
One of Australia's senior monks, Ajahn
Brahm, was invited to deliver a speech on Gender Equality at the UN Day
of Vesak Convention in Vietnam in May 2014. Unfortunately, Ajahn Brahm
was prevented from delivering his speech by a ban imposed by conference
organising committee the day before it was due to be given at the
Convention. Ajahn Brahm's paper had been pre-approved by the conference
organising committee several months before the event.
The FABC and Australian Buddhist
communities are very disappointed at this missed opportunity to promote
the important issue of Gender Equality at an international Buddhist
event to celebrate the most important day in the Buddhist calendar.
Ajahn Brahm's paper presented a solid
case for the full ordination of women in the Theravadin tradition,
supported by references from the Buddha and the Vinaya rules that govern
Buddhist monastic life.
Please read below the full text of Ajahn Brahm's banned paper: Theravada Buddhism and UN Millenium Development Goal 3 (MDG 3):
Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women
in Theravada Buddhism
Introduction

Rosa Parks became a Buddhist before she
passed away in 2005 aged 92. One can speculate that this female icon
against discrimination chose Buddhism because it is well suited to
advancing social justice issues.
In this paper, I will discuss how
Buddhism may advance the particular social justice issue of Millennium
Development Goal No. 3: Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women. I
will focus on the need for Theravada Buddhism’s current male leadership
to clearly demonstrate its own commitment to MDG 3 through acceptance of
the bhikkhuni ordination.
Only then can it use its considerable
influence to make our world more fair, one where people are judged on
their character and not on their gender.
Gender Inequality in Australia and the Contributions of Buddhist Leaders
In a report on gender equity issued by
the Council of Australian Governments on Tuesday 19 November 2013, the
median salary of new female graduates in Australia was found to be 10%
less than that of male graduates. Even though they were equally
qualified, women received less pay than men. Thus even in a developed
country such as Australia, gender inequality still persists. In less
developed countries it is far worse.
My colleague, Ajahn Sujato, recently
attended the 2013 Religions for Peace World Assembly in Vienna,
sponsored by the government of Saudi Arabia. He reported in his blog:
One panel was devoted to the role of women in religion, and that was,
predictably, powerful and moving. Rape, domestic violence, trafficking
in women, forced prostitution, maternal mortality: these are
all-too-painful realities for many women; and meanwhile male-dominated
religious morality obsesses about correct doctrine and stopping gays.
The suffering of women is rarely featured in religious discourse, and as
one of the delegates said, when it is mentioned it is tepid and
equivocal. Yet as those working in development know well, empowerment of
women is the single most effective means of lifting countries out of
poverty.
As Buddhists who espouse the ideal of
unconditional loving kindness and respect, judging people on their
behavior instead of their birth, we should be well positioned to show
leadership on the development of gender equality in the modern world and
the consequent reduction of suffering for half the world’s population.
Moreover, if Buddhism is to remain relevant and grow, we must address
these issues head on. But how can we speak about gender equality when
some of our own Theravada Buddhist organizations are gender biased?
In Australia, the Anglican Christian
Church represents 17.1% of the population (2011 National Census) and is
maintaining its relevance by ordaining female bishops. In May 2008, in
Perth, I was invited to attend the ordination of the world’s first
female bishop in the Anglican Christian Church, Rev. Kay Goldsworthy.
The media response to the recognition of women in the Anglican Church
was overwhelmingly positive. Such initiatives shine a damming spotlight
on other religions in Australia that still discriminate on the basis of
gender. But it shone a positive light on Theravada Buddhism in Perth
that has fully ordained nuns.
Unfortunately, other Theravada Buddhist
temples and monasteries in Australia and in other parts of the world
still adhere to excluding women from full membership of the Sangha. I
will later argue that there is no legal basis in the Vinaya, the ancient
Buddhist Monastic Code, to deny women full ordination.
Moreover, when parts of Theravada
Buddhism are generally considered to unreasonably prevent women from
full membership of the Sangha, then they have no moral authority to
speak on gender equality. They have lost the opportunity to speak for
the empowerment of women in other parts of society and advance the Third
Millennium Development Goal.
