Buddhism in the West
The Integration of Buddhism into Western Society
by Sangharakshita
'The Integration of Buddhism into Western Society' is a very big subject.
To begin with, Buddhism is very big subject in itself, and it would hardly
be possible to speak of the integration of Buddhism into Western society,
or into anything else, without first explaining what one understood by
the term Buddhism. Is Buddhism a religion, or a philosophy, or a system
of ethics, or is it something quite different from any of these? Is it,
perhaps, something for which there is no word in our modern Western languages?
Does Buddhism exist independently of the various Eastern Buddhist cultures
in which it is historically embodied, or is it distinguishable and separable
from them? In order to be a Buddhist does one have to transform oneself
into a Tibetan, or a Japanese, or a Thai, in accordance with the particular
sectarian form of Buddhism one wishes to adopt? Then there is the subject
of Western society. That too is a very big subject. Society is 'a system
of human organizations generating distinctive cultural patterns and institutions
and usually providing protection, security, continuity, and a national
identity for its members.' As such, society has a cultural, an economic,
a legal, and a political dimension, and if one was to speak of the integration
of Buddhism into Western society one would have to deal with its integration
in respect of each of these dimensions. Finally, there is the subject
of integration which, though not as big a subject as either Buddhism
or society, is yet big enough. By the integration of Buddhism into Western
society does one mean its bodily incorporation into that society, unchanged,
and without its bringing about any change in that society, or does one
mean its diffusion throughout Western society?
Thus the subject of the integration of Buddhism into Western society
is a very big one, but the organizers of this Congress, besides asking
me to speak on it, have allotted me some forty-five or fifty minutes
in which to do so. Either they underestimated the dimensions of the subject
or overestimated my ability to deal with it in the time allotted. It
would be pleasant to think that the latter alternative was the case,
but if this is so then I am going to have to disappoint our good organizers,
and must ask them and you to forgive me. I am quite unable to deal with
the subject of 'The Integration of Buddhism into Western Society' systematically
in the space of some forty-five or fifty minutes. Therefore I shall deal
with it unsystematically, not to say subjectively. I shall deal with
it by telling you the story of my own interaction with Western society,
after I had spent twenty years in the East, in the hope that this will
shed at least some light on the very big subject of 'The Integration
of Buddhism into Western Society'.
In left England in 1944, a few days before my nineteenth birthday. By
that time I was already a Buddhist, having discovered Buddhism when I
was sixteen or seventeen and having at once realized that I was, in fact,
a Buddhist and always had been. In 1943, the fourth year of the war,
I was conscripted into the army, despite my having spent much of my childhood
as an invalid, and the following year I was posted to India, the land
of the Buddha. There followed postings to Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and to Singapore.
In 1947, the war having ended, I left the army and spent two years in
South India as a free-lance wandering ascetic. At the end of that period
I received the lower ordination as a Buddhist monk and the following
year, 1950, the higher ordination. During the seventeen years from 1947
to 1964 I studied with Indian, Tibetan, and Chinese Buddhist teachers,
meditated, and wrote and lectured on the Dharma, all the time remaining
in India and leading the simple life of a Buddhist monk and becoming
increasingly Indianized.
1964 saw a dramatic change. In that year I returned to England for what
was originally intended to be a short visit, and in 1967, having paid
a farewell visit to my teachers and disciples in India, I returned to
England for good and started a new Buddhist movement, the Friends of
the Western Buddhist Order. Thus after twenty years in the East, seventeen
of them as a monk, I was interacting with Western society. That society
seemed very strange to me, as it in many ways still does. It was strange
to me for two reasons. In the first place, not only had I been leading
the simple life of a Buddhist monk; I had also been leading that life
within the context of a society with a traditional culture, and Western
society was far from having a traditional culture. In the second place,
during the twenty years that I had been away Western society had changed,
at least English society had changed. Wartime austerity had been replaced
by postwar prosperity. There were more motor cars on the roads, more
telephones, refrigerators, and washing machines in people's homes. There
were launderettes and supermarkets--neither of which had I seen before.
