Yiguandao
Yiguandao 一貫道 | |
---|---|
Type | Way of Former Heaven sect |
Classification | Chinese salvationist religion |
Founder | Wang Jueyi |
Origin | late 19th century Shandong |
Members | China, 1940s: 12 million[1] Japan: ~50,000[2] South Korea, 2015: 1.3 million[3] Taiwan, 2005: 810,000[4] |
Other name(s) | Zhenli Tiandao (眞理天道), Tiandao (天道) |
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Yiguandao / I-Kuan Tao (traditional Chinese: 一貫道; simplified Chinese: 一贯道; pinyin: Yīguàn Dào; Wade–Giles: I1-Kuan4 Tao4),[α] meaning the Consistent Way or Persistent Way, is a Chinese salvationist religious sect that emerged in the late 19th century, in Shandong, to become China's most important redemptive society in the 1930s and 1940s, especially during the Japanese invasion.[9] In the 1930s, Yiguandao spread rapidly throughout China led by Zhang Tianran, who is the eighteenth patriarch of the Latter Far East Tao Lineage, and Sun Suzhen, the first matriarch of the Lineage.
Yiguandao started off with a few thousand followers in Shandong in the 1930s, but under the Patriarch and Matriarch's leadership and with missionary work the group grew to become the biggest movement in China in the 1940s with millions of followers.[10] In 1949, Yiguandao was proscribed in mainland China as an illegal secret society and heretical cult as part of the greater antireligious campaign that took place. Yiguandao has since flourished in Taiwan, despite decades of persecution by the Kuomintang that officially ended in 1987 with the legalization of Yiguandao and a government apology.[11] Yiguandao is still not able to be officially promoted in the mainland, but there are many members who live and practice there.[12]
According to Dr. Sebastien Billioud, Yiguandao can be viewed as an updated version of the tradition unity of the three teachings of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism. In Yiguandao's case it also incorporated Christianity and Islam becoming a unity of the five teachings.[13]
Yiguandao is characterized by an eschatological and soteriological doctrine, presenting itself as a way to salvation. It also encourages adherents to engage in missionary activity.[5] Yiguandao is the worship of the source of the universal reality personified as the Eternal Venerable Mother, or the Splendid Highest Deity (Chinese: 明明上帝; pinyin: Míngmíng Shàngdì). The highest deity is the primordial energy of the universe, identified in Yiguandao thought with the Tao in the wuji or "unlimited" state and with fire. The name used in contemporary Yiguandao scriptures is the "Infinite Mother" (Chinese: 無極母; pinyin: Wújímǔ) and the "lantern of the Mother" (Chinese: 母燈; pinyin: mǔdēng)—a flame representing the Mother—is the central focus of Yiguandao shrines.[5]
Beliefs
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Spread to other regions and return to the mainland
[edit]Taiwan
[edit]In Kuomintang-governed Taiwan after 1949, there was initially a climate of restrictions of Chinese traditional religions and Yiguandao was attacked as immoral, politically charged, and suspect of cooperation with communists of mainland China. Yiguandao was officially outlawed in 1952 and driven underground. The Buddhist circles of Taiwan denounced it as heterodox "White Lotus" and called for its suppression, and succeeded in opposing the government when there was a proposal for lifting the ban in 1981.[53] The effort to legalize Yiguandao came from Chou Lien-hua and Chu Hai-yuan of the Institute of Ethnology at Academia Sinica, who lobbied on its behalf.[54]
In the period of rapid economic growth of Taiwan, starting in the 1960s and proceeding through the 1980s and 1990s, Yiguandao spread its influence by entering business and industrial development. Many members became important businessmen, for instance Chang Yung-fa, the founder of the Evergreen Marine Corporation, was the chief initiator of a Yiguandao subdivision and in the 1990s almost all the managers of his corporation were Yiguandao members.[55] The same strategy of "combining missionary work and business" facilitates the development of Yiguandao in mainland China, where Yiguandao businessmen began reestablishing the religion since the 1980s by means of investment.[56] Another mean by which Yiguandao expanded in Taiwan was that of charity.[57]
Through the years of the ban Yiguandao persisted as an underground phenomenon. In 1963 it was reported that the religion had about fifty thousand members, and grew rapidly through the 1970s and the 1980s, counting more than 324,000 members in 1984. Five years later in 1989 Yiguandao had 443,000 members or 2.2% of Taiwan's population.[58] Recognizing the social power of the religion, the Kuomintang officially gave Yiguandao legal status on 13 January 1987.[59] As of 2005 Yiguandao has 810,000 members in Taiwan (3.5% of the population) and tens of thousands of worship halls.[60] Its members operate many of Taiwan's vegetarian restaurants.
