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II
The
Buddha acted upon his conviction that women and men could pursue liberation in
the same way. He established both an order of bhikkhus (monks) and an order of
bhikkhunis (nuns). The two orders practiced in the same way and most of the
rules governing them were identical. The Buddha also preached to both men and
women. He was willing to teach anyone who was willing to learn. He put himself
out of his way to bring both women and men to a deeper understanding. His
belief that women could become arhats in the same way men could was validated
by the enlightenment of many of his female followers.
However,
the portrait of the Buddha painted by the Pali canon does not always validate
the efforts of women to practice a life of renunciation. In an oft quoted
passage, the Buddha is entreated by his step-mother to ordain an order of nuns.
He warns her to be wary of the idea. She and a large group of women who want to
be nuns dress as nuns, shave their heads, and walk barefoot to Vesali, where
the Buddha had gone. They arrive at the Buddha's door crying, with swollen
feet. Ananda is moved by their determination and sincerity, and pleads their
case with the Buddha. The Buddha at first refuses to ordain the women, although
he admits that women who live the monastic life can attain arhatship.
Eventually, Ananda changes the Buddha's mind, and the women are ordained as
nuns. However, the Buddha insists that they take upon themselves eight rules
which place the nuns in a position decidedly subordinate to the monks. He also
warns that his teachings, which would have lasted a thousand years, will only
last five hundred years because of the ordination of the nuns.
Why
does the Buddha, who is usually willing to bend over backwards to promote the
growth and enlightenment of every person, suddenly so hesitant and gloomy when
confronted with the opportunity to institutionalize a path towards
enlightenment for women? Some recent commentators have argued that this
incident never really happened, but was invented later in order to justify
changes to the status of the bhikkhunis which were made to bring the practice
of institutional Buddhism more in line with societally accepted norms. In other
words, the Buddha thought of men and women as equal, and made the bhikkhus and
bhikkhunis equal. After his death, the society could not deal with the
existence of a group of women which were acknowledged to be equal with or
superior to most men. Monastic Buddhism had to be acceptable to lay society,
because the monastics were completely supported by the lay people. Therefore,
various rules were made to lower the status of the bhikkhunis, and this story
was invented to justify the change. This explanation of the story of the
Buddha's reluctance is possibly correct. The scriptures were not written down
until four hundred years after the Buddha's death, which gave plenty of time
for small changes to creep into the stories.
Other
modern commentators feel that the story is an accurate representation of what
actually happened. These people feel that the Buddha himself must have been
aware of the problems society would have in accepting an independent order of
nuns. He made the rules about the bhikkhunis' subordinance to the bhikkhus
especially to mitigate action against the bhikkhunis. These rules call for
gestures of submission on the part of the bhikkhunis, but in no way diminish
the bhikkhunis' ability to meditate and follow the path towards enlightenment.
The Buddha may have seen this as the best way to preserve women's ability to
work towards enlightenment within the confines of their society. These
commentators generally explain the Buddha's statement about the amount of time
his teaching would survive by saying that the Buddha felt that it was as
valuable to reach twice as many people (both men and women) for half the length
of time (five hundred rather than one thousand). It is possible that the Buddha
thought his teaching would end sooner if women were ordained because he thought
that society simply wouldn't accept a teaching which allowed that much freedom
for women.
All
commentators agree that what was new and important about Buddha's teachings
about women was that women could attain arhatship and that women could do so by
following basically the same path as men. Certain limitations were made on the
social equality of bhikkhus and bhikkhunis, and these limitations were probably
made in order to increase societal acceptance of the monastic orders.
In
any case, Buddha opened the doors for women's entrance to monastic life. Women flocked
by the thousand to join the order of bhikkhunis. Women joined for all sorts of
reasons. Many women joined simply because the Buddha's teachings made sense to
them, and aroused in them a desire for liberation. Other women, though this
first reason was true for them, had other reasons as well. Some become
bhikkhunis because their husbands or other relatives were becoming bhikkhus.
Others became bhikkhunis when they were widowed, or when their other relatives
died. Some very poor women joined because the order would provide them with
some measure of security. Courtesans who were disgusted with their lives of sex
left to become bhikkhunis. Some young women chose the renunciate's life as
preferable to marriage.
Women
had more freedom and independence within the order of bhikkhunis than anywhere
else in society. Bhikkhunis were not anyone's slave or servant. For the most
part, they ran their own community and made their own decisions. They seldom
had to take orders from any one and did not have look after anyone's physical
needs. They were specifically forbidden to do household chores. They had only
to work for liberation from samsara. Once they, themselves, were liberated,
then they often taught other women.