There was television, with enormous aerials sprouting from the thatched
roofs of tiny country cottages. Moreover, manners and morals had changed.
People spoke differently, dressed differently, and behaved differently--sometimes
in ways that before the war would have would have been considered quite
shocking.
This was the society with which I was now interacting. This was the society
into which, after my twenty years in the East, I was trying to integrate
Buddhism when I started the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order.
The initial point of interaction was meditation. Mind, one could say,
started to interact with individual mind. Within weeks of my final return
to England I started conducting weekly meditation classes in a tiny basement
room in central London, only a few hundred yards from Trafalgar Square.
Subsequently I likened this basement room, in which the FWBO began its
existence, to the catacombs in which the early Christians took refuge
from their persecutors and where they developed their doctrine. In these
meditation classes I taught two methods of meditation, the anapana-sati
or 'awareness of in-and-out breathing' and metta-bhavana or 'development
of loving-kindness' (methods now taught throughout the FWBO), and it
was not long before people attending the classes began to experience
some of the benefits of these practices. Their minds became calmer and
clearer and they felt happier. This was only to be expected. Meditation
can be defined, at least provisionally, as the raising of the level of
consciousness by working directly on the mind itself, or, alternatively,
as the gradual replacement of a succession of unwholesome mental states
by a succession of wholesome mental states. Howsoever defined, meditation
means change, change for the better, in respect of one's mind, or heart,
or consciousness.
Thus the integration of Buddhism into Western society involves, to begin
with, raising the level of consciousness of at least some of the people
who make up that society. The two methods of meditation I have mentioned
are able to raise the level of consciousness only temporarily, but there
are other methods, also taught in the FWBO, which are able to raise it
permanently, or which are able, alternatively, to replace a succession
of unwholesome mental states by a succession of wholesome mental states
which, since they are imbued with 'clear vision', will never be replaced
by a succession of unwholesome mental states.
When I had been conducting my meditation classes for a few months the
FWBO held the first of its retreats. Some fifteen or twenty of us spent
a week together in a large house in the countryside, fifty miles from
London. We spent part of our time meditating, part of it in devotional
practices and discussion. Some people had come because they wanted to
deepen their experience of meditation, which with varying degrees of
success they were able to do. But this was not all. Without exception,
those taking part in the retreat found that simply being away from the
city, away from their jobs and families, in the company of other Buddhists,
and with nothing to think about except the Dharma, was sufficient to
raise their level of consciousness quite dramatically.
Here, then, was another point of interaction. The level of consciousness
of the people who make up Western society could be raised not only by
meditation, or working directly on the mind itself. It could also be
raised by changing the conditions under which they lived. It could be
raised by changing the environment. It could be raised, at least to some
extent, by changing society. The integration of Buddhism into Western
society therefore involves changing Western society. Inasmuch as our
level of consciousness is affected by external conditions, it is not
enough for us to work directly on the mind itself, through meditation,
as though it was possible for us to isolate ourselves from society or
to ignore the conditions under which we and others live. We must change
Western society, and change it in such a way as to make it easier, or
at least less difficult, for us to lead lives dedicated to the Dharma
within that society. To the extent that Western society has not been
changed by Buddhism, it could be said, to that extent Buddhism has not
been integrated into Western society. In order to change Western society
it will be necessary for us to create Western Buddhist institutions,
Western Buddhist life-styles. I shall have something to say about some
of these institutions in a minute.
