Buddhism in a Dark Age

Buddhism in a Dark Age
Title Buddhism in a Dark Age PDF eBook
Author Ian Harris
Publisher University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages 258
Release 2012-12-31
Genre History
ISBN 0824865774

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This pioneering study of the fate of Buddhism during the communist period in Cambodia puts a human face on a dark period in Cambodia’s history. It is the first sustained analysis of the widely held assumption that the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot had a centralized plan to liquidate the entire monastic order. Based on a thorough analysis of interview transcripts and a large body of contemporary manuscript material, it offers a nuanced view that attempts to move beyond the horrific monastic death toll and fully evaluate the damage to the Buddhist sangha under Democratic Kampuchea. Compelling evidence exists to suggest that Khmer Rouge leaders were determined to hunt down senior members of the pre-1975 ecclesiastical hierarchy, but other factors also worked against the Buddhist order. Buddhism in a Dark Age outlines a three-phase process in the Khmer Rouge treatment of Buddhism: bureaucratic interference and obstruction, explicit harassment, and finally the elimination of the obdurate and those close to the previous Lon Nol regime. The establishment of a separate revolutionary form of sangha administration constituted the bureaucratic phase. The harassment of monks, both individually and en masse, was partially due to the uprooting of the traditional monastic economy in which lay people were discouraged from feeding economically unproductive monks. Younger members of the order were disrobed and forced into marriage or military service. The final act in the tragedy of Buddhism under the Khmer Rouge was the execution of those monks and senior ecclesiastics who resisted. It was difficult for institutional Buddhism to survive the conditions encountered during the decade under study here. Prince Sihanouk’s overthrow in 1970 marked the end of Buddhism as the central axis around which all other aspects of Cambodian existence revolved and made sense. And under Pol Pot the lay population was strongly discouraged from providing its necessary material support. The book concludes with a discussion of the slow re-establishment and official supervision of the Buddhist order during the People’s Republic of Kampuchea period.

Buddhism in a Dark Age

Buddhism in a Dark Age
Title Buddhism in a Dark Age PDF eBook
Author Ian Charles Harris
Publisher
Total Pages 242
Release 2013
Genre Buddhism
ISBN 9780824871444

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Buddhism Under Pol Pot

Buddhism Under Pol Pot
Title Buddhism Under Pol Pot PDF eBook
Author Ian Charles Harris
Publisher
Total Pages 312
Release 2007
Genre Buddhism
ISBN

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Cambodian Buddhism

Cambodian Buddhism
Title Cambodian Buddhism PDF eBook
Author Ian Harris
Publisher University of Hawaii Press
Total Pages 370
Release 2008-03-11
Genre Religion
ISBN 0824832981

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The study of Cambodian religion has long been hampered by a lack of easily accessible scholarship. This impressive new work by Ian Harris thus fills a major gap and offers English-language scholars a booklength, up-to-date treatment of the religious aspects of Cambodian culture. Beginning with a coherent history of the presence of religion in the country from its inception to the present day, the book goes on to furnish insights into the distinctive nature of Cambodia's important yet overlooked manifestation of Theravada Buddhist tradition and to show how it reestablished itself following almost total annihilation during the Pol Pot period. Historical sections cover the dominant role of tantric Mahayana concepts and rituals under the last great king of Angkor, Jayavarman VII (1181–c. 1220); the rise of Theravada traditions after the collapse of the Angkorian civilization; the impact of foreign influences on the development of the nineteenth-century monastic order; and politicized Buddhism and the Buddhist contribution to an emerging sense of Khmer nationhood. The Buddhism practiced in Cambodia has much in common with parallel traditions in Thailand and Sri Lanka, yet there are also significant differences. The book concentrates on these and illustrates how a distinctly Cambodian Theravada developed by accommodating itself to premodern Khmer modes of thought. Following the overthrow of Prince Sihanouk in 1970, Cambodia slid rapidly into disorder and violence. Later chapters chart the elimination of institutional Buddhism under the Khmer Rouge and its gradual reemergence after Pol Pot, the restoration of the monastic order's prerevolutionary institutional forms, and the emergence of contemporary Buddhist groupings.

Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge

Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge
Title Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge PDF eBook
Author Evan Gottesman
Publisher Yale University Press
Total Pages 468
Release 2003-01-01
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9780300105131

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Reviewing a shadowy period in Cambodia's recent history ... as the legacy of the Khmer Rouge regime continues its influence today.

Children of Cambodia's Killing Fields

Children of Cambodia's Killing Fields
Title Children of Cambodia's Killing Fields PDF eBook
Author Kim DePaul
Publisher Yale University Press
Total Pages 228
Release 1999-01-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780300078732

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Publisher Fact Sheet This extraordinary collection of eyewitness accounts by Cambodian survivors of Pol Pot's genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s offers searing testimony to an era of brutality, brainwashing, betrayals, starvation, & gruesome executions.

Cambodia, 1975-1982

Cambodia, 1975-1982
Title Cambodia, 1975-1982 PDF eBook
Author Michael Vickery
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 1999
Genre History
ISBN 9789747100815

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In a searching assessment of Cambodian politics and society since the revolutionary victory in 1975, the author sets Pol Pot's experiments of 1975-1979 into their historical and theoretical contexts. A complex view of Democratic Kampuchea.