Religions Journal (MDPI)

2010 | 78,561,805 words

Religions is an international, interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed open access journal published monthly online by MDPI. The journal publishes a variety of scholarly works including research papers, reviews, communications, and research reports, as well as comprehensive book reviews and discussions. The “Religions” journal aims to foster critical, her...

Beyond the Mainland: An Introduction

Author(s):

Jack Meng-Tat Chia
Department of History, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117573, Singapore


Download the PDF file of the original publication


Year: 2022 | Doi: 10.3390/rel13040357

Copyright (license): Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.


[[[ p. 1 ]]]

Citation: Chia, Jack Meng-Tat. 2022 Beyond the Mainland: An Introduction Religions 13: 357 https://doi.org/10.3390/ rel 13040357 Received: 26 March 2022 Accepted: 12 April 2022 Published: 13 April 2022 Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations Copyright: © 2022 by the author Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommonsorg/licenses/by/ 4.0/) religions Editorial Beyond the Mainland: An Introduction Jack Meng-Tat Chia Department of History, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117573, Singapore; jackchia@nusedu.sg Mention “Southeast Asian Buddhism” and what comes to mind is often Theravada Buddhism, the dominant religion in the mainland Southeast Asian states of Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Thailand. Therefore, it is no surprise that scholars of Southeast Asian Buddhism have long been interested in studying how Theravada Buddhism shaped the history, culture, and politics of mainland Southeast Asia. Conversely, maritime Southeast Asia conjures the image of the Malay Archipelago, consisting of the Muslim-majority countries of Brunei, Indonesia, and Malaysia, as well as the Catholic-majority states of the Philippines and East Timor. Within the region, Singapore is considered an anomaly because of its predominant Buddhist and Chinese population. As I have argued elsewhere, scholars of Southeast Asia tend to highlight the cultural and historical differences between mainland and maritime Southeast Asia and emphasize the religious contrast between mainland Theravada Buddhism and maritime Islam and Catholicism when conceptualizing the region’s religious diversity ( Chia 2020 , p. 7) Recent scholarship over the past decade has started to pay more attention to the presence of Buddhist communities in the Islamic Malay world, Catholic Philippines, and Buddhist-majority Singapore. While some scholars have highlighted the vibrant activities and networks of Chinese Mahayana Buddhists ( Chia 2020 ; Dean 2018 ; Dy 2015 ; Hsu 2021 ; Hue 2020 ; Tan 2020 ), others have noticed a small but lively Theravada Buddhist presence ( Blackburn 2012 ; Chia 2021 ; Johnson 2013 ; Kitiarsa 2010 ; Samuels 2011 ). More intriguingly, recent studies have revealed that Mahayana and Theravada Buddhists in the maritime region of Southeast Asia are not isolated within their communities but frequently interact and even merge the practices of different traditions together ( Chia 2018 ; Zhang 2018 ). In this same vein, this Special Issue of Religions brings together five articles that explore the diverse beliefs and practices of Buddhist communities in the maritime Southeast Asian states of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore. The collection of essays—written by innovative Southeast Asian-based scholars in Anthropology, Chinese Studies, Communication Studies, History, and Religious Studies—provide new perspectives on the lesser-known Buddhist communities in this region. These five articles are empirically grounded in a specific community, but they situate their analyses in much broader disciplinary and theoretical perspectives Beyond the Mainland opens with two articles that focus on Buddhist-majority Singapore Guan Thye Hue, Chang Tang, and Juhn Khai Klan Choo’s “The Buddhist Philanthropist: The Life and Times of Lee Choon Seng” uses the biography of Lee Choon Seng ( 李 俊 承 , 1888–1966) as a prism to examine the development of lay Buddhist piety and philanthropy in twentieth-century Singapore. Lee Choon Seng, a successful Chinese businessman and community leader, was arguably the most prominent Buddhist householder in Singapore history. He was best known for his role as the founding and inaugural chairman of the Singapore Buddhist Federation in 1949. The article presents Lee Choon Seng’s religious activities in three phases of his life: the pre-World War Two era (1920–1942), the Japanese Occupation period (1942–1945), and the post-war era (1945–1966) Keng Yung Phua’s “‘Contramodernist Buddhism’ in a Global City-State: Shinnyo-en in Singapore” explores the history and development of Shinnyo-en ( 真 如 苑 ), a new Japanese Buddhist movement, from its arrival in Singapore in 1983 to the present. Building on Religions 2022 , 13 , 357. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel 13040357 https://www.mdpi.com/journal/religions