At the time I was conducting meditation classes and leading retreats,
during the first few years of the FWBO's existence, I was delivering
public lectures, both under the auspices of the FWBO and at the invitation
of universities and other outside bodies. In these lectures I sought
to communicate the fundamental ideas or concepts of Buddhism in a way
that was both intelligible to a Western audience and faithful to the
spirit, and even to the letter, of Buddhist tradition. Here was yet another
point of interaction with Western society, this time one that was of
a more intellectual character. The integration of Buddhism into Western
society involves the introduction of Buddhist ideas into Western intellectual
discourse. By Buddhist ideas I do not mean the doctrinal refinements
of the Abhidharma or the philosophical subtleties of the Madhyamika and
Yogachara Schools, though these have begun to attract the attention of
professional philosophers and theologians in the West. I am speaking
of ideas so fundamental that Buddhists themselves often take them for
granted and fail to recognize their full significance. Such, for example,
is the idea that religion does not necessarily involve belief in God,
the creator and ruler of the universe, and that it is quite possible
for one to lead an ethical and spiritual life, and to raise the level
of one's consciousness, without invoking the aid of any outside, supernatural
power.
If Buddhism is to be integrated into Western society Buddhist ideas of
this fundamental kind, which have been known to strike those previously
unacquainted with them with the force of a revelation, will have to become
familiar to all educated Europeans and Americans. Moreover, we shall
have to establish, wherever possible, connections between Buddhist ideas
and concepts of Western origin, as I have done in the case of the Buddhist
idea of conditionality, mundane and transcendental, and the Western concept
of evolution. We shall have to be able to recognize the Buddhistic nature
of some of the insights of Western philosophers, poets, novelists, and
dramatists. Goethe, for example, has some interesting comments on self-education
and self-transformation--a subject of central importance in Buddhism.
The bridge between East and West must be built from both sides.
But to return to Western Buddhist institutions, which we are under the
necessity of creating if Western society is to be changed and Buddhism
integrated into that society. When the FWBO had held a few retreats,
some of the people who had taken part in them regularly started to feel
that they wanted to prolong the experience, at least to an extent. Even
if they were not in a position to move to the countryside, or give up
their jobs (though some did give them up), they wanted to live with other
Buddhists and have more time for thinking about the Dharma and, of course,
more time for practising it. In this way there came into existence what
came to be called residential spiritual communities. The members of these
communities did not just live under the same roof. They meditated together
every morning, ate together, studied the Dharma together, encouraged
one another in their Buddhist life, and contributed to the maintenance
of the physical basis of the community. That was twenty or more years
ago. Now the FWBO has scores of residential spiritual communities, in
a number of countries.
These communities are of several different kinds. Some are quite small,
consisting of only four or five persons, while others are relatively
large, consisting of anything up to thirty persons. Most are situated
in the city, though a few, including some of the largest, are to be found
in rural areas. Some community members have outside jobs, while others
work within the FWBO. The most successful, and perhaps most typical kind
of FWBO spiritual community, is the single sex community consisting of
either men only or women only. Mixed sex communities, including those
containing families, have not worked very well or lasted very long. Some
women's communities, however, contain mothers and children, and this
arrangement seems to work. Husbands and wives, as well as lovers, sometimes
live in separate, single sex communities.
Thus we change Western society, thereby integrating Buddhism into that
society, by creating Western Buddhist institutions, in this case the
institution of the residential spiritual community, which to some extent
replaces the institution of the nuclear family. The residential spiritual
community, as I have described it, is not an Eastern Buddhist institution.
In most Buddhist countries society is divided into two mutually exclusive
groups, the monastic and the lay, the latter being very much the larger
of the two. The FWBO is neither a monastic movement nor a lay movement,
and its communities are neither monastic nor lay communities, though
some members of some communities are celibate. I shall have more to say
about this aspect of the integration of Buddhism into Western society
towards the end of this talk.
Another Western Buddhist institution is the team-based right livelihood
business, in which the point of interaction with Western society is economic.
