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"Laos
is a landlocked nation squeezed between Thailand to the west and
Vietnam to the east, and sharing shorter borders with Burma in
the northwest and Cambodia in the south. As its position on the
map of southeast Asia might suggest, Laos is the product of early
contacts between the Khmers of Cambodia and the Thais who eventually
established Thailand. As Thai tribes migrated into the southwest
Asian peninsula during the latter half of the first millennium,
they came first down the Mekong river until they encountered the
rear guard of the Khmer tribes who had followed that route before
them. Some settled along the upper reaches of the Mekong, while
others resorted to the relatively uninhabited Chao Phraya, which
flows through the heart of present day Thailand, reaching the
sea at Bangkok. The Thai-related people who settled in the upper
Mekong region became the ancestors of the modern day Laos. Landlocked
and surrounded by more powerful cultures, Laos remains the poorest
country in southeast Asia in every way except for the renowned
Lao sense of humour and fun.
Lao
history in fact begins in the 14th century with a risqué
event, the seduction of one of the king's wives by his son Phi
Fa, heir apparent to the throne. For his indiscretion, Phi Fa
was banished. He and his son Fa Ngum journeyed south and took
up residence in the Khmer royal court at Angkor. There, Fa Ngum
studied under a Theravadin monk,gained favour of the Khmer king,
and eventually married one of his daughters. In about 1350, the
king of Angkor provided Fa Ngum with an army so that he could
reassert control over his father's lost inheritance.
By this time, Angkor was in a state of decline, and the political
centre of gravity in Thailand had shifted southward from Sukkhothai
to Ayutthaya. Angkor's weakness and this shift in power in Thailand
left the way open for Fa Ngum to establish an independent kingdom,
with ties to Angkor, along the upper reaches of the Mekong river.
Fa Ngum's coronation at Luang Phrabang in 1353 marked the beginning
of the historical Laos state. It also established the farthest
northern extent of Khmer civilization, since Fa Ngum's kingdom
was modeled on Angkoran precedents even though the Laos are racially
related to the Thais. Furthermore, Fa Ngum invited his Buddhist
teacher at the Khmer court to act as his advisor and chief priest.
Under his influence the new kingdom of Laos became firmly Theravadin,
as it has remained to the present day. This Buddhist master brought
with him from Angkor a Buddha image known as the "Phra Bang".
This image accounts for the capital's name and like the tooth
relic of the Buddha in Sri Lanka, became the palladium of the
kingdom.
From
the very beginning, Laos seems to have been just barely strong
enough to maintain a separate identity in the midst of its more
powerful neighbours. This it was able to do only by means of a
series of alliances, concessions and submissions to the Thais,
Burmese and finally the Vietnamese. As the Khmers too were finding
out about this time, it was a question of being dominated by the
related, Indianized cultures of Burma and Thailand or by the Vietnamese,
who were especially hated because of their sacking of the Lao
capital in 1479. Subservient alliances with Burma and Thailand
were undesirable for Laos, but they had the effect of reinforcing
Theravada Buddhism, which became the country's primary symbol
of continuity and identity in the face of its shifting political
fortunes.
Because
of the relatively weak central government of Laos, Theravada Buddhism
became the primary cement holding together the numerous ethnic
groups and inaccessible villages scattered through the mountainous
countryside. According to the Lao model of kingship , the king
sat upon the throne not so much because of divine right as because
of his obviously good karma in his previous lives. He was expected
to continue that good karma in this life by supporting the Sangha
and promoting Buddhism through royal construction projects. Pursuing
this role, King Visun (r. 1501-20) is remembered as the prime
mover behind the splendour of Luang Phrabang, the first capital
of Laos. Actually, Visun brought to fruition an ambitious Buddhist
construction program which had been begun by his two older brothers
in order to repair damage done by the Vietnamese in the previous
century. Since they were made of wood, few examples of these early
architectural works survive, but Luang Phrabang remains the site
of some of the most attractive Buddhist monuments and ruins in
southeast Asia.
Visun's
grandson Setthathirat (r. 1548-71) occupied the throne in 1548.
Soon, Burmese expansionism forced Setthathriat to form an alliance
with the Thais in 1560. The resulting treaty entailed shifting
the capital from Luang Phrabang to Vien Chan, a site closer to
the Thai capital at Ayutthaya and more conducive to trade with
and supervision by the Thais. Setthathriat did for Vien Chan what
King Visun had done for Luang Phrabang, carrying out a large-scale
Buddhist construction program.