[[[ p. 2 ]]]

Religions 2022 , 13 , 357 2 of 3 the notion of “Contramodernist Buddhism,” Phua argues that the changing memory of the Japanese Occupation in Singapore, coupled with the spiritual appeal of Shinnyo-en’s contramodernist spirituality and practices to Singaporean Chinese Buddhists, has led to the organization’s rapid expansion in this global city-state. The article places the development of Shinnyo-en in the larger context of Japan-Singapore relations and concludes with a discussion of Shinnyo-en’s socially engaged Buddhist activities in Singapore’s society For its part, Lee Ooi Tan’s “Conceptualizing Buddhisization: Malaysian Chinese Buddhists in Contemporary Malaysia” discusses the “Buddhisization” of Chinese Buddhist community in contemporary Malaysia. “Buddhisization,” as Tan suggests, is the process of “guiding someone or something under the influence of Buddhism.” Drawing on data collected from interviews and participant observation at the individual and institutional levels, Tan argues that “Buddhisization” in Malaysia is both a product of Islamization and a strategy of survival in the Muslim-majority nation. He highlights six aspects of Buddhisization activities among Malaysian Chinese Buddhists, namely taking refuge, participating in Buddhist associations, taking Buddhist examination, attending meditation courses, choosing Buddhist weddings, and preferring Buddhist funerals Next, Yulianti’s “The Birth of Buddhist Organizations in Modern Indonesia, 1900–1959,” looks at the emergence and evolution of Buddhist organizations in late colonial and early post-colonial Indonesia, revealing that Buddhist organizations established during this period served the needs of an emerging Buddhist community from diverse national and ethnic backgrounds. She demonstrates how the Peranakan Chinese community was actively establishing Buddhist organizations and propagating the Dharma, accelerating the growth of Buddhism in the world’s largest Muslim nation. The article offers a brief history of a number of prominent Indonesian Buddhist organizations, including the Java Buddhist Association, Batavia Buddhist Association, Gabungan Sam Kauw Indonesia, Persaudaraan Upasaka Upasika Indonesia, and Buddhist Study Club Finally, Aristotle Chan Dy’s “Buddhist Modernism in the Philippines: Emerging Localization of Humanistic Buddhism” brings to light the growth of humanistic Buddhism ( 人 間 佛 教 ), a modernist form of Chinese Buddhism, in the Philippines. Dy analyzes how two humanistic Buddhist organizations—Ciji ( 慈 濟 ) and Foguangshan ( 佛 光 山 )—seek to localize Buddhist teachings and practices to attract a wider following in the Catholicmajority maritime Southeast Asian country. He reveals that these two organizations rely on education, culture, and charity as a platform to localize themselves and cater to the needs of the local population. Yet, as Dy concludes, Ciji and Foguangshan can do more to translate Buddhist teachings into various Philippine languages The Buddhists who are the focus of the articles in this Special Issue are mostly ethnic Chinese, be they migrants or local-born descendants. While the articles have offered some valuable insights into the Buddhist experiences in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore, there is considerable room for further exploration into the practices and activities of non-Chinese Buddhists in these locations. Furthermore, little is known about the minority Buddhist population in Muslim Brunei and Catholic East Timor. Thus, there are many more Buddhist persons and institutions in maritime Southeast Asia that deserve our attention, and they should be the focus of future research endeavors by scholars within and outside the region In conclusion, I would like to thank Roy C. Amore, Mark Berkson, and numerous anonymous reviewers for their valuable feedback and constructive criticism. I would also like to thank Kiki Zhang and the editorial staff at Religions for their support and production of this Special Issue. I hope this collection of essays will stimulate further interest in and research on the Buddhist communities beyond the Theravada mainland Funding: This research was funded by the National University of Singapore Startup Grant (A-0003648-00-00) Conflicts of Interest: The author declares no conflict of interest.