The Republic of China I-Kuan Tao Association was formed in 1988 as an umbrella organisation bringing together the majority of lineages.
Korea
[edit]Yiguandao was transmitted in the Korean peninsula (Hanja: 일관도 Ilgwando) in the 1940s through the pioneering work of Dukbuk Lee, Sujeun Jang, Buckdang Kim and Eunsun Kim. Korean Ilgwando is incorporated as the International Moral Association which was founded in the 1960s by Buckdang Kim (1914-1991), and as of 2015 it has 1.3 million members in South Korea (2.5% of the population).[3]
Japan
[edit]In the 1950s, Yiguandao spread to Japan (where its name is Ikkandō), during the persecutions in mainland China. In Japan, it has attracted about fifty thousand members from both Chinese minorities and Japanese ethnic groups. It is articulated into two main branches: ① Kōmōseidōin (孔孟聖道院 Kǒng Mèng Shèngdào Yuàn, "School of the Holy Way of Confucius and Mencius") and Sentendaidōnihonsoōtendan (先天大道日本総天壇 Xiāntiāndàdào Rìběn Zǒng Tiāntán, "Japan Headquarters of the Great Way of Former Heaven") with 8000 members each; and ② Tendō (天道 Tiāndào, "Heavenly Way") and Tendo Sotendan (天道総天壇 Tiāndào Zǒng Tiāntán, "Headquarters of the Heavenly Way") respectively with 300 and 30,000 members.[2]
Southeast Asia
[edit]Since the 1970s, Yiguandao spread to Southeast Asia. In Thailand (where it is named อนุตตรธรรม Anuttharatham) it has grown so strong in recent decades to come into conflict with Buddhism; as of 2009, there were over 7000 worship halls, and it is reported that 200.000 Thais each year convert into the religion.[8] In Singapore, the Yiguandao has three great public halls (white multiple-storied buildings with traditional Chinese architectural features) and more than 2,000 house churches.[61]
Mainland China
[edit]The relationship between the government of mainland China and Yiguandao began to change by the mid-1980s.[62] In those years, Yiguandao was spreading secretly back to mainland China from Taiwan; entrepreneurs belonging to Yiguandao were building temples, networks and factories.[63] According to scholar Philip Clart, missionaries from Taiwan have been particularly active in proselytization in Fujian, where there is strong presence of Taiwanese-owned companies and joint ventures.[64] According to a 1996 report, the movement can be found in every province of China. In 1978, there was one of the biggest cases of government suppression against the "Fraternal Army of the Soldiers of Heaven" (天兵弟子軍 Tiānbīng Dìzǐjūn),[65] which has been formed by thousands of Yiguandao members.[66] As of 1999, the Japanese publication Tokyo Sentaku reported that there were 2 million Tiandao members in Sichuan, equal to 2.4% of the province's population.[67]
In the 1990s, backroom meetings between Chinese government officials and representatives of Yiguandao were held; by the mid-2000s these meetings had become public. Between 2000 and 2005, Yiguandao was removed from the Chinese government's official list of "evil cults", and branches of the organization were tacitly allowed to return to China.[68] Yiguandao also cooperates with academic and non-governmental organizations in mainland China.[69] In an attitude of growing interest for the movement on the mainland, by the 2010s a Yiguandao text was published in the People's Republic.[70]
However, Yiguandao remains illegal in China in common with the majority of Chinese salvationist religions which relocated to Taiwan in 1949. [65] Human rights and religious freedom groups have noted ongoing harassment of Yiguandao followers in China.[71] In December 2023, a Taiwanese member of Yiguandao was arrested in China on suspicion of spreading Yiguandao teachings. [72]
Structure and schisms
[edit]Yiguandao is a collection of at least nineteen divisions (subsects).[60] Generally all of them share the rule to not proselytize among members of other branches of the "golden line" of Yiguandao.[46] Since the 1980s some denominations of Yiguandao have established a professionalized clergy.[73] The majority of subsects affiliated with the Republic of China I-Kuan Tao Association upon its formation in 1988. The World I-Kuan Tao Headquarters, encompassing federations throughout the world, was established in Alhambra, California in 1996.
