Will China’s spiritual
revival benefit the environment?
Ma Tianjie 01.06.2017
chinadialogue
Pulitzer Prize winner Ian Johnson discusses
his new book and whether faith can reshape the relationship between
man and nature
Ian Johnson’s latest book The Souls of
China: The Return of Religion After Mao has rekindled a national
conversation that started almost a century ago: what’s the
spiritual status of the Chinese people?
A hundred years ago, China’s humiliating
defeat on the world stage kicked off a painful round of
soul-searching within the country’s intellectual elites, many of
whom blamed it on the nation’s backward state of mind. Since then,
campaigns, movements and revolutions have been waged to reform and
reshape the soul of the Chinese people; some have advocated the
complete abolishment of traditional Chinese beliefs while others
have insisted on their reinforcement.
Johnson’s book documents a new phase in this
history of self-examination. By following various Chinese groups,
including pilgrims in Beijing, Daoists in Shanxi and Christians in
Chengdu, he depicts “a great awakening of faith that is shaping the
soul of the world's newest superpower”, which many outside China
are either unaware of or can’t fully understand.
On a sunny afternoon in downtown Beijing, we
talked to Johnson about his book, and particularly about how this
new awakening in Chinese society could form a foundation of
environmental awareness in China.
chinadialogue (CD): You’ve followed these faith communities in
China for years. What’s different about them compared to other
Chinese groups you interact with?
Ian Johnson (IJ): These are people who are looking for
community and some kind of togetherness in society. And people of
course find answers in different ways but there is a significant
number of them who find answers in faith groups such as pilgrimage
associations (香会).
The pilgrimage groups are like mildly
dysfunctional families [laughs]. There is a lot of shouting and
yelling, but there is always mutual respect, and, at the end of the
day, a lot of comradery. Members of pilgrimage groups are often
working class native residents. The churches are a bit more formal.
As people who go to church are from a higher socio-economic class,
they tend to be a bit more uptight.
CD: Through this "spiritual revival", what are
some of the values being emphasised?
IJ: Again,
community is the key point. People feel that they've lost this
sense of community. When they live in villages, everybody is
related to each other. There are clear ways of dealing with others.
Through urbanisation people come to big cities, or even much
smaller cities and county seats, where they don't know anybody
including their neighbours.
Even people who always live in the cities see
their communities essentially blown up through urban redevelopment.
People who once lived in one alleyway are now living all around the
city. So this is part of the reason that faith has some attraction.
It reminds me of the great awakening in the United States in the
19th century which was also a period of urbanisation and economic
change. People looked for answers in faith.
Of course, not everyone finds an answer in
religion. For issues like tainted milk powder or pollution, people
may attribute them to the lack of laws, rules or a free press. But
a strong moral component is also present in such discussions. There
is a belief that if people do not have a sense of right and wrong
then all these things are useless. So lots of people start to think
of it as spiritual, as a lack of minimum moral standards
(底线), which I think is often mistranslated in
English as "bottom line". These are things you won't do to get
ahead. And it is what a lot of people feel is missing in
China.
CD: In your book you feature places like
Miaofengshan, where pilgrims visit every year to pay tribute to the
Buddhist deity Our Lady of the Azure Clouds. When Western readers
think of a centre of worship they think of places like Mecca or
Jerusalem. What’s unique about Chinese pilgrimage
sites?
IJ: What's
special about Chinese centres of worship is their linkage with
mountains and the idea that mountains and holy places are almost
synonymous. Going back in the history you have the idea of yue
(岳),
now called a peak. You have Buddhist holy mountains and
specifically Daoist holy mountains like Wudangshan. People believe
mountains bring them physically closer to the heaven.
In Daoism, a temple is called a guan
(观)
which essentially means observatory, where you look at the stars
and observe heaven. There is no division between the physical and
the spiritual world. That’s probably why Chinese religions place a
big emphasis on physical cultivation. It’s somewhat similar with
Indian traditions such as Yoga, which started also as a purely
spiritual practice. You have the same thing in China with different
traditions often known as Qigong which is now making a
comeback.
CD: Does this say anything about the
relationship between man and nature in Chinese
culture?
IJ: On the more
abstract level there is this idea that the body is a microcosm of
the universe. You can recreate the universe in your body through
different cultivation techniques. When Daoists meditate in a cave
they talk about going back to the womb of the earth, trying to
resync with the earth on some symbolic level. On the other hand I
think it's a mistake to translate the traditional Daoist concept of
ziran (自然, nature) in a modern ecological way. It's
more of an idea that you should be part of the cosmos
(顺其自然).
Concretely there are moves by Daosim to
position itself as a green religion. But in my view it seems to be
an effort to rebrand itself because people have a hard time
understanding what Daosim is. The so-called ‘world religions’ like
Islam, Christianity and Buddhism, all have clear stories.
Shakyamuni was a prince. He went outside and saw the world
suffering. Then he discovered the solution to suffering was to end
desire.
Daoism is more of a folk religion which
doesn't really have a clear story, even though it is inside so much
of Chinese culture, from Tai Chi to Fengshui. Marketing Daoism
proves to be difficult. For historical reasons, it was also
socially marginalised by the Manchurian rulers of the Qing Dynasty
who were Buddhists.
The result is that even today the educational
level of Daoist priests tends to be low. Almost nobody has a
university degree. Buddhist temples would have monks with doctoral
degrees who are much more able to tell stories and convert people.
So Daoism is faced with a crisis and turns to ecology as a
re-marketing opportunity. I don't mean it's disingenuous or that
it's fake. But whether it will succeed or not is
debatable.
CD: Do you think Chinese religions have the
potential of forming the foundation of a new environmental
awareness and to contribute to the global conversation about
conservation?
IJ: There is
potential in the sense that most of the temples are in the
countryside and in mountainous areas. They used to have large land
holdings. And some of them present themselves as stewards of these
areas. I know some Daoist temples around Maoshan outside of Nanjing
have organic tea and organic herbal products. The challenge for
them is again the educational level of the priests who have
difficulty marketing themselves successfully to the better educated
urban elites. They even have trouble writing the promotional
materials. Nowadays there are local governments that assist Daoist
temples in marketing and attempts to elevate the level of
sophistication of Daoism in general.
I think overall, Chinese are thinking about
the same issues as other people around the world. These ideas that
societies are not organised fairly, that there is a lack of justice
and transparency which led to great political upheavals in the West
concern Chinese society as well. If there is one idea that unites
all the faith groups I’ve followed, it is the idea of justice, and
of "tian" or heaven. I think that's a very strongly Chinese idea
that society should be just. And justice is not something given by
a party or a political campaign but it is divinely given. In
Miaofengshan, these pilgrimage groups all perform stories of
righteousness as part of their rituals.
The spiritual revival shows that Chinese
people are participating in this global conversation. And it would
be interesting to see if China through Daosim or other religions
could contribute something unique.