Remnants
of Sutthathriat's works still stand, the most notable being the
hundred-yard square That Luang or "Great Shrine", a
temple mountain built in the Khmer style. Setthathriat also built
a second grand temple to house a precious jade Buddha known as
the Phra Keo. This image was the second palladium of Laos until
it was removed to Bangkok by a Thai invading force in 1778. It
has remained in Bangkok ever since in the Wat Phra Keo as Thailand's
most sacred image. This same image is also the primary symbol
of Lao resentment against Thailand.
In 1778,
Thailand conquered the southern kingdom of Vien Chan, asserted
control over the northern kingdom of Luang Phrabang, and removed
both the Phra Bang and Phra Keo Buddha images to Thailand. In
1782, the Thais restored the Vietnamese dynasty as a puppet regime
in Vien Chan and returned the Phra Bang Buddha image. Despite
continuing Thai domination of the entirety of Laos, the country
remained divided into a northern and southern kingdom until 1893,
when the French blockaded Bangkok and forced Thailand to cede
to France the upper reaches of the Mekong river. The French protectorate
thus established over Laos had little to do with the distribution
of the Lao people, many of whom still resided in Thai territory.
The Thais, on the other hand, resented having been deprived of
the most valuable portion of their Laotian holdings. Again, no
one was happy with European map-making when Laos eventually became
independent.
Briefly
during World War II, Laos was nominally independent under Japanese
control. After World War II, in 1946, reassertion of French control
in southeast Asia led directly to the formation of a communist
independence movement under Ho Chi Minh. The French collapse in
southeast Asia in 1954 led to a coalition government in which
both Lao royalists and Lao communists were represented. This coalition
quickly collapsed, and Laos, like Vietnam, entered the 1960's
in the throes of a full-scale civil war between communist and
pro-western factions, which were now aided primarily by the United
States. After the defeat of American forces in Vietnam in 1975,
the communists quickly gained control in Laos, at about the same
time as Pol Pot's Khumer Rouge gained control in Cambodia. In
Laos, however, the transition to communism was not the nightmare
that the Cambodians faced.
In
the course of this much more benign transition to communism in
Laos, there is little evidence of significant suppression of Buddhism.
Even during the revolution, one of the main propaganda tactics
of the Pathet Lao was to promulgate the compatibility of Buddhism
and communism and to enlist the support of monks for their revolution.
While many monks worked against the communists, it is clear also
that many worked actively for them. When the communists came to
power, they forbade the giving of alms to monks, but announced
provision of a state-controlled ration of rice for monks. This
ration was to be supplemented by food produced or earned by the
monks themselves. Since then, monks have been required to perform
productive roles in the community, primarily their traditional
roles as teachers and healers.
What
they teach and the medicine they practice, however, are controlled
by a Department of Religious Affairs, administered by the Ministry
of Education. The Department of Religious Affairs has overseen
a program designed to expunge "counter-revoulutionary"
and "exploitative" material from the traditional Buddhism
of Laos. Under this program, in addition to teaching Buddhism,
monks have a significant responsibility for teaching literacy
and a patriotic, communist version of Lao history. Monks were
traditionally consulted for the relief of illness, but prior to
the communist takeover they administered primarily blessings and
magical amulets. Now they administer traditional herbal medicine
and where possible, western medicine.
The
communist reformation of Buddhism, implemented by a panel of respected
Lao monks, has been criticized as repressive by some Thai and
expatriate Lao Buddhists. Alternatively, it has been praised by
Lao and Thai reformists as representing a return to a purer Buddhism
unencumbered by superstitious accretions. There can be little
doubt, from the standpoint of Theravada doctrine, that traditional
herbal and western medicine are an improvement over the previous
practices of performing exorcisms and selling blessings and magical
amulets. It is also evident that the previous catering to traditional
Lao spirit cults and ancestor worship had nothing to do with scriptural
Buddhism.
It
is not yet clear how extensive revisions of the Buddhist texts
themselves may be, or how such revisions will effect Buddhism
in Laos. On the surface, there does not appear to be much material
in the Theravada texts that conflicts with the moderate communism
of the Lao regime. Some of the restrictions upon monks set forth
in the Vinaya Pitaka have been abandoned - most notably the prohibition
upon working the soil - but Vinaya rules are not strictly observed
by all monks in any Buddhist country in the world. On the whole,
most reports from Laos indicate that Buddhism there thrives in
harmony with the communist regime. Clearly, there is much scope
for a revival of the crippled Buddhism of Cambodia with recourse
to the closely related and still healthy Buddhism of Laos. Laos
and Cambodia have diplomatic relations going back to the 14th
century, both espouse Theravada Buddhism, and both have lived
under communist regimes."
Extract
from "Buddhism: A History" by Noble Ross Reat.