The primary organization unit of Yiguandao are local worship halls (佛堂 fótáng, literally "halls of awakening"). Although some of them may develop into elaborate complexes of public buildings, they are in most cases private house churches (the gatherings are held in private homes of Yiguandao members), a type of organism which provides Yiguandao the ability to blossom in the private sphere circumventing states' definitions and management of "religion".[61]
Following the death of Zhang Tianren in 1947, the majority faction followed Sun Suzhen while a minority faction followed Zhang's widow Liu Shuaizhen. The latter group is now known as Tien Tao or Tiandao (天道) under the auspices of the Republic of China Tiandao Association (中華民國天道總會).
There are a number of divisions which are no longer considered to be part of Yiguandao; some of them are: the Miledadao founded by Wang Hao-te in 1982, the Haizidao founded by Lin Jixiong in 1984, the Holy Church of China (Zhonghua Shengjiao) founded by Ma Yongchang in 1980, the Guanyindao founded by Chen Huoguo in 1984, the Yuande Shentan founded by Wu Ruiyuan, and the Jiulian Shengdao founded by Lin Zhenhe in 1992.[46]
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Lu 2008, pp. 37–38.
- ^ a b Ng Ka Shing. Yiguan Dao in Japan: A Case Study of a Chinese Religion in the Japanese Settings.
- ^ a b Kim 2015.
- ^ "Taiwan Yearbook 2006". Government of Information Office. 2006. Archived from the original on July 8, 2007. Retrieved September 1, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f Lu 2008, p. 23.
- ^ Kubo Noritada. "Ikkando ni tsuite (On the Unity Sect)". Toyo Bunka Kenkyujo kiyo, n. 4, March 1953: 186-187.
- ^ Official website: Korean 일관도 Ilgwando International Morality Association
- ^ a b Yusheng Lin. Yiguandao and Buddhism in Thailand. 2015.
- ^ Ownby (2015), pp. 702–703.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 21.
- ^ a b Goossaert, Palmer, 2011. p. 340
- ^ Kuo (2017), p. 245.
- ^ Billioud, Sebastien (2020). Reclaiming the Wilderness: Contemporary Dynamics of the Yiguandao. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 3.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 24.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 25.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 150–151.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 143–144.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 27.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 26.
- ^ a b 南屏道, 济 (1988). 性理題釋 Explanations of the Answers to the Truth. Hongkong: Jiu-hua Central Altar of the I-Kuan.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 78.
- ^ a b 無妄, 郭 (1985). 一貫道大綱. 發行人郭正忠.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 53.
- ^ Billioud, Sébastien; Thoraval, Joël. (2015). The Sage and the People: The Confucian Revival in China. Oxford University Press. p. 263. ISBN 978-0190258146
- ^ "Yiguandao’s Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic". ari.nus.edu.sg. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ Billioud, Sébastien. (2020). Reclaiming the Wilderness: Contemporary Dynamics of the Yiguandao. Oxford University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0197529133
- ^ Davison, Gary Marvin; Reed, Barbara E. (1998). Culture and Customs of Taiwan. Greenwood Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-0313302985
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 27, 106.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 28.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 27–28.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 106.
- ^ Billioud (2017), p. 211.
- ^ Ma (2011), p. 173–175.
- ^ Palmer (2011), p. 4.
- ^ Topley, 2011. p. 211
- ^ Ter Harr, 1999. pp. 16-59
- ^ a b c Lu (2008), p. 3.
- ^ a b c d Lu (2008), p. 4.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, pp. 29–30.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 31.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 31–33.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 32.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 34.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 34a: "Also the use of spirit writing accounted for the sect's amazing power of mobilization. [...] Spirit writing activity was closely linked to the Chinese intellectual tradition. As a divinatory way of gaining some foreknowledge of examination questions, spirit writing had been widely practiced by the educated, especially examination candidates, since the Song dynasty."
