, northeast of the present day capital city of Hanoi. Luy Lâu was the capital of the Han region of Jiaozhi
and was a popular place visited by many Indian Buddhist missionary
monks en route to China. The monks followed the maritime trade route
from the Indian sub-continent to China used by Indian traders. A number
of Mahayana sutras and the āgamas were translated into Classical Chinese there, including the Sutra of Forty-two Chapters and the Anapanasati.
Jiaozhi was the birthplace of Buddhist missionary Kang Senghui who was of Sogdian origin.
Over the next eighteen centuries, Vietnam and China shared many
common features of cultural, philosophical and religious heritage. This
was due to geographical proximity to one another and Vietnam being
annexed twice by China. Vietnamese Buddhism is thus related to Chinese Buddhism in general, and to some extent reflects the formation of Chinese Buddhism after the Song dynasty. Theravada Buddhism, on the other hand, would become incorporated through the southern annexation of Khmer people and territories.
During the Đinh dynasty
(968–980), Buddhism was recognized by the state as an official faith
(~971), reflecting the high esteem of Buddhist faith held by the
Vietnamese monarchs. The Early Lê dynasty
(980–1009) also afforded the same recognition to the Buddhist church.
The growth of Buddhism during this time is attributed to the recruitment
of erudite monks to the court as the newly independent state needed an
ideological basis on which to build a country. Subsequently, this role
was ceded to Confucianism.
Vietnamese Buddhism reached its zenith during the Lý dynasty (1009–1225) beginning with the founder Lý Thái Tổ, who was raised in a pagoda. All of the kings during the Lý dynasty professed and sanctioned Buddhism as the state religion. This endured with the Trần dynasty (1225–1400) but Buddhism had to share the stage with the emerging growth of Confucianism.
By the 15th century, Buddhism fell out of favor with the court
during the Later Lê dynasty, although still popular with the masses.
Officials like Lê Quát attacked it as heretical and wasteful. It was not until the 19th century that Buddhism regained some stature under the Nguyễn dynasty who accorded royal support.
A Buddhist revival movement (Chấn hưng Phật giáo) emerged in the
1920s in an effort to reform and strengthen institutional Buddhism,
which had lost grounds to the spread of Christianity and the growth of
other faiths under French rule. The movement continued into the 1950s.
Republican period
From 1954 to 1975, Vietnam was split into North and South Vietnam. In a country where surveys of the religious composition estimated the Buddhist majority to be approximately 50 to 70 percent, President Ngô Đình Diệm's
policies generated claims of religious bias. As a member of the
Catholic Vietnamese minority, he pursued pro-Catholic policies that
antagonized many Buddhists.
In May 1963, in the central city of Huế, where Diệm's elder brother Ngô Đình Thục was the archbishop, Buddhists were prohibited from displaying Buddhist flags during Vesak celebrations yet few days earlier, Catholics were allowed to fly religious flags at a celebration in honour of the newly seated archbishop.
This led to widespread protest against the government; troops were sent
in and nine civilians were killed in the confrontations. This led to
mass rallies against Diệm's government, termed as the Buddhist crisis. The conflicts culminated in Thích Quảng Đức's self-immolation. President Diệm's younger brother Ngô Đình Nhu favored strong-armed tactics and Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces engaged in the Xá Lợi Pagoda raids, killing estimated hundreds. Dismayed by the public outrage, the US government withdrew support for the regime. President Diệm was deposed and killed in the 1963 coup.
Political strength of the Buddhists grew in the 1960s as the different schools and orders convene to form the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam. Leaders of the Church like Thích Trí Quang had considerable sway in national politics, at times challenging the government.
With the fall of Saigon in 1975, the whole nation came under Communist rule; many religious practices including Buddhism were discouraged. In the North the government had created the United Buddhist Sangha of Vietnam, co-opting the clergy to function under government auspices but in the South, the Unified Buddhist Sangha of Vietnam
still held sway and openly challenged the communist government. The
Sangha leadership was thus arrested and imprisoned; Sangha properties
were seized and the Sangha itself was outlawed. In its place was the
newly created Buddhist Sangha of Vietnam, designed as the final union of all Buddhist organizations, now under full state control.
