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Thích Quảng Độ

Thích Quảng Độ (釋廣度)([Thích Quảng Độ]; 27 November 1928 – 22 February 2020) was a Vietnamese Buddhist monk and scholar who was the patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam (UBCV) from 2008 until his death.[1] Since the execution of his master at the hands of the communist Việt Minh in his teenage years, Thích Quảng Độ had been involved in political activism, firstly against the anti-Buddhist policies of the Catholic President of South Vietnam Ngô Đình Diệm. After the fall of Saigon, the UBCV was banned by the communist government, and as one of the senior monks in the organisation, Thích Quảng Độ was at the forefront of the UBCV's defiance of the government, refusing to join the government-endorsed Vietnamese Buddhist Church. He was detained repeatedly by the communist authorities in the last 45 years of his life for his resistance and criticism of their policies, particularly his calls for multi-party democracy. During the Vietnam War period, he also served as a university academic in Buddhism, translated sutras and wrote books, notably a nine-volume Buddhist encyclopedia, and two-volume dictionary between Vietnamese and Sino-Vietnamese.

Thích Quảng Độ
TitleTăng Thống (Patriarch)
Personal
Born27 November 1928
Died22 February 2020(2020-02-22) (aged 91)
ReligionBuddhism
NationalityVietnamese
SchoolThiền
Senior posting
PredecessorThích Huyền Quang

In 2002, he was awarded the Homo Homini Award for human rights activism by the Czech group People In Need, which he shared with his predecessor as patriarch Thích Huyền Quang and Thadeus Nguyễn Văn Lý.[2] He was also awarded the Thorolf Rafto Memorial Prize and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Life

Thích Quảng Độ was born Đặng Phúc Tuệ in Thanh Chau village[3] in Thái Bình Province in northern Vietnam,[4] and became a monk at age 14. During the Vietnamese famine of 1945, he walked for two days from Thanh Sam Temple, where he was training to his home village, where he carried his gravely-malnourished oldest brother from the home to the local temple and nursed him back to health.[5] At age 17 he witnessed his religious master Thích Đức Hải executed by the revolutionary People's Tribunal.[6] He quoted in open letter to Communist Party Secretary-General Đỗ Mười in 1994 that "Then and there I vowed to do all that I could to combat fanaticism and intolerance and devote my life to the pursuit of justice through the Buddhist teachings of non-violence."[6][3]

In the 1950s, Thích Quảng Độ travelled to India, Sri Lanka and other parts of Asia to further his Buddhist training and serve as an academic at various universities,[3] spending seven years abroad before returning to Saigon in South Vietnam to teach Buddhism.[7] He was a professor at the Van Hanh Buddhist University and Saigon University among other institutions in the 1960s and 1970s.[3] He translated various Buddhist texts into Vietnamese and wrote Buddhist textbooks,[4] notably a two-volume Buddhist dictionary between Vietnamese and Sino-Vietnamese, and oversaw a nine-volume Vietnamese language Buddhist encyclopedia.[8]

Political opposition

While a member of the leadership of the UBCV, Thích Quảng Độ became an activist, fighting against the anti-Buddhist policies of the Catholic President of South Vietnam Ngô Đình Diệm. After a military raid of Buddhist monasteries in Hue and Saigon, Thích Quảng Độ was arrested on 20 August 1963. He and thousands of other Buddhists endured torture and persecution while imprisoned by the Diem government. He was released after Diem regime was toppled in military coup in November 1963. As a result of imprisonment, Thích Quảng Độ struggled with tuberculosis before having a lung operation in Japan in 1966.[3]

In 1965, Thích Quảng Độ was appointed as the Secretary-General of the Viện Hóa Đạo (Institute for the Dissemination of Dharma) of the UBCV.[4]

