The power struggle
behind Thailand's temple row
MATTHEW TOSTEVIN and
COD SATRUSAYANG 24 February 2017
BANGKOK (Reuters) - A
stand-off between security forces and monks at Thailand's biggest
temple has exposed a struggle as much about power as religion in
the predominantly Buddhist country, where the junta has shut down
dissent since a 2014 coup.
For the past week, some 4,000 police and
soldiers have surrounded the Dhammakaya temple, which practices a
form of Buddhism at odds with conservatives. It is widely seen as
linked to the populist movement of former prime minister Thaksin
Shinawatra - which the temple firmly denies - and its size makes it
increasingly influential.
Dhammakaya has created the most visible
challenge to the authorities since the coup by refusing for months
to hand over its former abbot - wanted for money laundering - and
by frustrating a police search.
"It is trying to create unrest and subverting
state power," said Paiboon Nititawan, a former senator appointed by
the military to a council on solving Thailand's
problems.
Thai society traditionally has three pillars:
nation, monarchy and religion.
The establishment controls the first two through
the junta and King Maha Vajiralongkorn, who appointed a
conservative as Supreme Patriarch for Thailand's 300,000 monks days
before the temple confrontation.
Dhammakaya is of a different scale to over
40,000 other temples. Its headquarters outside Bangkok covers
nearly 10 times the area of the Vatican and is completed by a
UFO-shaped golden temple dome. Since 1970, it has established over
90 branches in 35 countries.
The temple runs television stations, slick
websites and active social media accounts. It holds choreographed
ceremonies of tens of thousands of people.
Yet Dhammakaya's millions of adherents are still
a minority within Thailand's almost entirely Buddhist
population.
MEDITATION AND MONEY
Its fundraising has made Dhammakaya much richer
than other temples - and angered critics who say it has deserted
Theravada Buddhist teachings to shun material
possessions.
Parallels are drawn to China's Falun Gong and
Turkey's Gulenists. Both were fast growing religious groups using
modern methods, which were suppressed when their influence grew too
great.
A spokesman for the Department of Special
Investigation said the government's aim was only to bring in the
temple's influential former abbot, Phra Dhammachayo, in a way that
respects Buddhism.
The temple says the 72-year-old monk is very ill
and has not been seen for months.
It questions charges against him, some of which
relate to money allegedly embezzled from a credit union that lost
hundreds of millions of dollars. Monks say they have cooperated
fully with the search.
"We have never been involved in any political
affairs," said Phra Pasura Dantamano, a senior monk.
"Every project we have conducted is transparent.
If anyone fears a threat, it’s only those who obtained power
improperly," he said. "All we do is teach monks, teach self
discipline, meditation. Is that wrong?"
The temple rejects any link to former prime
minister Thaksin Shinawatra or his 'red-shirt' followers. Weng
Tojirakarn, a red shirt leader, also told Reuters there was no
link.
Regardless, both groups represent newcomers
whose power threatened - or could threaten - the establishment's
hold.
Dhammakaya is explicit that giving brings merit.
When that "bears fruit", it brings more wealth, which means more
donations - to support Buddhist activities.
Such activities have expanded Dhammakaya's
influence.
By helping temples in hard times, it has brought
dozens into its orbit. That in turn increased its support on the
Sangha religious council, Buddhism's governing body.
Critics say its influence grew too
great.
"Nirvana is for sale and the more you give, the
better you become," said Mano Laohavanich a former Dhammakaya monk
but now a strong critic. "It’s like a parasite, which has taken
control of Thai Buddhism."
Three members of the Sangha council declined to
comment on Dhammakaya. So did the government's National Office of
Buddhism.
SHOWDOWN
The showdown for control began last year when
the Sangha recommended a candidate for Supreme Patriarch with links
to Dhammakaya and was under investigation over taxes on a vintage
car.
The junta rejected that candidate. Then, when
the new king took the throne in December, the law was changed to
let him choose a patriarch and ignore the Sangha's
wishes.
Four days after a new patriarch, chosen from
Thai Buddhism's more austere fraternity, was installed the junta
declared emergency powers over Dhammakaya.
The problem for police is how to pass through
chanting, saffron-robed monks when violence against them would be
taboo.
Police have raised the pressure with more
forces, rolling out razor wire and threatening more temple leaders
with arrest.
The temple's adversaries believe charges of
scandal and the scenes at the compound will at least discourage
Thais from joining Dhammakaya. Longer term, other steps are being
considered.
"Assets owned by the Dhammakaya Foundation
should be transferred to the temple and the leadership of the
temple needs to change," said Paiboon, the former senator. "Someone
outside the temple must be appointed to steer the temple back to
the right path."