Modern period
The treatment on Buddhists started to ease since Đổi mới at 1986.
Since Đổi Mới
(1986) many reforms have allowed Buddhism to be practiced relatively
unhindered by the individuals. However no organized sangha is allowed to
function independent of the state. It was not until 2007 that Pure Land Buddhism, the most widespread type of Buddhism practiced in Vietnam, was officially recognized as a religion by the government. Thích Quảng Độ the Patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Sangha, once imprisoned, remains under surveillance and restricted in his travels.
Today, Buddhists are found throughout in Vietnam, from North to
South. Buddhism is the single largest organized religion in Vietnam,
with somewhere between 12.2% and 16.4% of the population identifying
themselves as Buddhist.
Some argued the number to be higher than general, as many declared
itself as atheists, but still participate on Buddhist activities.
In one side, though the Communist Party of Vietnam
officially promotes atheism, it has usually leaned in favor to
Buddhism, as Buddhism is associated with the long and deep history of
Vietnam, and also, there have been rarely disputes between Buddhists and
the Government;
the Communist Government also sees Buddhism as a symbol of Vietnamese
patriotism. Buddhist festivals are officially promoted by the Government
and restrictions are few, in contrast to its Christian, Muslim and other religious counterparts.
Recently, the Communist regime in Vietnam allows major Buddhist figures to enter the country. Thích Nhất Hạnh, a major Buddhist figure revered both in Vietnam and worldwide, is among these.
In order to distance itself from the fellow communist neighbor China,
the Government of Vietnam allows publishing books and stories of 14th Dalai Lama, who has a personal friendship with Thích Nhất Hạnh and were commonly critical of Chinese regime after 2008 Tibetan unrest,
which was seen as an attempt to antagonize Chinese Government and China
as a whole as Beijing considers Dalai Lama as a terrorist.
Overseas
After the fall of South Vietnam to communism in 1975 at the end of the Vietnam War,
the first major Buddhist community appeared in North America. Since
this time, the North American Vietnamese Buddhist community has grown to
some 160 temples and centers. Proselytizing is not a priority.
The most famous practitioner of synchronized Vietnamese Thiền in the West is Thích Nhất Hạnh who has authored dozens of books and founded the Plum Village Monastery in France together with his colleague, bhikṣuṇī and Zen Master Chân Không.
According to Nguyen and Barber, Thích Nhất Hạnh's fame in the Western
world as a proponent of engaged Buddhism and a new Thiền style has "no
affinity with or any foundation in traditional Vietnamese Buddhist
practices" and according to Alexander Soucy (2007) his style of Zen Buddhism is
not reflective of actual Vietnamese Buddhism. Thích Nhất Hạnh often
recounts about his early Thiền practices in Vietnam in his Dharma talks
saying that he continued and developed this practice in the West which
has a distinctive Vietnamese Thiền flavor.
Thích Nhất Hạnh's Buddhist teachings have started to return to a
Vietnam where the Buddhist landscape is now being shaped by the combined
Vietnamese and Westernized Buddhism that is focused more on the
meditative practices.
Practice
Followers in Vietnam practice differing traditions without any problem or sense of contradiction.
Few Vietnamese Buddhists would identify themselves as a particular kind
of Buddhism, as a Christian might identify him or herself by a
denomination, for example. Although Vietnamese Buddhism does not have a
strong centralized structure, the practice is similar throughout the
country at almost any temple.
Gaining merit is the most common and essential practice in
Vietnamese Buddhism with a belief that liberation takes place with the
help of Buddhas and bodhisattvas. Buddhist monks commonly chant sutras,
recite Buddhas’ names (particularly Amitābha), doing repentance and praying for rebirth in the Pure Land.
The Lotus Sutra and the Amitabha Sutra are the most commonly used sutras. Most sutras and texts are in Classical Chinese and are merely recited with Sino-Xenic pronunciations, making them incomprehensible to most practitioners.