In 1975 Vietnam was under communist control, and the UBCV was once again unwelcome in Vietnam. As a result, the UBCV facilities were seized, and documents burned. Thích Quảng Độ was active in protesting the government's actions, and after attempting to gather Buddhists from other regions in non-violent opposition, he was arrested on charges of 'anti-revolutionary activities' and 'undermining national solidarity'.[3] He spent 20 months at the Phan Dang Luu Prison in solitary confinement in a cell approximately 2m2 in size with a hand-sized window,[9] before he was tried and released in December 1978. Later that year he was nominated by Betty Williams and Mairead Maguire to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.[10][7]

In 1982 the Vietnamese Government created a Buddhist alternative, called the Vietnam Buddhist Church, which was state sponsored and controlled by the Vietnam Fatherland Front. Because of Quảng Độ's opposition to the new church, he was again jailed.[3] At one meeting of the Viện Hóa Đạo, he stated to the attendees that 'If you want to pursue glory, then go ahead, but this boat, regardless of whether it is disintegrating, broken or unsteady, let us look after it'.[5] He rejected an approach from the Minister of Public Security Mai Chi Tho to take up a leadership role in the government-backed Buddhist organisation.[3] Quảng Độ would spend the next 10 years in exile in the village of Vu Doai,[10] in Thai Binh.[7] His 84-year-old mother was expelled with him, and died in 1985 due to inadequate medical care and malnutrition.[3] In 1992, he returned to the Thanh Minh Pagoda in Saigon.[7]

Yet again in 1995, while attempting to send a fax to overseas Buddhists to expose government abuse of the UBCV by obstructing UBCV flood relief effors,[9] he was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison and a further five years of probation on the grounds of 'undermining the policy of unity and exploiting the rights of freedom to impede the interests of the state'.[4] This led to condemnation by the likes of Nobel laureates the 14th Dalai Lama, Jose Ramos Horta, Mairead Maguire and Francois Jacob, and the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.[3] He was released in September 1998 in response to international pressure on the communist government, and returned to Thanh Minh Monastery.[4] In October 2000 he led a delegation of monks to provide relief in An Giang Province in the Mekong Delta but they were detained by communist police before being forced to return to Saigon after being accused of threatening national security.[7][3]

Thích Quảng Độ became the President of the UBCV's Institute for the Dissemination of the Dharma in 1999, meaning that he was the second-ranking UBCV dignitary after patriarch Thich Huyen Quang.[10]

In February 2001, just before the 9th Congress of the Vietnamese Communist Party, Thích Quảng Độ started a pro-democracy campaign as part of an eight-point program, including free elections as part of a multi-party democracy, trade union membership and 'the abolition of all degrading forms of imported culture and ideologies that pervert Vietnamese spiritual and moral values'.[7] The communist government responded by detaining him, before releasing him in June 2003.[7] In February he published an open letter advocating multi-party democracy and civil rights.[11] He further stated that they were “more important than economic development” and without them “we cannot make any progress in the real sense.”[9] In a 2003 interview, he stated "People are very afraid of the government ... Only I dare to say what I want to say. That is why they are afraid of me".[9] However, he was again detained in October 2003 after an unauthorised UBCV meeting.[11] He was officially released in 2005, but a UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention reported that he was still effectively under detention.[9]

In 2008, as one of his last wishes Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang named Thích Quảng Độ as the new patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam, a position he would occupy until his death.[4] Upon succeeding Thich Huyen Quang, Thích Quảng Độ stated that 'The best way to honour our late Patriarch is by putting his words into practice in our daily lives. The Supreme Bicameral Council pledges to do its utmost to re-establish the legal status of the UBCV and maintain its historic tradition of independence'.[3]

After 20 years at Thanh Minh, where he remained under continuous surveillance,[9] he returned north to Thai Binh, before returning to Saigon to stay at Tu Hieu Temple in November 2018.[4][5] The communist authorities continued to send police to the temple to harass Thích Quảng Độ and the abbot Thích Nguyên Lý about the residency status of the former,[5] and tried to restrict access by his disciples.[9]

