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Thursday, October 11, 2007 | Reason : Commentary | print version Print | Comments

Document How China Got Religion

by Slavoj Zizek

Reposted from:
ttp://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/11/opinion/11zizek.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin

The Western liberal media had a laugh in August when China's State Administration of Religious Affairs announced Order No. 5, a law covering "the management measures for the reincarnation of living Buddhas in Tibetan Buddhism." This "important move to institutionalize management on reincarnation" basically prohibits Buddhist monks from returning from the dead without government permission: no one outside China can influence the reincarnation process; only monasteries in China can apply for permission.

Before we explode in rage that Chinese Communist totalitarianism now wants to control even the lives of its subjects after their deaths, we should remember that such measures are not unknown to European history. The Peace of Augsburg in 1555, the first step toward the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 that ended the Thirty Years' War, declared the local prince's religion to be the official faith of a region or country ("cuius regio, eius religio"). The goal was to end violence between German Catholics and Lutherans, but it also meant that when a new ruler of a different religion took power, large groups had to convert. Thus the first big institutional move toward religious tolerance in modern Europe involved a paradox of the same type as that of Order No. 5: your religious belief, a matter of your innermost spiritual experience, is regulated by the whims of your secular leader.

Contrary to the conventional wisdom, the Chinese government is not antireligious. Its stated worry is social "harmony" — the political dimension of religion. In order to curb the excess of social disintegration caused by the capitalist explosion, officials now celebrate religions that sustain social stability, from Buddhism to Confucianism — the very ideologies that were the target of the Cultural Revolution. Last year, Ye Xiaowen, China's top religious official, told Xinhua, the official Chinese news agency, that "religion is one of the important forces from which China draws strength," and he singled out Buddhism for its "unique role in promoting a harmonious society."

What bothers Chinese authorities are sects like Falun Gong that insist on independence from state control. In the same vein, the problem with Tibetan Buddhism resides in an obvious fact that many Western enthusiasts conveniently forget: the traditional political structure of Tibet is theocracy, with the Dalai Lama at the center. He unites religious and secular power — so when we are talking about the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, we are taking about choosing a head of state. It is strange to hear self-described democracy advocates who denounce Chinese persecution of followers of the Dalai Lama — a non-democratically elected leader if there ever was one.

In recent years, the Chinese have changed their strategy in Tibet: in addition to military coercion, they increasingly rely on ethnic and economic colonization. Lhasa is transforming into a Chinese version of the capitalist Wild West, with karaoke bars and Disney-like Buddhist theme parks.

In short, the media image of brutal Chinese soldiers terrorizing Buddhist monks conceals a much more effective American-style socioeconomic transformation: in a decade or two, Tibetans will be reduced to the status of the Native Americans in the United States. Beijing finally learned the lesson: what is the oppressive power of secret police forces, camps and Red Guards destroying ancient monuments compared to the power of unbridled capitalism to undermine all traditional social relations?

It is all too easy to laugh at the idea of an atheist power regulating something that, in its eyes, doesn't exist. However, do we believe in it? When in 2001 the Taliban in Afghanistan destroyed the ancient Buddhist statues at Bamiyan, many Westerners were outraged — but how many of them actually believed in the divinity of the Buddha? Rather, we were angered because the Taliban did not show appropriate respect for the "cultural heritage" of their country. Unlike us sophisticates, they really believed in their own religion, and thus had no great respect for the cultural value of the monuments of other religions.

The significant issue for the West here is not Buddhas and lamas, but what we mean when we refer to "culture." All human sciences are turning into a branch of cultural studies. While there are of course many religious believers in the West, especially in the United States, vast numbers of our societal elite follow (some of the) religious rituals and mores of our tradition only out of respect for the "lifestyle" of the community to which we belong: Christmas trees in shopping centers every December; neighborhood Easter egg hunts; Passover dinners celebrated by nonbelieving Jews.

"Culture" has commonly become the name for all those things we practice without really taking seriously. And this is why we dismiss fundamentalist believers as "barbarians" with a "medieval mindset": they dare to take their beliefs seriously. Today, we seem to see the ultimate threat to culture as coming from those who live immediately in their culture, who lack the proper distance.

Perhaps we find China's reincarnation laws so outrageous not because they are alien to our sensibility, but because they spill the secret of what we have done for so long: respectfully tolerating what we don't take quite seriously, and trying to contain its political consequences through the law.

Slavoj Zizek, the international director of the Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities, is the author, most recently, of "The Parallax View."

Comments 1 - 15 of 15 |

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1. Comment #77976 by ChrisMcL on October 11, 2007 at 11:31 am

 avatarI thought that the author had missed the point about that which he was writing until I read the last paragraph. Very nice.

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3. Comment #77996 by Steve Wrathall on October 11, 2007 at 12:27 pm

 avatarIt's said that moderate religion provides the cover for extreme religion. But maybe "culture" does as well. Maybe worldwide homogenisation of culture is the price we'll all have to eventually pay for world peace. Speak English, use metric, spend dollars, respect only reason and evidence. Yup, works for me.

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4. Comment #78004 by Goldy on October 11, 2007 at 1:01 pm

As I tell my wife, our leaders aren't so different. Hell, even our mail coming to NZ is opened and checked - just like China :-)
Good article.
Have to say I found the Chinese I know rather superstitious. There is much of the religious baggage still left in Chinese culture. Once the CCP goes, watch it all come washing back...

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5. Comment #78018 by Henri Bergson on October 11, 2007 at 1:49 pm

 avatarExcellent article; excellent thinker. I recommend his collection of essays, 'The Universal Exception'.

It's quite funny how he attacks capitalism by attacking liberals. In reality, Zizek is a hardcore Stalinist (he even has his portrait in his flat!).