- ^ a b c Lu 2008, p. 35.
- ^ a b c Lu 2008, p. 101.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 36.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 37.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 38.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 39.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 40.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 41.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 49–50.
- ^ Taiwan: A New History.
- ^ Lu 2008, pp. 58–59.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 59.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 60.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 63.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 64.
- ^ a b Lu 2008, p. 5.
- ^ a b Francis Lim Khek Gee. The Eternal Mother and the State: Circumventing Religious Management in Singapore Archived November 29, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Asia Research Institute, Working Paper No. 161, August 2011.
- ^ Kuo (2017), p. 243.
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 166.
- ^ Australian Government Refugee Review Trubunal: CHN32439 – China – Yiguandao 2007 report.
- ^ a b Munro (1994), p. 270.
- ^ Thom Beal. China cracks down on rural cults. World Tibet Network News, Tuesday, June 11, 1996.
- ^ Tokyo Sentaku [in Japanese]. 1 June 1999. "Cult Groups Seen Shaking Party Leadership" (FBIS-CHI-1999-0614 1 June 1999/WNC). Cited in: ecoi.net, The Tian Dao (Yi Guan Dao, Yiguandao, Yi Guandao) sect and treatment of believers by the authorities. [CHN32887.E] [ID 171890].
- ^ Kuo (2017), pp. 244–245.
- ^ Xinping, Zhuo (2014). "Relationship between Religion and State in the People's Republic of China" (PDF). Religions & Christianity in Today's China. 4 (1): 22–23. ISSN 2192-9289.
Very often academic organizations or non-governmental organizations in China Mainland collaborate with Yiguandao (normally under the title of "Society for Confucian and Mencian Morality"), Dejiao (Religion of Virtue) and Tiandijiao (Religion of the Emperor of Heaven).
- ^ Billioud (2015), p. 299.
- ^ "The Ongoing Crackdown on Yi Guan Dao".
- ^ "Religious groups warned of China travel dangers".
- ^ Lu 2008, p. 167.
Sources
[edit]- Billioud, Sébastien; Joel Thoraval (2015), The Sage and the People: The Confucian Revival in China, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0190258146
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Billioud, Sébastien (2017). "Yiguandao's Patriarch Zhang Tianran: Hagiography, Deification and Production of Charisma in a Modern Religious Organization". In Ownby, David; Goossaert, Vincent; Zhe, Ji (eds.). Making Saints in Modern China. Oxford University Press. pp. 209–240. ISBN 978-0190494568.
- Billioud, Sébastien (2020), Reclaiming the Wilderness, Contemporary Dynamics of the Yiguandao, Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780197529133
- Goossaert, Vincent; Palmer, David A. (2012), The Religious Question in Modern China, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 9780226005331
- Haar, B. J. ter (1992), The White Lotus Teachings in Chinese Religious History, University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 9780824822187
- Kim, David William (2015). A Chinese New Religious Movement in Modern Korea. XXI. World Congress of the International Association for the History of Religions. Erfurt, Germany.
- Kuo, Cheng-Tian (2017), Religion and nationalism in Chinese societies, Amsterdam University Press, ISBN 978-9048535057
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{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Munro, Robin; Mickey Spiegel (1994). Detained in China and Tibet: A Directory of Political and Religious Prisoners. Human Rights Watch. ISBN 978-1564321053.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)- List first published in: "Appendix: Sects and Societies Recently or Currently Active in the PRC". Chinese Sociology & Anthropology. 21 (4): 103–104. 1989. doi:10.2753/CSA0009-46252104102.
- Ownby, David (2015). "Redemptive Societies in Twentieth Century China". In Goosaert, Vincent; Kiely, Jan; Lagerway, John (eds.). Modern Chinese Religion, 1850-1950. Brill. pp. 685–730. ISBN 9789004304642.
- Palmer, David (2011), "Redemptive Societies in Cultural and Historical Context", Journal of Chinese Theatre, Ritual and Folklore / Minsu Quyi (173): 1–12
- Topley, Marjorie; DeBernardi, Jean (2011), Cantonese Society in Hong Kong and Singapore: Gender, Religion, Medicine and Money, Hong Kong University Press, ISBN 9789888028146