Death

Thích Quảng Độ died on 22 February 2020 at age 91 at Từ Hiếu Temple in District 8, Ho Chi Minh City.[12][4] In his later years, he had been afflicted by diabetes, high blood pressure and a heart condition, the last of which required an operation in 2003.[7] Thích Quảng Độ asked for his ashes to be scattered at sea.[6] The exiled Vietnamese dissident blogger Điếu Cày stated that his death was 'a great loss for the UBCV as well as the movement for freedom and democracy in Vietnam. The Most Venerable Thích Quảng Độ dedicated his entire life to struggling for religious freedom for Vietnam'.[4] Điếu Cày described him as 'one of the main pillars of the UBCV, withstanding many oppressions and persecutions from the communist authorities but nevertheless remaining steadfast in maintaining the independence of the UBCV and not accepting the administration of the communist regime'.[4] Thích Quảng Ba, the Vice Chairman of the UBCV in Australia and New Zealand, stated that Thích Quảng Độ's contributions extended beyond his work as a scholar and translator, and that his greatest legacy was his 'indomitable spirit', which made him the 'conscience' of the Vietnam people and 'shown the path to our generation'.[5] The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom called his death 'an incredible loss for the people of Vietnam' and said that 'With his quiet strength and grace, he fought for decades to preserve and promote religious freedom in Vietnam'.[9]

Awards

In 2001, Thích Quảng Độ received the Hellman-Hammet Award from Human Rights Watch for persecuted writers.[3]

In 2003, Thích Quảng Độ was honored with the Homo Homini Award for human rights activism by the Czech group People in Need, which he shared with Thích Huyền Quảng and Father Nguyễn Văn Lý.[13]

In 2006, Thích Quảng Độ was awarded the Thorolf Rafto Memorial Prize, in recognition of "personal courage and perseverance through three decades of peaceful opposition against the communist regime in Vietnam, and as a symbol for the growing democracy movement". Thích Quảng Độ was unable to the receive the award, as the government prevented him from attending the ceremony.[14]

In 2006, Thích Quảng Độ was also awarded the Democracy Courage Tribute by the World Movement for Democracy.[4]

References

  1. ^ Self-Immolation 'Only Possible Recourse', RFA, 17 February 2012
  2. ^ . People In Need. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Thich Quang Do is appointed new leader of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam" (PDF). European Parliament. 17 August 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Hòa thượng Thích Quảng Độ 'hiến dâng cả đời đấu tranh cho tự do tôn giáo". BBC. 23 February 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Tương lai GHPGVNTN sau khi Hòa thượng Thích Quảng Độ qua đời". BBC. 25 February 2020. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  6. ^ a b c "Vietnamese dissident monk, a Nobel Prize nominee, dies". The Straits Times. 24 February 2020. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Taylor, p. 310.
  8. ^ Diệu Nghiêm (23 February 2020). "Trưởng lão Hòa thượng Thích Quảng Độ viên tịch".
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h "Vietnam dissident Buddhist monk Thich Quang Do dies at 91". 26 February 2020. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  10. ^ a b c . Biography. Que me. Archived from the original on 25 January 2016. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  11. ^ a b Taylor, p. 311.
  12. ^ "Vietnamese dissident monk who was a Nobel Prize nominee dies at 93". The Japan Times. 23 February 2020.
  13. ^ Martin Hrobský (11 April 2003). Homo Homini Awards recognize the work of three Vietnamese activists, Radio Prague International, Czech Radio
  14. ^ The Rafto Foundation, 2006 Laureate Thích Quảng Độ

Further reading

  • Taylor, Philip, ed. (2007). Modernity and re-enchantment: religion in post-revolutionary Vietnam. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 310–312.