[[[ p. 3 ]]]

Religions 2022 , 13 , 357 3 of 3 References Blackburn, Anne M. 2012 Ceylonese Buddhism in Colonial Singapore: New Ritual Spaces and Specialists, 1895–1935 . Asia Research Institute Working Paper Series, No. 184. Singapore: Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore Chia, Jack Meng-Tat. 2018. Neither Mahayana Nor Theravada: Ashin Jinarakkhita and the Indonesian Buddhayana Movement History of Religions 58: 24–63. [ CrossRef ] Chia, Jack Meng-Tat. 2020 Monks in Motion: Buddhism and Modernity across the South China Sea . New York: Oxford University Press Chia, Jack Meng-Tat. 2021. The Road Less Travelled: From Landways to Seaways in the Study of Theravada Buddhism Journal of Global Buddhism 22: 211–18 Dean, Kenneth. 2018. Whose Orders? Chinese Popular God Temple Networks and the Rise of Chinese Mahayana Buddhist Monasteries in Southeast Asia. In Buddhist and Islamic Orders in Southern Asia: Comparative Perspectives . Edited by R. Michael Feener and Anne M. Blackburn. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press, pp. 99–124 Dy, Ari C. 2015 Chinese Buddhism in Catholic Philippines: Syncretism as Identity . Mandaluyong City: Anvil Publishing, Inc Hsu, Yu-Yin 徐 郁 縈 . 2021 Xinjiapo Renjian Fojiao de Qicheng Zhuanhe 新 加 坡 人 間 佛 教 的 起 承 轉 合 [The Origin and Transformation of Humanistic Buddhism in Singapore] . Hong Kong: Centre for the Study of Humanistic Buddhism, Chinese University of Hong Kong Hue, Guan Thye 許 源 泰 . 2020 Shicheng Foguang: Xinjiapo Fojiao Fazhan Bainian Shi 獅 城 佛 光 : 新 加 坡 佛 教 發 展 百 年 史 [The Buddha Lights of Lion City: The Hundred-Year Development of Buddhism in Singapore] . Hong Kong: Centre for the Study of Humanistic Buddhism, Chinese University of Hong Kong Johnson, Irving Chan. 2013 The Buddha on Mecca’s Verandah: Encounters, Mobilities, and Histories along the Malaysian-Thai Border . Seattle: University of Washington Press Kitiarsa, Pattana. 2010. Buddha-izing a Global City-State: Transnational Religious Mobilities, Spiritual Marketplace, and Thai Migrant Monks in Singapore Mobilities 5: 257–75. [ CrossRef ] Samuels, Jeffrey. 2011. “Forget Not Your Old Country”: Absence, Identity, and Marginalization in the Practice and Development of Sri Lankan Buddhism in Malaysia South Asian Diaspora 3: 117–32. [ CrossRef ] Tan, Lee Ooi. 2020 Buddhist Revitalization and Chinese Religions in Malaysia . Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press Zhang, Wenxue. 2018. Interactions between Mahayana and Theravada Buddhism in Colonial Singapore. In Theravada Buddhism in Colonial Contexts . Edited by Thomas Borchert. New York: Routledge, pp. 42–58.

Let's grow together!

I humbly request your help to keep doing what I do best: provide the world with unbiased sources, definitions and images. Your donation direclty influences the quality and quantity of knowledge, wisdom and spiritual insight the world is exposed to.

Let's make the world a better place together!

Like what you read? Help to become even better: