캄보디아의 승가와 국가
The state-sangha relations in the countries of Theravada Buddhism has often been described as a mutually dependent patron-client relation in which the state and the sangha support each other by performing their due roles. Yet this theory involves a normative dimension that prescribes such a relation...
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Published in | SUVANNABHUMI, 3(1) Vol. 3; no. 1; pp. 25 - 46 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | Korean |
Published |
부산외국어대학교 아세안연구원
30.06.2011
아세안연구원 |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2092-738X 2799-7839 |
DOI | 10.22801/svn.2011.3.1.25 |
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Summary: | The state-sangha relations in the countries of Theravada Buddhism has often been described as a mutually dependent patron-client relation in which the state and the sangha support each other by performing their due roles. Yet this theory involves a normative dimension that prescribes such a relation as the ideal in the Buddhist world. The explanatory power of this theory hence is hampered in a country where the ideal is not fully realized. In the wake of tumultuous political upheaval where political rivals vie for the state the ideal as well as the theory are put into a trial. The tragic history of modern Cambodia is a history of ceaseless conflict in which multiple contenders for the state had to define their relations with the sangha. The relations defined turned out less mutual than supposed. The state-sangha relations were rather unilaterally dependent. More often than not the sangha was subject to state control with no power to confront the state or coopted only to become a tool for political propaganda and manipulation. The sangha always played the role of client, waiting for the state to define the relation and to be benevolent. Even when the monks were forced to disrobe and when the sangha itself was annihilated, all they did was to wait for another patron state that would put the sangha back in place. The state-sangha relations the Cambodian history reveals were not close to one in which the two parties benefit each other on an equal basis. It was a patron-client relationship in which the client sangha had to be heavily dependent on the patron state. Such a unilaterally dependent relationship is the one that has prevailed in Cambodia. |
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Bibliography: | Institue for Southeast Asian Studies KISTI1.1003/JNL.JAKO201114436736864 https://suvannabhumi.bufs.ac.kr/suvannabhumi/index.php?pCode=MN200005&CgCode=v05&mode=view&idx=60179 |
ISSN: | 2092-738X 2799-7839 |
DOI: | 10.22801/svn.2011.3.1.25 |