Some of the people who were living together in FWBO residential spiritual
communities, but who had outside jobs, started to feel that they wanted
to work together. In some cases this was because their present job was
not of a very ethical nature, and Buddhism attaches great importance
to what it terms 'right means of livelihood', the fifth step of the Buddha's
noble eightfold path. In others, it was because they did not want to
spend their working life in the company of people who were hostile or
indifferent to Buddhism or whose behaviour they found offensive. Thus
there came into existence the first of what came to be called the FWBO's
team-based right livelihood businesses. They were 'team-based' because
they consisted of a number of Buddhists working together along broadly
co-operative lines, and they were 'right livelihood' because they operated
in accordance with Buddhist ethical principles. But there was another
factor in their genesis. In 1975 the FWBO embarked on the creation of
'Sukhavati' and the London Buddhist Centre, in east London, at present
the second largest of its urban centres. Huge sums of money were needed.
Instead of appealing for help to wealthy Buddhists in the East, as other
groups might have done, the FWBO raised the money itself, partly by setting
up team-based right livelihood businesses which donated their profits
to the project. Such businesses thus came to do four things. They provided
those working in them with material support, they enabled Buddhists to
work with one another, they conducted themselves in accordance with Buddhist
ethical principles, and they gave financial support to Buddhist activities.
Over the years the FWBO has set up a number of team-based right livelihood
businesses, not all of which have survived. Existing economic institutions
are immensely powerful, and the integration of Buddhism into the economic
life of Western society is therefore a task of enormous difficulty. In
the early days of the FWBO I once did a television interview on Buddhism
while walking through the streets of the City, the financial centre of
London. Pointing to the Bank of England and the Stock Exchange, I remarked,
'This is what we are up against.' Nonetheless, some of our team-based
right livelihood businesses have done extremely well. One of them currently
'employs' more than sixty people and has an annual turnover of Û2,000,000.
We can now begin to see what the integration of Buddhism into Western
society actually involves. There is what we may term psychological integration,
consisting of the raising of the level of consciousness of at least some
of the people who make up that society. The level of consciousness is
raised by meditation, or working directly on the mind itself, as well
as by various indirect methods such as Hatha Yoga and T'ai Chi Chu'an
which I have not had time to mention. Since the level of consciousness
is affected by the conditions under which we live, we have to change
those conditions, change Western society, and in order to change Western
society we shall have to create Western Buddhist institutions. We shall
have to create, for example, residential spiritual communities, representing
the integration of Buddhism into Western society in the narrower sense
of the term, and team-based right livelihood businesses, representing
the integration of Buddhism into the economic life of Western society.
We shall have to integrate Buddhism into Western society intellectually
by introducing its fundamental ideas into Western intellectual discourse
and making them, in fact, familiar to all educated Europeans and Americans.
Unless we do these things, and many other things of the same kind, there
can be no question of any integration of Buddhism into Western society
and all talk of such integration will be just so much hot air. But though
I have spoken of the psychological, the social, the economic, and the
intellectual integration of Buddhism, there is one kind of integration
of which I have not spoken, even though it is the most important of all,
in the sense that all the other kinds of integration of Buddhism into
Western society depend upon it and cannot, in fact, exist without it.
Before going on to speak of this kind of integration, however, and therewith
begin thinking of bringing this talk to an end, I want to say a few words
about a broader kind of integration of Buddhism into Western society.
This broader kind of integration is the integration of Buddhism into
Western culture, in the sense of its integration into the whole body
of the fine arts, music, and literature. At the beginning of this talk
I referred to my returning to England for good in 1967 and founding the
FWBO. Earlier this year the FWBO celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary.
The celebrations included the performance of 'Carpe Diem', a Buddhist
oratorio by a member of the Western Buddhist Order, and a performance
of A Face Revealed, a play based on the first four chapters of the White
Lotus Sutra, written by another Order member. While it would be premature
to pronounce upon the intrinsic merits of these works, they undoubtedly
constitute points of interaction between Buddhism on the one hand and
Western music and drama on the other. They represent the integration
of Buddhism into Western culture. There are other points of interaction.
Over the years, members of the Western Buddhist Order and their friends
have produced Buddha-images and Buddha-icons which, while faithful to
the spirit of Buddhist tradition, show a sensitivity to Western aesthetic
values. A similar integration of Buddhism into Western culture seems
to be taking place, perhaps more sporadically, within certain North American
Buddhist circles.
