4 May 2017 12:29 am
In the pre-Buddhist India, the position of women varied from time to time depending on changes in religious ideologies. In Vedic India women held an honourable position in society. According to the Rigveda women had access to the highest knowledge. They also had the freedom to participate in religious ceremonies. In domestic life there was no seclusion of the sexes and women were well respected. There is no evidence of child marriages. However, during the Brahmin period women suffered greatly. For that matter they were classed together with the Sudras said to be the lowest caste of untouchables as well as the dogs and the crows. In fact, Manu’s code of law the most relentless of the Brahmin law givers contains the most anti-feminist diatribes. Manu deprived women of their religious rights and spiritual life. Sudras, slaves and women were prohibited from reading the Vedas.Women could not attain heaven through any merit of their own. Manu elaborated the myth that all women were sinful and prone to evil. According to the code of Manu women do not need to perform any sacrifices or religious rites or observances on their own. Obedience to the husband alone would exalt the woman to heaven. This Brahmin superiority and monopoly was challenged by the Upanishads which questioned the very core of the Brahmin ritual system. But the Upanishads were not powerful enough to completely change the attitudes moulded through a long period of Brahmin supremacy.
In certain primitive societies in India, Africa and America wives were regarded as the personal property of their husbands; hence the custom of slaying, sacrificing or burying women alive to accompany their deceased husbands along with their belongings. The best known example is the Sathi pooja or self immolation of high caste Hindu widows; a savage crime which continued until early
ancient India.
The arrival of Buddhism in the 5th century BC, created a minor stir against Brahmin dogma and superstition. Buddhism rejected the caste structure, excessive ritualism and sacrifice.The basic doctrine of Buddhism which is salvation by one’s own effort; presupposes the spiritual equality of all beings both male and female. The Buddha saw the spiritual potential of both men and women and founded after lot of hesitation the order of Bhikkhunis or Nuns; one of the earliest organizations for women in the ancient world. The Buddha Sasana consisted of Bhikkhus, Bhikkhunis or laymen and laywomen, so that women were not left out of any sphere of religious activity. Thus, Buddhism accorded to women a position of absolute equality. In early Buddhist literature, one sees an intermingling of the genders.
During the time of the Buddha, there was in Indian society the widespread belief that woman was inferior to man. The Buddha while granting equality of status to women pointed out that women had an important and dignified role to play in society. He has defined the role of woman in society with great insight, fitting her harmoniously into the social fabric. Also, the Buddha hailed the woman as a lovable member of the household, held in esteem by numerous inter relationships and respected above all as the mother of worthy children. He stressed that sex did not matter and that in character and in her role in society, she may even rival men. The Buddha raised the status of women and made them realize their importance in society. He did not humiliate women but only regarded them as somewhat physically weak by nature. He saw the innate good of both men and women and assigned to them their due place in his teaching. The Pali term used to denote women is “Matugama” which means mother folk. The mother holds an honourable position in Buddhism. So doesw the wife. She is regarded as the best friend or “Paramaskha” of the husband.
The hostile and antagonistic attitude to women both in religion and in society which was widespread at the time was roundly criticized and challenged by the Buddha on numerous occasions, In the Kosala Samyutta the Buddha contradicts the belief of the Brahmans that the birth of a daughter was not as much a cause of joy as that of a son. The Buddha pointed out clearly that the woman had a
Buddhism was introduced to Sri Lanka at a time when both men and women in India were actively involved in its practice. In Sri Lanka too Buddhism evoked considerable interest irrespective of gender. This fact is clearly evident from the cave grants and the Pali chronicles. From the very inception of Buddhism in Sri Lanka both men and women were ordained as monks and nuns respectively.It is well known that the highest in the land together with their near and dear ones opted for ordination. Theri Sangamitta arrived in Sri Lanka accompanied by ten Bhikkhunis and they set in motion a succession of Vinaya teachers. Chinese chronicles have recorded visits of Sinhalese Bhikkhunis to Nanking in the 5th century AD followed by the establishment of the Bhikkhuni order in China. Historical records in Sri Lanka have clearly established that there were flourishing Bhikkhuni Vihares belonging to the Mahavihara, Jetavana and Abhayagiri sects up to the 10th century AD. The Chola occupation of Sri Lanka in the 11th and 12th centuries caused widespread damage and destruction to the Buddhist monasteries and institutions which resulted in the disappearance of both the Bhikkhu and Bhikkhuni Sasanas from the country. Fortunately for the monks some Sinhala Bhikkhus who had taken refuge in Burma were brought back by King Vijayabahu and the Bhikkhu order was restored. Unfortunately the Bhikkhuni order had perished for good and to this day it remains in
total disarray.
In Sri Lanka their is ample historical evidence to establish the participation of women in all religious observances and activities from the very inception of Buddhism without any let or hindrance. Several rulers honoured their mothers and wives by naming temples and monasteries after them. The naming of temples and monasteries after females seemingly did not bother the resident monks. Also, up to medieval times there were no restrictions on female employment in monasteries, a practice which is quite unacceptable today. In Sri Lanka there were no religious taboos with respect to women. It is abundantly clear that women did not lead cloistered lives. While the women of the upper classes took part both in politics and religion; all women rich or poor took part in religion freely and devoutly. In Buddhism death is considered to be a natural and inevitable end. As a result woman suffers no moral degradation on account of her widowhood. In Buddhist societies a widow was not called upon to advertise her widowhood by shaving her head and relinquishing her ornaments nor was she required to undergo self mortification or pay any penances. Above all there was no barrier to her remarriage. Also, they had the right to remarry after divorce. It is therefore clearly evident that Buddhism saved women from suffering various indignities, granted them near equality with men and retrieved the widow from abject misery. More important than the equality of status that the women in Buddhist societies enjoyed was the non segregation of the sexes. Segregation of the sexes in many non Buddhist societies has resulted in the seclusion and confinement of women behind veils and walls.
The Buddhist injunctions on the marital relationship is reciprocal containing mutual rights and obligations. Among Buddhists, marriage is a contract between equals. However, in Buddhist societies including Sri Lanka, there is a façade of husband domination. On the subject of terminating a marriage contract it is seen that in most cultures the woman is irretrievably bound by the chains of matrimony while the man can shed his shackles easily. In Buddhism marriage received no religious sanction and in the absence of a Buddhist legal code like the laws of Manu of the Hindus or the Sharia law of the Muslims, the dissolution of the marriage contract was settled by the individuals concerned or their families. Down the ages women in Buddhist societies have enjoyed equal status as Buddhism does not consider women to be inferior to men. In fact the husband is admonished to consider the wife a friend, a companion
and a partner.
The present day liberal attitude towards women in Sri Lanka is a trend that has continued from the remote past obviously under Buddhist influence. The position of women in many Buddhist countries especially in Thailand and Myanmar has been as favourable as in Sri Lanka. This is in direct contrast to the position of women in several non Buddhist societies as evinced by the veiled women of Islamic societies, the zenanas where high class Indian ladies lived in seclusion, the harems of imperial China in which thousands of concubines lived guarded by eunuchs and the devadasis of India who in the name of God were forced into a life of prostitution. Thus compared with the neighbouring Hindu, Confucian and Islamic societies women in Buddhist societies have enjoyed a much higher degree of freedom, independence and more often than not even equality
of status.