It's the far-left attacking the centre-left who are actually now capitalists.

But 'respect' for other cultures ('multiculturalism') is simply a method of upper-middle class social control. Zizek makes this explicit.

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6. Comment #78049 by mmurray on October 11, 2007 at 3:52 pm

 avatar
This "important move to institutionalize management on reincarnation" basically prohibits Buddhist monks from returning from the dead without government permission: no one outside China can influence the reincarnation process; only monasteries in China can apply for permission.


Surely this has zilch to do with religion and everything to do with stopping the exiled Dalai Lama who is `outside China' from having any political influence.

When in 2001 the Taliban in Afghanistan destroyed the ancient Buddhist statues at Bamiyan, many Westerners were outraged — but how many of them actually believed in the divinity of the Buddha?


Not even the Buddha believed in the divinity of the Buddha. But why would I have to believe in the divinity of the Buddha to be outraged by the destruction of a piece of human cultural history?


Michael

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7. Comment #78052 by Damien White on October 11, 2007 at 4:25 pm

This reminds me of a book I once read which claimed that there was ancient Roman legislation prohibiting the transmutation of lead into gold, as it was devaluing the currency. 2000 years later, this 'law' was used as proof by alchemists that the ancient Romans must have been able to do so.
Therefore, if the Chinese regulate reincarnation, will this later be used as proof that it was possible?

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8. Comment #78054 by BAEOZ on October 11, 2007 at 4:58 pm

 avatarThis does demonstrate that the political correct who say we must tolerate other points of view and truth is relative help pernicuous world views to germinate and prosper in the west. It's also insulting to the people being tolerated that they can't be told the truth because it will upset them.
Scrap that last paragraph. It's entirely too serious for my persona on this website. Probably wrong too. :)

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9. Comment #78064 by Zzyx1170 on October 11, 2007 at 5:36 pm

He lost me when he wrote "All human sciences are turning into a branch of cultural studies." I wonder if he has been too long subjected to the rotting influence of post-modernist Humanities. Some association with real scientists could do him a world of good.

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10. Comment #78104 by GSP on October 11, 2007 at 9:23 pm

I am beginning this comment from the assumption that capitalism destroys social community (such as was implied by Zizek). If you do not agree with this, please do not take it up here; we can do it in the forum section of this site.

So, given that capitalism has been the source of disintegration within social groups, and assuming further that religion has traditionally provided that cohesion, if religion is removed, what will take its place (if we need anything)?

It seems to me that perhaps we have a (evolutionarily) built-in repulsion toward people who question "our" religion; this is reason why people take it so seriously and get so offended. But it also makes sense on a social scale; religion provided commonality for people within a group, so to question this religiosity would be to, in effect, threaten one's very existence (not to mention after-life).

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11. Comment #78109 by Bonzai on October 11, 2007 at 10:20 pm

GSP,

Is social cohesion always the supreme goal to strive for? One can argue that divorce,--hence family disintegration,-- is more common as a result of women having more options and no longer have to stick with bad marriage. Is this an argument for taking away women's rights and confining them to their traditional roles for the sake of social cohesion?

I think it is true that Capitalism destroys community, but "community" is often not as rosy as one may imagine.

Social cohesion often comes with a price. Oppressions based on tribe, gender and kinship are rife in many traditional communities where social cohesion is often achieved through (subtle or overt)coercion, demand of conformity and strict adherence to rigidly prescribed social roles. The Confucian ideal and the Hindu Caste system are some examples of this.

I am by no means cheering capitalist globalization, but it is undeniable that by bulldozing over the old order it does have the effect of eroding old authorities and traditional forms of oppression (the Dalits, or "untouchables" in India are the most enthusiastic supporters of globalization in India) It often creates new kinds of oppression, which may be a set back or an improvement depending on where and who you are. It is not all black and white.

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12. Comment #78176 by Mat on October 12, 2007 at 3:51 am

Bonzai said "...but "community" is often not as rosy and one may imagine."

I agree 101% with this statement. Communities in Swaziland, for example, espouse traditional behaviour which massively and permanently disempowers women from owning land and operating successful businesses. Men are able to beat and rape their wives with relative impunity from both the "formal" law as well as from "traditional" leaders. A woman whose husband dies can be forcibly removed from "his" land, which gets taken back by his family, leaving the woman homeless, landless and destitute.

This is all traditional, community behaviour. It is happening today, right now, and not just in Swaziland either.

This kind of traditional community systematically and deliberately causes untold suffering to women - and can also affect men that try to oppose it - for no better reason than that they've always done it.

Community is not necessarily a good thing. Swazi women's best chance for progress in reducing the stultifying oppression they face comes from "modernising" the Swazi legal system and changing the most pernicious aspects of community culture.

Preventing or opposing suffering is and has to be a moral absolute. Pretending that suffering isn't happening because "it's always been that way" or that it's an "intrinsic part of a traditional culture" just doesn't cut it. Suffering is suffering. And should be opposed.

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13. Comment #78231 by GSP on October 12, 2007 at 8:03 am

Thanks Mat and Bonzai. I didn't even consider the implied assumption in my statement; that social cohesion is necessarily positive. It's an interesting argument.

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14. Comment #78429 by nother person on October 12, 2007 at 8:48 pm


It is strange to hear self-described democracy advocates who denounce Chinese persecution of followers of the Dalai Lama — a non-democratically elected leader if there ever was one.



Preventing or opposing suffering is and has to be a moral absolute... Suffering is suffering. And should be opposed.


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15. Comment #78437 by keith on October 12, 2007 at 9:53 pm

 avatarBAEOZ,
I'm sure your post was right and that your words were correct. They just seem to be in the wrong order.

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