Monk accuses nominated head of Thai
Buddhism of fraud
26.03.2016
Max Constant Anadolu
Agency
Activist monk who led protests leading to 2014 coup says senior
monk protects wealthy temple accused of distorting Buddhist, having
links to divisive political clan
A Thai activist monk has accused a clergyman
nominated to lead the country’s Buddhist establishment of being
unfit for the post, due to his involvement in a tax scandal and
protection of a wealthy temple with alleged connections to a
divisive political clan.
“If someone in your country is involved in a tax
fraud scandal, could he be elected or appointed to lead the country
as prime minister or president? No, isn’t it?” Phra Buddha Issara
-- who led anti-government protests leading up to the 2014 coup --
asked in an interview with Anadolu Agency Saturday.
“For us, the Supreme Patriarch [the Thai Buddhist
church’s leader] is even more important than a president or a prime
minister because he is the leader of the faith,” Buddha Issara said
at his Or Noi temple in western Thailand.
“And if he is involved in a fraud scandal, we cannot
accept it,” he added.
The comments by the monk -- who has led several
demonstrations since the elected government of Yingluck Shinawatra
was ousted in a May 2014 coup he applauded -- addressed a
months-long controversy over the appointment of a successor to the
previous Supreme Patriarch, who died in 2013.
In January, the Supreme Sangha Council -- the top
administrative organization of Thailand’s monastic community --
nominated for the post the senior monk holding the highest title,
90-year-old Somdej Chuang.
The appointment of Chuang, however, has been blocked
since, following accusations that he tried to evade tax payments on
a vintage Mercedes Benz given to him by a devotee.
While police launched an investigation into the
case, Chuang has refused to respond to questioning.
Behind what might appear as simply a controversy
over a minor infraction lies a religious and political struggle for
authority over the 200,000 monks who make up the Thai monastic
community, or “sangha”.
The main motivation behind the campaign against
Chuang’s appointment is his protection of the enormous Wat
Dhammakaya temple, a wealthy and controversial temple located just
north of Bangkok that opponents accuse of distorting Buddhist
principles.
“It is known across the world that the Dhammakaya
temple has been distorting the teachings of Buddhism, by saying
that if you make donation, you will get richer and richer,” Buddha
Issara said Saturday.
“Somdej Chuang has been the mentor of Dhammakaya
temple’s abbot, Phra Dhammachayo, and he [Chuang] is a very senior
monk, but he never said anything to his disciple who breached
Buddhist discipline,” he underlined.
Controversies over the temple are compounded by its
alleged links to the Shinawatra political clan, whose leader
Thaksin -- Yingluck’s elder brother – served as prime minister from
2001 until his overthrow in a 2006 coup.
Few commentators and Buddhist scholars have spoken
positively about Wat Dhammakaya, or even Somdej Chuang.
Buddhist scholar Sulak Sivaraksa told Anadolu Agency
earlier this week that while he did not see eye to eye with Buddha
Issara on many matters, he agreed with the monk activist’s stance
on the Supreme Patriarch issue.
“Somdej Chuang is not capable of becoming Supreme
Patriarch,” he said. “He has been supporting the Dhammakaya temple
undeservedly, even after the late Supreme Patriarch wrote a letter
clearly condemning the abbot of the temple because he cheated
money.”
Sivaraksa stressed that under Buddhist teachings “a
monk who cheated money is no longer a monk.”
Since the mid-1990s, the Dhammakaya temple has been
involved in a number of financial scandals, often involving land
donations -- with several legal cases filed against the temple,
only to be withdrawn under Thaksin's premiership.
For Phra Buddha Issara, this is no a
coincidence.
“It is not possible to change history. It is very
clear that Thaksin helped Phra Dhammachayo to avoid a jail term,”
he said Saturday.
“Thaksin wrote a letter to the authorities in
charge, saying that it was better to stop the legal case against
Dhammachayo and the Dhammakaya temple in the name of
reconciliation,” he added.
Over the past ten years, as Thailand has been
destabilized by a political crisis -- punctuated by street
demonstrations, military coups and massacres of civilians -- the
turmoil has spread to the monastic community, where monks have
become divided along political lines.
While some associate with the mostly rural-based
“Red Shirts” -- supporters of Thaksin who advocate social change
and electoral democracy -- others are lining up behind the
conservative “Yellow Shirts”, who defend the status quo as well as
the bureaucratic and military domination of society.
For Buddhist scholar Vichak Panich, Yellow Shirts
currently have by far the upper hand.
“Buddhism has become a political tool for the elite.
It has become a tool of the social structure from above to oppress
the people, crushing their freedom and their rights to participate
and make change,” he told Anadolu Agency in a recent
interview.