And
many women became liberated, becoming arhats. There are dozens of instances of
female arhats in the Pali canon. There must have been many more who were not
recorded. These women were often accomplished speakers who led many other women
to liberation. Some of their words are recorded in the Pali canon. These
snippets show the female arhats' delight and self-confidence in their freedom
from traditional women's positions. Soma, a bhikkhuni and contemporary of the
Buddha, was taunted thus:
"That
vantage point the sages may attain Is hard to win. With her two-fingered
consciousness, That place no woman is competent to gain."3
"
Soma replied:What should the women's nature signify When consciousness is taut
and firmly set, When knowledge rolleth ever on, when she by insight rightly
comprehends the Dharma?" 4
Soma
clearly felt that her femininity was no obstacle to her enlightenment. She
acted with self-confidence and poise. Her position was completely in accord
with the Buddha's teaching of anatman, or no-self. This teaching states that people
have no fixed or permanent nature. All human attributes are in a constant state
of change, and are not inherently real. If we see something that looks real,
like "women's nature," we simply need to transcend this illusory
attribute.
The
greatest source of women's voices in the Pali canon is in the Therigatha -- the
enlightenment songs of the early bhikkhunis. Although the Therigatha was
probably edited by monks, it still allows us a glimpse of the early bhikkhunis'
delight at their freedom. For example, a nun named Mutta wrote:
"Free
I am free I am free from the three crooked things: mortar, pestle, and my
crooked husband. I am free from birth and death and all that dragged me
back".5
Bhikkhunis
were not the only women who were important in the early years of Buddhism. Lay
women were also important in the early vitality of the sect. Many women who
were converted to Buddhism did not join the order of bhikkhunis. Quite a number
of these women gained some level of enlightenment, and a few even became
arhats. Perhaps more important to the young movement, however, was the
financial support of wealthy lay women. Wealthy women gave the monastic orders
mansions, money with which to construct monasteries, material for robes, bowls,
food, medicine, and so forth. Historical studies have found that during the
first seven or eight centuries of Buddhism in India, Buddhism was patronized by
wealthy queens. These women provided a large portion of the material wealth of
the monasteries, as well as probably helping the political position of the
Buddhists. Although we cannot definitively say that Buddhism would not have
survived that period without the help of the queens, it is certain that
Buddhism would not have prospered nearly as much as it did.
On
a more mundane level, most of the daily giving of food to the bhikkhus and
bhikkhunis was done by lay women, as they were the ones who traditionally
prepared and served food. Thus, the daily life of the renunciates required
interaction with the lay women. As the bhikkhus were supposed to be celibate,
this constant interaction with lay women could cause quite a problem. The lay
women provided a temptation and a target for lust. In defense against their own
lustful tendencies, the bhikkhus developed a misogynistic philosophy. For
example, in the Anguttara-Nikaya (vi, 5, III, 56), monks are warned:
"Monks,
a woman, even when going along, will stop to ensnare the heart of a man;
whether standing, sitting or lying down, laughing, talking or singing, weeping,
stricken, or dying, a woman will stop to ensnare the heart of a man. Monks, if
ever one would rightly say: "It is wholly a snare of Mara," verily,
speaking rightly, one may say of womanhood: "It is wholly a snare of
Mara."6
This
point of view was given credence by the circumstances surrounding many monks'
entrance to the order. Often, husbands abandoned their wives and children in
order to become monks. As the women were left with little financial support and
a greatly reduced status in society, they often tried to woo their husbands
back. Although this tendency to present women as temptresses did have the
positive effect of helping the monks resist the temptation to renounce the
monastic life, it also had the negative effect of vilifying women. It placed the
blame for monks' feelings of lust on the women instead of on the monks. These
misogynistic ideas also provided support for reducing the freedoms allowed to
bhikkhunis.
So
what happened to the order of bhikkhunis in the centuries after the Buddha's death?
The order flourished for several centuries. It is claimed that in the third
century B.C.E., 96,000 bhikkhunis once gathered in Jambudipa. This is probably
an exaggeration, but the order was clearly thriving.7
In
the same century, Mahinda and some other monks travelled from India to Sri
Lanka to convert the inhabitants to Buddhism. He preached to many people,
converting many. He started an order of bhikkhus there. Queen Anula and her
maidens heard him and were impressed by his wisdom. They wanted to become
bhikkhunis, but he told them that he could not ordain them. Traditionally, it
takes ten bhikkhus to ordain a bhikkhu, and both ten bhikkhus and ten
bhikkhunis to ordain a bhikkhuni. Mahinda sent for his sister, Sanghamitta, who
was a bhikkhuni in India. She came, with eleven other bhikkhunis, and started
the nuns' order in Sri Lanka. This happened in approximately 250 B.C.E.
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