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Tibetan Reform and the Kalmyk Revival of Buddhism

In:Inner Asia
Author:
Tara Sinclair
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Online Publication Date:
01 Jan 2008

Abstract

The anti-religious campaigns of the Soviet Union in the 1930s eradicated Kalmyk Buddhism from the public sphere. Following perestroika the Kalmyks retain a sense of being an essentially Buddhist people. Accordingly, the new Kalmyk government is reviving the religion with the building of temples and the attempted training of Kalmyk monks, yet monasticism is proving too alien for young post-soviets. According to traditional Kalmyk Gelug Buddhism authoritative Buddhist teachers must be monks, so monastic Tibetans from India have been invited to the republic to help revive Buddhism. The subsequent labelling by these monks of 'surviving' Kalmyk Buddhist practices as superstitious, mistaken or corrupt is an initial step in the purification of alternate views, leading to religious reform. This appraisal of historical practices is encouraged by younger Kalmyks who do not find sense in surviving Buddhism but are enthused with the philosophical approach taught by visiting Buddhist teachers at Dharma centres. By discussing this post-Soviet shift in local notions of religious efficacy, I show how the social movements of both reform and revival arise as collusion between contemporary Tibetan and Kalmyk views on the nature of true Buddhism.

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Title:
Tibetan Reform and the Kalmyk Revival of Buddhism
Article Type:
Research Article
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1163/000000008793066713
Language:
English
Pages:
241–259
Keywords:
REFORM;BUDDHISM;KALMYKIA;REVIVAL;RUSSIA
In:
Inner Asia
In:
Volume 10: Issue 2
Publisher:
Brill
E-ISSN:
2210-5018
Print ISSN:
1464-8172
Subjects:
Central Asia,Asian Studies
All TimePast 365 daysPast 30 Days
Abstract Views71016016
Full Text Views11800
PDF Views & Downloads6420

Tibetan Reform and the Kalmyk Revival of Buddhism

In:Inner Asia
Author:
Tara Sinclair
Search for other papers by Tara Sinclair in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
View MoreView Less
Online Publication Date:
01 Jan 2008
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€35.00

Abstract

The anti-religious campaigns of the Soviet Union in the 1930s eradicated Kalmyk Buddhism from the public sphere. Following perestroika the Kalmyks retain a sense of being an essentially Buddhist people. Accordingly, the new Kalmyk government is reviving the religion with the building of temples and the attempted training of Kalmyk monks, yet monasticism is proving too alien for young post-soviets. According to traditional Kalmyk Gelug Buddhism authoritative Buddhist teachers must be monks, so monastic Tibetans from India have been invited to the republic to help revive Buddhism. The subsequent labelling by these monks of 'surviving' Kalmyk Buddhist practices as superstitious, mistaken or corrupt is an initial step in the purification of alternate views, leading to religious reform. This appraisal of historical practices is encouraged by younger Kalmyks who do not find sense in surviving Buddhism but are enthused with the philosophical approach taught by visiting Buddhist teachers at Dharma centres. By discussing this post-Soviet shift in local notions of religious efficacy, I show how the social movements of both reform and revival arise as collusion between contemporary Tibetan and Kalmyk views on the nature of true Buddhism.

Title:
Tibetan Reform and the Kalmyk Revival of Buddhism
Article Type:
Research Article
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1163/000000008793066713
Language:
English
Pages:
241–259
Keywords:
REFORM;BUDDHISM;KALMYKIA;REVIVAL;RUSSIA
In:
Inner Asia
In:
Volume 10: Issue 2
Publisher:
Brill
E-ISSN:
2210-5018
Print ISSN:
1464-8172
Subjects:
Central Asia,Asian Studies

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PDF Views & Downloads6420
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