When Mahatma Gandhi was a law student in
London, the landlady of his boarding house asked him to have a talk
with her son. Her boy was eating too much sugar and would not listen to
his mother when she told him to stop. Yet the boy had a fondness for the
young Mr. Gandhi. She suggested that if Mr. Gandhi advised her son not
to eat so much sugar then he might follow the good advice. A week or two
went by and the landlady’s son was still eating lots of sugar. So she
took Mr. Gandhi aside and asked him why he had not kept his promise to
talk with her son. “But I did talk with your son” Mr. Gandhi replied,
“but only this morning.”
“So why did you wait so long?” “Because it was only yesterday that I gave up eating sugar”. Such was the reply of the great man.
Religious leaders, above all others, must practice what they preach to be taken seriously and for their advice to be effective.
The Power of Leading by Example
According to the latest figures from
Wikipedia, there are between 506 million to 1,146 million Buddhists in
our world. Even at the lower estimate that is a significant proportion
of the global population. The vast majority of these look to their monks
and lamas for inspiration, guidance and moral leadership.
Moreover, many of these Buddhists are in
undeveloped or developing countries where the empowerment of women is
crucial for those countries’ economic development and social progress.
In today’s highly connected world, words are not enough. Actions are
demanded.
Master Cheng Yen, the female founder of
the International Tzu Chi Foundation, is an example of the power of an
ordained Buddhist Nun. Ordained in Taiwan in 1962, at a time when women
had little influence in social policy, she is now regarded as an icon
throughout her homeland as well as internationally.
She has built state-of-the-art
earthquake-proof hospitals in Taiwan, led the way in encouraging
recycling of waste in her country, and established the largest Buddhist
Relief Organization in our world. When I visited Tzu Chi Foundation in
Taiwan in May 2013, I was shown how discarded plastic bottles were
turned into blankets to be sent to natural disaster zones, such as the
areas devastated by the recent Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines. Much
of the work was done by retired men and women who gained meaning in
their lives together with the considerable emotional and health
benefitsthat such a social activity provides. They were enjoying their
twilight years instead of wasting away at home. No monk or lama has done
anything comparable.
For Buddhism to grow in our modern
world, we need to do more than teach meditation, preach inspiring
sermons, and make the Sutras available over the internet. We are good at
studying, publishing and spreading the word of Buddhism. What we have
not been very successful at is showcasing the compassion and
selflessness of the Dharma by our actions. We have written many more
words in our books than what few kind words we have spoken to the poor,
lonely and desperate. We have built so many more temples than
orphanages.
Female Leadership in Theravada Buddhist Countries.
Sri Lanka, a majority Theravada Buddhist
country, can be proud of having the modern world’s first female Prime
Minister, Mrs Sirimavo Bandaranaike, in 1960. Myanmar would have had its
first female head of government in 1990 when Aung San Su Kyi and her
NLD party won 59% of the popular vote in the national election, but the
election result was not accepted. In 2013, Thailand elected their first
female Prime Minister, Yingluk Shinawatara.
This shows that Theravada Buddhist laypeople can accept women in leadership roles, why can’t the Sangha?
Tradition
Theravada Buddhist monks, generally
speaking, are very conservative. They often claim that they are the
guardians of “Original Buddhism” from the time of the Lord Buddha
Himself. They consider that one of their most important duties is to
preserve these precious and authentic early teachings. In this context,
what was the tradition in the time of The Lord Buddha with regard to
women in the Sangha?
All monks of all traditions in all
countries, and all Buddhist lay scholars as well, fully accept that
there were fully ordained women, called Bhikkhuni, in the lifetime of
the Buddha. Moreover, it is clearly stated in these early teachings that
one of the goals of the Lord Buddha’s mission was to give the full
ordination to women:
Ananda, once I was staying at
Uruvela on the bank of the river Neranjara (present day Bodh Gaya) under
the Goatherd’s Banyan tree, when I had just attained supreme
enlightenment. And Mara the Evil One had come to me, stood to one side
and said “May the Blessed One now attain final Nibbana, may the Sugata
now attain final Nibbana. Now is the time for the Blessed Lord’s final
Nibbana.”