Three services are practiced regularly at dawn, noon, and dusk. They include sutra reading with niệm Phật and dhāraṇī recitation and kinh hành
(walking meditation). Laypeople at times join the services at the
temple and some devout Buddhist practice the services at home. Special
services such as Sam Nguyen/Sam Hoi (confession/repentance) takes place
on the full moon and new moon each month. Niệm Phật practice is one way of repenting and purifying bad karma.
Buddhist temples also serve a significant role in death rituals and funerals among overseas Vietnamese.
Branches
Mahāyāna traditions
The overall doctrinal position of Vietnamese Buddhism is the inclusive system of Tiantai, with the higher metaphysics informed by the Huayan school (Vietnamese: Hoa Nghiêm); however, the orientation of Vietnamese Buddhism is syncretic without making such distinctions. Therefore, modern practice of Vietnamese Buddhism can be very eclectic, including elements from Thiền (Chan Buddhism), Thiên Thai (Tiantai), Tịnh độ Pure Land Buddhism, and popular practices from Vajrayana.
According to Charles Prebish, many English language sources contain
misconceptions regarding the variety of doctrines and practices in
traditional Vietnamese Buddhism:
We will not consider here the misconceptions presented in most English-language materials regarding the distinctness of these schools, and the strong inclination for "syncretism" found in Chinese and Vietnamese Buddhism. Much has been said about the incompatibility of different schools and their difficulty in successfully communicating with each other and combining their doctrines. None of these theories reflects realities in Vietnam (or China) past or present. The followers have no problem practicing the various teachings at the same time.
The methods of Pure Land Buddhism are perhaps the most widespread within Vietnam. It is common for practitioners to recite sutras, chants and dhāraṇīs looking to gain protection through bodhisattvas or dharmapalas. It is a devotional practice where those practicing put their faith in Amitābha (Vietnamese: A-di-đà). Followers believe they will gain rebirth in his pure land
by chanting Amitabha's name. A pure land is a Buddha-realm where one
can more easily attain enlightenment since suffering does not exist
there.
Many religious organizations have not been recognized by the
government; however, in 2007, with 1.5 million followers, the Vietnamese
Pure Land Buddhism Association (Tịnh Độ Cư Sĩ Phật Hội Việt Nam)
received official recognition as an independent and legal religious
organization.
Thiền is the Sino-Xenic pronunciation of Chan (Japanese Zen) and is derived ultimately from Sanskrit "dhyāna". The traditional account is that in 580, an Indian monk named Vinitaruci (Vietnamese: Tì-ni-đa-lưu-chi) traveled to Vietnam after completing his studies with Sengcan,
the third patriarch of Chan Buddhism. This would be the first
appearance of Thiền. The sect that Vinitaruci and his lone Vietnamese
disciple founded would become known as the oldest branch of Thiền. After
a period of obscurity, the Vinitaruci School became one of the most
influential Buddhist groups in Vietnam by the 10th century, particularly
under the patriarch Vạn-Hạnh (died 1018). Other early Vietnamese Zen schools included the Vô Ngôn Thông, which was associated with the teaching of Mazu Daoyi, and the Thảo Đường, which incorporated nianfo chanting techniques; both were founded by Chinese monks.
A new Thiền school was founded by King Trần Nhân Tông (1258–1308); called the Trúc Lâm "Bamboo Grove" school, it evinced a deep influence from Confucian and Taoist
philosophy. Nevertheless, Trúc Lâm's prestige waned over the following
centuries as Confucianism became dominant in the royal court. In the
17th century, a group of Chinese monks led by Nguyên Thiều introduced
the Ling school (Lâm Tế). A more native offshoot of Lâm Tế, the Liễu
Quán school, was founded in the 18th century and has since been the
predominant branch of Vietnamese Zen.
