When
a person wishes to join the Buddhist Order, he is first ordained
as a novice. As a symbolic act of his renunciation of the
worldly life, he is asked to shave off his hair and put on
a robe appropriate to the monastic tradition, which he has
entered. The Preceptor, who is a senior monk, then ordains
him usually the abbot. The Preceptor and an instructor are
then given the responsibility for guiding the novice through
his period of monastic training. At the end of this period,
the novice may receive the higher ordination as a monk (bhikkhu)
or a nun (bhikkuni).
An
ordained member of the Order is provided with shelter, food,
clothing and medical cares. His life is secure, though not
luxurious. His time is spent on the following activities,
namely
(1)
study, either in groups or individually;
(2) the performance of assigned tasks for the maintenance
of the monastic institution;
(3) meditation;
(4) participation in collective observances like the recitation
of the disciplinary code on new moon and full moon days;
(5) and the performance of religious services for the lay
community.
The
amount of time taken up by any one of these activities depends
on what the individual member can and wants to do, as well
as the nature of the monastic institution that he lives in.
Although
members of the Order are subject to the code of discipline
and have renounced all but the most basic possessions, they
retain the freedom to express their views. The system is highly
democratic. Important decisions are normally made collectively
and only after all the members have had the opportunity to
air their views.
At
first, education in Buddhist monasteries was confined to the
study of topics on Buddhist Teaching like the basic doctrines,
the rules of discipline and the tales of the deeds of the
Buddha in His former lives. Gradually, however, Buddhist monastic
education became more comprehensive in scope. In the great
Buddhist monastic universities of India, students were taught
everything from Buddhist and non-Buddhist Philosophy to Grammar
and Composition, Logic, Mathematics, Medicine and even the
Fine Arts.
In
an age when education was not yet the responsibility of the
state, the Buddhist monastic universities played an important
role in providing the people with an education. When Buddhism
spread to other parts of Asia, various Buddhist monastic universities
were established in China, Tibet and the Buddhist countries
of Southeast Asia. Several of these are in existence even
to this century.