External links

  • Video: interview of Thích Quảng Độ under house arrest (Oslo Freedom Forum, 2010)

thích, quảng, Độ, this, vietnamese, name, surname, thích, accordance, with, vietnamese, custom, this, person, should, referred, given, name, quảng, Độ, 釋廣度, november, 1928, february, 2020, vietnamese, buddhist, monk, scholar, patriarch, unified, buddhist, chur. In this Vietnamese name the surname is Thich In accordance with Vietnamese custom this person should be referred to by the given name Quảng Độ Thich Quảng Độ 釋廣度 Thich Quảng Độ 27 November 1928 22 February 2020 was a Vietnamese Buddhist monk and scholar who was the patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam UBCV from 2008 until his death 1 Since the execution of his master at the hands of the communist Việt Minh in his teenage years Thich Quảng Độ had been involved in political activism firstly against the anti Buddhist policies of the Catholic President of South Vietnam Ngo Đinh Diệm After the fall of Saigon the UBCV was banned by the communist government and as one of the senior monks in the organisation Thich Quảng Độ was at the forefront of the UBCV s defiance of the government refusing to join the government endorsed Vietnamese Buddhist Church He was detained repeatedly by the communist authorities in the last 45 years of his life for his resistance and criticism of their policies particularly his calls for multi party democracy During the Vietnam War period he also served as a university academic in Buddhism translated sutras and wrote books notably a nine volume Buddhist encyclopedia and two volume dictionary between Vietnamese and Sino Vietnamese Thich Quảng ĐộTitleTăng Thống Patriarch PersonalBorn27 November 1928Thanh Chau Thai Binh Province French IndochinaDied22 February 2020 2020 02 22 aged 91 Hồ Chi Minh City VietnamReligionBuddhismNationalityVietnameseSchoolThiềnSenior postingPredecessorThich Huyền QuangIn 2002 he was awarded the Homo Homini Award for human rights activism by the Czech group People In Need which he shared with his predecessor as patriarch Thich Huyền Quang and Thadeus Nguyễn Văn Ly 2 He was also awarded the Thorolf Rafto Memorial Prize and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize Contents 1 Life 1 1 Political opposition 2 Death 3 Awards 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksLife EditThich Quảng Độ was born Đặng Phuc Tuệ in Thanh Chau village 3 in Thai Binh Province in northern Vietnam 4 and became a monk at age 14 During the Vietnamese famine of 1945 he walked for two days from Thanh Sam Temple where he was training to his home village where he carried his gravely malnourished oldest brother from the home to the local temple and nursed him back to health 5 At age 17 he witnessed his religious master Thich Đức Hải executed by the revolutionary People s Tribunal 6 He quoted in open letter to Communist Party Secretary General Đỗ Mười in 1994 that Then and there I vowed to do all that I could to combat fanaticism and intolerance and devote my life to the pursuit of justice through the Buddhist teachings of non violence 6 3 In the 1950s Thich Quảng Độ travelled to India Sri Lanka and other parts of Asia to further his Buddhist training and serve as an academic at various universities 3 spending seven years abroad before returning to Saigon in South Vietnam to teach Buddhism 7 He was a professor at the Van Hanh Buddhist University and Saigon University among other institutions in the 1960s and 1970s 3 He translated various Buddhist texts into Vietnamese and wrote Buddhist textbooks 4 notably a two volume Buddhist dictionary between Vietnamese and Sino Vietnamese and oversaw a nine volume Vietnamese language Buddhist encyclopedia 8 Political opposition Edit See also Buddhist crisis While a member of the leadership of the UBCV Thich Quảng Độ became an activist fighting against the anti Buddhist policies of the Catholic President of South Vietnam Ngo Đinh Diệm After a military raid of Buddhist monasteries in Hue and Saigon Thich Quảng Độ was arrested on 20 August 1963 He and thousands of other Buddhists endured torture and persecution while imprisoned by the Diem government He was released after Diem regime was toppled in military coup in November 1963 As a result of imprisonment Thich Quảng Độ struggled with tuberculosis before having a lung operation in Japan in 1966 3 In 1965 Thich Quảng Độ was appointed as the Secretary General of the Viện Hoa Đạo Institute for the Dissemination of Dharma of the UBCV 4 In 1975 Vietnam was under communist control and the UBCV was once again unwelcome in Vietnam As a result the UBCV facilities were seized and documents burned Thich Quảng Độ was active in protesting the