Female face of interfaith dialogue in Myanmar
Buddhist nuns at Myanmar's Shwedagon Pogoda in Yangon.- AP |
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis meets on Wednesday afternoon
with Myanmar’s Supreme Council of Buddhist monks, as well as with
the country’s Minister for Religious Affairs.
There are about half a million monks in the
country today, plus over 60.000 Buddhist nuns, often seen with
shaved heads and pink robes, collecting money or uncooked rice in metal alms
bowls.
Philippa Hitchen is in Yangon to cover this papal visit and
has been finding out more about the female face of Buddhism in
the country today….
Even the briefest visit to any city, town or village in
Myanmar leaves you in no doubt that this is an overwhelmingly Buddhist nation.
Golden gates and pointed domes, rise up out of the landscape and monks, in
their simple maroon or brown robes, are everywhere to be seen.
Deeply religious nation
According to the statistics, almost 90 percent of people
belong to this faith, with monks, collectively known as the Sangha, revered as
highly respected members of society. Outwardly, it’s a deeply religious
country, yet according to Ketu Mala, a well-known Burmese nun I met, there’s an
urgent need for reform within this very traditional, patriarchal society.
Educational reforms
In 2012 she started an education project known as the Dhamma
School Foundation, teaching Buddhism to young people, less as an ancient
religious belief system and more as a contemporary way of applying values of
love and compassion in their daily lives. By all accounts, she’s had remarkable
success in bringing Buddhist teachings into mainstream education, with over
20.000 training centres in schools across the nation. Beforehand, she told me,
at a meditation centre on the outskirts of Yangon, there was no real equivalent
of catechism or Sunday school for young Burmese girls and boys. It was a “top
down system” where the “monks did all the talking and praying”, with no
interest in the children’s views.
Active participation
Her method, on the other hand, she describes as an “active
learning system” which encourages participation, designing specific curricula
for the different school years. The idea is to make children and adults alike
take their faith more seriously, focusing less on superficial religious rituals
and more on a profoundly personal way of relating to one other. Or as Pope
Francis might put it, less “comfortably tepid, lukewarm” believers and more
genuine “joyful proclamation” of the faith.
Interfaith dialogue with women
Ketu Mala’s other passion is promoting equality for women,
within her faith and within Burmese society as a whole. She recently won an
award for a documentary film called ‘She’, produced together with a female
Muslim leader and with Catholic Sister Elizabeth Chit Pom, who works for an NGO
under the auspices of Myanmar’s bishops’ conference. Interfaith dialogue is
increasingly difficult here with the exploitation of religion by
ultra-nationalistic politicians.
Struggle for equality
Though she refutes the label ‘feminist’, Ketu Mala is doing
a PhD on the role of Buddhist nuns in Myanmar, adding that it’s still “not easy
to talk about gender equality” in the country today. When I mention Burmese
leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, Ketu smiles and says ‘The Lady’ faces many of the
same struggles too. There’s a long way to go before women enjoy the same
respect and rights as their male counterparts here, but this is a battle that
both these ladies are clearly committed to.
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