At this, I said to Mara: “Evil One, I
will not take final Nibbana until I have bhikkhus, bhikkhunis, lay men
and lay women followers, who are accomplished, trained, skilled,
learned, knowers of the Dhamma, trained in conformity with the Dhamma,
correctly trained and walking in the path of the Dhamma, who will pass
on what they have gained from their Teacher, teach it, declare it,
establish it, expound it, analyse it, make it clear, until they shall be
able by means of the Dhamma to refute false teachings that have arisen,
and teach the Dhamma of wondrous effect (MahaparinibbanaSutta 3. 34-35)
Theravada Buddhists should have an
advantage over other major world religions because their tradition
explicitly gives such equity to women. Christianity has no tradition of
gender equality in their priesthood. Nor does Islam, Judaism or the
various schools of Hinduism. Buddhism stands apart and ahead of its time
in granting such status to women from “when I (the Lord Buddha) had
just attained supreme enlightenment” at Bodh Gaya.
Therefore, full ordination of women is part of the earliest tradition. It is also the declared wish of the Lord Buddha
Obstacles to Gender Equality in the Theravada Sangha
There are two main obstacles to the
acceptance of the Bhikkhuni Ordination in Theravada Buddhism: 1)
Ignorance about who makes the decisions that govern the Sangha, and 2)
Ignorance of the Vinaya, the rules established by the Lord Buddha that
restrict what decisions may be made.
1. Many monks in Thailand argue that a ruling from the Sangharaja of Thailand in 1928 bans the ordination of female monks:
Announcement
“It is unallowable for any Bhikkhu to give the Going-Forth to Women.
Any woman who wishes to ordain as a
Samaneri, in accordance with the Buddha’s allowances, has to be ordained
by a fully ordained Bhikkhuni. The Buddha laid down the rule that only a
Bhikkhuni over 12 vassas is eligible to be a Preceptor (pavattini).
The Buddha did not allow for a
Bhikkhu to be the preceptor in this ceremony. Unfortunately, the
Bhikkhuni lineage has since faded and died out. Since there is no more
fully-fledged Bhikkhunis to pass on the lineage, there is henceforth no
Samaneris who have obtained a proper ordination from a fully-fledged
Bhikkhuni.
Therefore both the Bhikkhuni and
Samaneri lineage has died out. So any Bhikkhu who gives the going forth
to a woman to become a Samaneri, it can be said that the Bhikkhu is not
acting in accordance with the regulations the Buddha laid down. In
essence, he is following his own guidelines and diverging from the
guidelines that the Buddha laid down. This is something that will
jeopardize the Buddhist Religion and is not a good example for other
Bhikkhus.
Therefore, all monks and novices in
both Nikayas are forbidden to ordain any woman as a Bhikkhuni,
Sikkhamana, or Samaneri from this day forth.”
Phra Bancha Somdet Phra Sangharacha Jiao Gromluang Jinawarn Siriwad (18 June 2471)
(An official announcement from the Sangha Committee Meeting minutes, Book 16 pp 157)
As well as noting the antiquity of this
ruling, it should also be pointed out that the Sangharaja of Thailand,
together with the Thai Council of Elders (Mahatherasamakom), are only
permitted by their legally binding constitution to rule on matters
directly concerning the monks and novices of the main two Thai Buddhist
sects, Mahanikaya and Dhammayuttanikaya. They are legally not empowered
to rule on the affairs of other monastic groups, such as Chinese
Mahayana monks in Thailand, nor on nuns. For those well meaning monks
waiting for the Thai Council of Elders to decide on the legitimacy of
Theravada Bhikkhunis, they will need to wait forever. The Thai Council
of Elders is not legally entitled to rule on matters beyond its remit.
As the Late Somdet Phra Pootajarn, the
then acting leader of the Thai Council of Elders, told me in 2009
regarding the question of Bhikkhuni ordination “Thai law does not extend
beyond Thailand”.In essence, a Sangha in Thailand cannot rule on the
proceedings of a Sangha in Sri Lanka, nor in Australia.
Indeed, the Buddha established that all
Sanghakamma (monastic acts), such as the ordination of Bhikkhunis, are
to be decided on by the local monastic community, defined as those monks
or nuns within the same monastic boundary. Decisions or opinions of
other monastic communities are not binding. Governance of the Sangha is
devolved to each monastic community.