But now for the kind of integration on which all the other kinds of integration
of Buddhism into Western society depend, and about which I have not yet
spoken. This most important integration of all is the integration of
the individual, that is, of the individual Buddhist. It is the individual
Buddhist who meditates, who goes on retreat, who lives in a spiritual
community or works in a team-based right livelihood businesses, and who
communicates the fundamental ideas of Buddhism. It is the individual
Buddhist who paints pictures, composes music, writes plays and poems,
and sculpts Buddha-images. Without the individual Buddhist there can
be no integration of Buddhism into Western society. The idea of such
a thing would, indeed, be absurd. But what is a Buddhist?
First of all let me say what a Buddhist is not. A Buddhist is not someone
who has simply been born into a Buddhist family, though being born into
a Buddhist family obviously does not prevent one from being a Buddhist.
A Buddhist is not someone who has made an academic study of Buddhism
and has an exhaustive factual knowledge of the history, doctrines, and
institutions of Buddhism. Such a person is no more a Buddhist than the
director of an art gallery is an artist or, perhaps I should say, than
the caretaker of an art gallery is an artist. Similarly, a Buddhist is
not someone who merely dabbles in Buddhism, who has a smattering of knowledge
about it, who airs purely subjective views on the subject, and who mixes
Buddhism up with Christianity, or Vedanta, or New Ageism, or what not.
What, then, is a Buddhist? A Buddhist is someone who goes for Refuge
to the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha, and who, as an expression
and as a reinforcement of that Going for Refuge, seeks to observe the
ethical precepts of Buddhism.
Going for Refuge to the Buddha means accepting the Buddha, and no other,
as one's ultimate spiritual guide and exemplar. Going for Refuge to the
Dharma means doing one's utmost to understand, practise, and realize
the fundamental import of the Buddha's teaching. Going for Refuge to
the Sangha means looking for inspiration and guidance to those followers
of the Buddha, both past and present, who are spiritually more advanced
than oneself. The ethical precepts that one observes as an expression
and as a reinforcement of that threefold Going for Refuge are the precept
of reverence for life, the precept of generosity, the precept of contentment,
and the precepts of truthful, gracious, helpful and harmonious speech,
and so on. The word refuge, which is the literal translation of the original
Indic term, is liable to be misunderstood. It does not have connotations
of running away, or of seeking to escape from the harsh realities of
life through losing oneself in pseudo-spiritual fantasies. Rather does
it represent (i) the whole-hearted recognition of the fact that permanence,
identity, unalloyed bliss, and pure beauty are not to be found anywhere
in mundane existence, but only in the transcendental Nirvanic realm,
and (ii) the whole-hearted resolve to make the great transition from
the one to the other.
Such is the Buddhist. Such is the individual without whom there can be
no integration of Buddhism into Western society. But the individual,
the individual Buddhist, does not go for Refuge to the Buddha, the Dharma,
and the Sangha alone or in isolation. He or she goes for Refuge in the
company of other individuals who also go for Refuge. He or she is a member
of the Sangha or spiritual community in the wider sense and it is this
Sangha, and not so much the individual Buddhist alone or in isolation,
that raises the level of consciousness of people living in Western society,
changes that society by creating Western Buddhist institutions, introduces
the fundamental ideas of Buddhism into Western intellectual discourse,
and interacts with Western fine arts, music, and literature. It is this
wider spiritual community that effects the psychological, social, economic,
and cultural integration of Buddhism into Western society.
This brings me back to the aspect of the integration of Buddhism into
Western society to which I referred earlier on, when I spoke of the FWBO
as being neither a monastic movement nor a lay movement. It also brings
me very nearly to the end of this talk. At the time that I started the
FWBO a Buddhist movement had been in existence in Britain for about fifty
years. It was a very small movement, and one of the reasons for its smallness
was that it was to a great extent controlled by people who, though sympathetic
to Buddhism, were not actually Buddhists, and who could not bring to
the work of making known the Dharma the energy and conviction of Buddhists.