Some scholars argue that the importance and prevalence of Thiền in
Vietnam has been greatly overstated and that it has played more of an
elite rhetorical role than a role of practice. The Thiền uyển tập anh (Chinese: 禪苑集英,
"Collection of Outstanding Figures of the Zen Garden") has been the
dominant text used to legitimize Thiền lineages and history within
Vietnam. However, Cuong Tu Nguyen's Zen in Medieval Vietnam: A Study and Translation of the Thien Tap Anh
(1997) gives a critical review of how the text has been used to create a
history of Zen Buddhism that is "fraught with discontinuity". Modern
Buddhist practices are not reflective of a Thiền past; in Vietnam,
common practices are more focused on ritual and devotion than the Thiền
focus on meditation. Nonetheless, Vietnam is seeing a steady growth in Zen today. Two figures who have been responsible for this increased interest in Thiền are Thích Nhất Hạnh, and Thích Thanh Từ, who lives in Da Lat.
Theravada
The central and southern part of present-day Vietnam were originally inhabited by the Chams and the Khmer people, respectively, who followed both a syncretic Śaiva-Mahayana and Theravada Buddhism. Đại Việt
annexed the land occupied by the Cham during conquests in the 15th
century and by the 18th century had also annexed the southern portion of
the Khmer Empire,
resulting in the current borders of Vietnam. From that time onward, the
dominant Đại Việt (Vietnamese) followed the Mahayana tradition while
the Khmer continued to practice Theravada.
In the 1920s and 1930s, there were a number of movements in
Vietnam for the revival and modernization of Buddhist activities.
Together with the re-organization of Mahayana establishments, there
developed a growing interest in Theravadin meditation as well as the Pāli Canon.
These were then available in French. Among the pioneers who brought
Theravada Buddhism to the ethnic Đại Việt was a young veterinary doctor
named Lê Văn Giảng. He was born in the South, received higher education
in Hanoi, and after graduation, was sent to Phnom Penh, Cambodia, to
work for the French government.
During that time he became especially interested in Theravada
Buddhist practice. Subsequently, he decided to ordain and took the
Dhamma name of Hộ-Tông (Vansarakkhita). In 1940, upon an invitation from
a group of lay Buddhists led by Nguyễn Văn Hiểu, he went back to
Vietnam in order to help establish the first Theravada temple for
Vietnamese Buddhists at Gò Dưa, Thủ Đức (now a district of Hồ Chí Minh
City). The temple was named Bửu Quang (Ratana Ramsyarama). The temple
was destroyed by French troops in 1947, and was later rebuilt in 1951.
At Bửu Quang temple, together with a group of Vietnamese bhikkhus
who had received training in Cambodia such as Thiện Luật, Bửu Chơn, Kim
Quang and Giới Nghiêm, Hộ Tông began teaching Buddhism in their native
Vietnamese. He also translated many Buddhist materials from the Pali
Canon, and Theravada became part of Vietnamese Buddhist activity in the
country.
In 1949–1950, Hộ Tông together with Nguyễn Văn Hiểu and
supporters built a new temple in Saigon (now Hồ Chí Minh City), named Kỳ
Viên Tự (Jetavana Vihara). This temple became the centre of
Theravada activities in Vietnam, which continued to attract increasing
interest among the Vietnamese Buddhists. In 1957, the Vietnamese
Theravada Buddhist Sangha Congregation (Giáo Hội Tăng Già Nguyên Thủy
Việt Nam) was formally established and recognised by the government, and
the Theravada Sangha elected Venerable Hộ Tông as its first President,
or Sangharaja.
From Saigon, the Theravada movement spread to other provinces,
and soon, a number of Theravada temples for ethnic Viet Buddhists were
established in many areas in the South and Central parts of Vietnam.
There are 529 Theravada temples throughout the country, of which 19 were
located in Hồ Chí Minh City and its vicinity. Besides Bửu Quang and Kỳ
Viên temples, other well known temples are Bửu Long, Giác Quang, Tam Bảo
(Đà Nẵng), Thiền Lâm and Huyền Không (Huế), and the large Thích Ca Phật Đài in Vũng Tàu.