This is the ruling of the Lord Buddha.
2. However, each monastic community is
bound to act within the rules called the Vinaya. So are these rules an
obstacle to Bhikkhuni Ordination?
The Thai Sangharaja’s 1928 ruling judged
that a bhikkhu Sangha cannot give ordination to a bhikkhuni, because
one needs other bhikkhunis to ordain a bhikkhuni. This is a moot point.
In a recent publication “The Revival of the Bhikkhuni Order and the
Decline of the Sasana” by the renowned scholar monk Bhikkhu Analayo
(Journal of Buddhist Ethics, Vol. 20 2013, available on-line at http://blogs.dickinson.edu/buddhistethics/files/2013/09/Analayo-Legality-final.pdf),
the author argues that such an ordination is valid. In short, he argues
that at first the Lord Buddha gave the bhikkhus authority to ordain
bhikkhunis.
Later, the Buddha gave authority for
bhikkhunis to be ordained by a dual ordination ceremony; first in a
Sangha of bhikkhunis and then in a Sangha of bhikkhus. However, in
contrast with the history of the bhikkhu ordination, where one finds
that whenever a new ordination is allowed by the Lord Buddha then the
previous method is immediately abolished, the original ordination of
bhikkhunis by bhikkhus was not abolished by the Lord Buddha. It is a
general principle of Theravada Buddhism “Not to abolish what has been
authorized by the Buddha” (one of the seven causes for the longevity of
the Buddhist religion – Anguttara Sevens, 23). This, then, is a strong
argument for the legitimacy of ordination of bhikkhunis by bhikkhus
alone.
It is generally regarded that the first
bhikkhuni ordination of modern times was that which occurred in 1998 in
Bodh Gaya. This was a dual ordination performed first by Chinese
bhikkhunis following the “Dharmagupta” Vinaya and then by an
international Theravada Sangha of bhikkhus. Was this legitimate?
There are four, and only four,ways that an ordination may be judged illegitimate:
Simavipatti: when there is a monk or nun within the monastic boundary who should be present but is absent.
Parisavipatti: when there is not an adequate quorum.
Vatthuvipatti: (for ordinations) when the candidate is disqualified from ordination such as being underage.
Kammavacavipatti: when the procedure is chanted incorrectly, e.g. an ordination ceremony being chanted without a motion and three announcements.
In regard to the Bodh Gaya ordination, there is no doubt that:
1. All the monks and nuns within the monastic boundary were present,
2. The candidates were well qualified and
3. The procedure was chanted correctly.
But was there a quorum? May Mahayana bhikkhunis qualify as a quorum?
There are no reasonable grounds to
suspect that the Chinese Mahayana nuns who performed the Bodh Gaya
ordination are not legitimate bhikkhunis. The records show that their
lineage came from Sri Lanka. Their own ordination procedure does not
fail for any of the four reasons given above. They perform the ceremony
with all present within a boundary (which they call a “platform”). There
is always a quorum. They ensure that the candidate is qualified. And
the ceremony is enacted by the same motion and three announcements as in
Theravada, albeit chanted in Chinese. They are bhikkhunis according to
the Vinaya and so can ordain other bhikkhunis.
But what about a quorum of one sect (Mahayana) ordaining nuns of another sect (Theravada)?
Sects in Buddhism
The different sects of Theravada are
called “nanasamvasa” in the Vinaya. They are separate communities each
performing their own acts of governance (Sanghakamma), even within the
same monastic boundary. The Vinaya states that there are only two
origins of separate communities (nanasamvasabhumi – Vinaya Mahavagga,
chapter 10, verse 1.10):
1. A monk decides for himself to belong to a community separate from others, or
2. The Sangha forces a monk out of their
community by enacting the severe penalty of Ukkhepaniyakamma by a
motion and three announcements.
The second cause for a separate
community is not used these days. This leaves only the first, that of
personal choice. Put simply, according to Vinaya, a monk may choose to
perform Sanghakamma with any group of monks he feels comfortable with.
There is no legal impediment preventing a Theravada bhikkhu from
performing a Sanghakamma with a Mahayana bhikksu.