A year after starting the FWBO I therefore founded not another Buddhist
society but a spiritual community, a Sangha, an Order. I founded the
Western Buddhist Order or WBO, all the members of which are Buddhists,
in that they all go for Refuge to the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha,
and undertake to observe the ten fundamental precepts of ethical behaviour.
It is this Order that directs FWBO activities and institutions in more
than a dozen countries, including Germany, and which I believe offers
a paradigm for the integration of Buddhism into Western society. Without
such an Order, their common membership of which enables individual Buddhists
to co-operate on the closest terms, there can be no integration of Buddhism
into Western society such as I have described. It is therefore good to
know that membership of the European Buddhist Union, which together with
the German Buddhist Union has organized this Congress, is open only to
bona fide Buddhist organizations whose membership is predominantly Buddhist
and whose council or board is under the control of professed Buddhists.
This is a move in the right direction and one that augurs well for the
future of Buddhism in Europe.
But while there can be no integration of Buddhism into Western society
without an Order, equally that Order itself must be an integrated Order
in the sense of being without serious internal divisions, that is, divisions
between Buddhists of different kinds. It must be a unified Order. The
Western Buddhist Order is a unified Order in three important respects.
Firstly, it is an Order of Buddhists, that is, of individuals who go
for Refuge to the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha, and who undertake
to observe the ten ethical precepts. It is neither a monastic Order nor
a lay Order, which is why the FWBO is neither a monastic movement nor
a lay movement. In the WBO and FWBO commitment, in the sense of Going
for Refuge, is primary, and life-style, in the sense of living more as
a monk or nun or more as a layman or laywoman, is secondary. This does
not mean that life-style is unimportant but only that it is less important
than commitment or Going for Refuge, the latter being the central or
definitive act of the Buddhist life and as such the fundamental basis
of unity and union among Buddhists. Secondly, the Western Buddhist Order
is an Order of both men and women, who are admitted on equal terms. Men
and women receive the same ordination, engage in the same spiritual practices,
and undertake the same organizational responsibilities. Thirdly and lastly,
the Western Buddhist Order is not a sectarian Order, in that it does
not identify itself with any one form of Buddhism. Instead, it rejoices
in the riches of the whole Buddhist tradition and seeks to draw from
those riches whatever is of value for its own practice of the Dharma
here in the West. Thus the Western Buddhist Order is a unified Order,
an integrated Order, and it is because it is an integrated Order that
it has been able to make its contribution to the integration of Buddhism
into Western society and, indeed, to offer a paradigm for that integration.
As I observed at the beginning of this talk, 'The Integration of Buddhism
into Western Society' is a very big subject, and I hope that by telling
you the story of my own--and the FWBO's--interaction with Western society
I have been able to shed at least some light on it. This Congress is
being held in Berlin, and I am addressing you not far from the area which,
three years ago, saw the dismantling of a notorious symbol of disunion
and disintegration. Happily East and West Berlin, and East and West Germany,
are now unified or, as we may say, integrated. We, the Buddhists of Europe
and America, are concerned with a different kind of integration--the
integration of Buddhism into Western society. Let us therefore do away
with our divisions. Let us do away with the divisions between monastic
and lay Buddhists, between men and women Buddhists, and between the followers
of different sects and schools of Buddhism. Let us have an integrated
Buddhism and an integrated Buddhist community. Let us base ourselves
firmly and unmistakably upon our common Going for Refuge to the Buddha,
the Dharma, and the Sangha.
One last word. I have spoken on the integration of Buddhism into Western
society because that is what I was asked to speak on. But as my talk
proceeded it will have become obvious to you that what we really have
to do is integrate Western society into Buddhism. There is much in Western
society that needs changing. Buddhism can help us change it. May this
Congress be a step in that direction.