Indeed, it may be accurately said that
there are no Theravada or Mahayana bhikkhus, there are just bhikkhus,
according to the Vinaya, who happen to follow Theravada customs or
Mahayana practices. Thus, a monk ordained in a Theravada ceremony may
join a Mahayana monastery without needing to be re-ordained.
Thus, according to the Vinaya, Mahayana
bhikkhunis may perform the first part of the ordination ceremony for a
new bhikkhuni, and then she may take the second part of the dual
ordination in a gathering of Theravada bhikkhus. This is what happened
in Bodh Gaya. There is no reasonable argument based on the Vinaya to
invalidate this. And what sect to those bhikkhunis ordained at Bodh Gaya
belong to? They choose!
The Perth Bhikkhuni Ordination in 2009
Once there were Theravada bhikkhunis, it
was relatively easy to arrange for the ordination of four women as
bhikkhunis in Perth in October 2009. Even though it caused some trouble
at the time, the bhikkhunis that were ordained are now recognized by all
as bhikkhunis according to the Vinaya. As the old saying goes: “One
cannot make an omelette without cracking eggs”.
The Bhikkhuni Sangha is growing. In
Perth, the Dhammasara Nuns Monastery currently has 11 members of the
Sangha with a waiting list of women from around the world wanting to
ordain. Recently, a Thai TV channel visited Dhammasara and interviewed
the bhikkhunis. In Thailand there are around 100 bhikkhunis (Murray
Hunter, ANU, 2/1/2014) and in Sri Lanka around 800 bhikkhunis (The
Sunday Leader, Sri Lanka, 3 March 2013). They may not be respected by
all monks but they are becoming ever more respected by the lay Buddhist
community, especially in Western countries. The Perth bhikkhunis are
giving talks and teaching meditation. They are taking their place in the
fourfold assembly of Buddhism as the Lord Buddha wanted. They are
getting ample support.
The Need for the Current Leadership of Theravada to Embrace Bhikkhuni Ordination
It may be of interest to Thai monks to
know that the Preceptor (pavattini) at the Perth Bhikkhuni ordination,
Ayya Tathhaaloka, visited Ajahn Maha Boowa at Wat Bahn That in Udon
shortly before the Perth Bhikkhuni ordination. Ajahn Maha Boowa invited
her to stay in the female quarters overnight, and gave her ordination
recognition by inviting her up onto the monks’ platform and then
addressing her as a bhikkhuni, in front of the Sangha together with the
assembled laity.
Many influential leaders in Thailand
respect Ajahn Maha Boowa to such an extent that this incident may
encourage other senior monks to accept the existence of Theravada
bhikkhunis in Thailand. Such acceptance by Buddhist monk leaders will
result in greater respect for the status of bhikkhunis among the lay
Buddhist followers. Then those women will be empowered to lead in many
other areas for the benefit and progress of their nation.
The Relevance of Bhikkhuni Ordination for the Third Millennium Development Goal
In a recently published paper by Emma
Tomalin and Caroline Starkey (Sakyadhita newsletter, Winter 2012), the
authors explored the role that Buddhism in Thailand and Cambodia plays
in maintaining gender disparity in education and, “ultimately ask what
is the relationship between the reassertion of women’s traditional
ordination rights and female empowerment through education?” They noted
that “Several scholars, both Thai and Western, have implicated Buddhism
as one explanatory factor for the historical inequality between genders,
particularly in the poorest areas.”
Also that “Many advocates of the
bhikkhuni ordination consider that that there is a direct relationship
between the low status of women in many Buddhist traditions and the
inferior status of women within Buddhist societies.
Thus, by restoring equity to women in
the Theravada Sangha through the reinstating of the bhikkhuni
ordination, we will be addressing the inferior status of women in many
Theravada countries, promoting gender equity in education and, thereby,
making a strong statement in support of the Third UN Millennium
Development Goal.
By fixing our own house first, we have
the considerable opportunity and moral authority through our books and
sermons to inspire and encourage our Buddhist followers to also work
towards gender equality in spheres other than religion. That will lead
to a world with less violence, better health and more prosperity.
Ajahn Brahm, Perth, January 2014Source: http://buddhistchannel.tv/index.php?id=70,11880,0,0,1,0#.U5GRBXZrSkx
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