government s actions and after attempting to gather Buddhists from other regions in non violent opposition he was arrested on charges of anti revolutionary activities and undermining national solidarity 3 He spent 20 months at the Phan Dang Luu Prison in solitary confinement in a cell approximately 2m2 in size with a hand sized window 9 before he was tried and released in December 1978 Later that year he was nominated by Betty Williams and Mairead Maguire to receive the Nobel Peace Prize 10 7 In 1982 the Vietnamese Government created a Buddhist alternative called the Vietnam Buddhist Church which was state sponsored and controlled by the Vietnam Fatherland Front Because of Quảng Độ s opposition to the new church he was again jailed 3 At one meeting of the Viện Hoa Đạo he stated to the attendees that If you want to pursue glory then go ahead but this boat regardless of whether it is disintegrating broken or unsteady let us look after it 5 He rejected an approach from the Minister of Public Security Mai Chi Tho to take up a leadership role in the government backed Buddhist organisation 3 Quảng Độ would spend the next 10 years in exile in the village of Vu Doai 10 in Thai Binh 7 His 84 year old mother was expelled with him and died in 1985 due to inadequate medical care and malnutrition 3 In 1992 he returned to the Thanh Minh Pagoda in Saigon 7 Yet again in 1995 while attempting to send a fax to overseas Buddhists to expose government abuse of the UBCV by obstructing UBCV flood relief effors 9 he was arrested and sentenced to five years in prison and a further five years of probation on the grounds of undermining the policy of unity and exploiting the rights of freedom to impede the interests of the state 4 This led to condemnation by the likes of Nobel laureates the 14th Dalai Lama Jose Ramos Horta Mairead Maguire and Francois Jacob and the US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright 3 He was released in September 1998 in response to international pressure on the communist government and returned to Thanh Minh Monastery 4 In October 2000 he led a delegation of monks to provide relief in An Giang Province in the Mekong Delta but they were detained by communist police before being forced to return to Saigon after being accused of threatening national security 7 3 Thich Quảng Độ became the President of the UBCV s Institute for the Dissemination of the Dharma in 1999 meaning that he was the second ranking UBCV dignitary after patriarch Thich Huyen Quang 10 In February 2001 just before the 9th Congress of the Vietnamese Communist Party Thich Quảng Độ started a pro democracy campaign as part of an eight point program including free elections as part of a multi party democracy trade union membership and the abolition of all degrading forms of imported culture and ideologies that pervert Vietnamese spiritual and moral values 7 The communist government responded by detaining him before releasing him in June 2003 7 In February he published an open letter advocating multi party democracy and civil rights 11 He further stated that they were more important than economic development and without them we cannot make any progress in the real sense 9 In a 2003 interview he stated People are very afraid of the government Only I dare to say what I want to say That is why they are afraid of me 9 However he was again detained in October 2003 after an unauthorised UBCV meeting 11 He was officially released in 2005 but a UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention reported that he was still effectively under detention 9 In 2008 as one of his last wishes Patriarch Thich Huyen Quang named Thich Quảng Độ as the new patriarch of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam a position he would occupy until his death 4 Upon succeeding Thich Huyen Quang Thich Quảng Độ stated that The best way to honour our late Patriarch is by putting his words into practice in our daily lives The Supreme Bicameral Council pledges to do its utmost to re establish the legal status of the UBCV and maintain its historic tradition of independence 3 After 20 years at Thanh Minh where he remained under continuous surveillance 9 he returned north to Thai Binh before returning to Saigon to stay at Tu Hieu Temple in November 2018 4 5 The communist authorities continued to send police to the temple to harass Thich Quảng Độ and the abbot Thich Nguyen Ly about the residency status of the former 5 and tried to restrict access by his disciples 9 Death EditThich Quảng Độ died on 22 February 2020 at age 91 at Từ Hiếu Temple in District 8 Ho Chi Minh City 12 4 In his later years he had been afflicted by diabetes high blood pressure and a heart condition the last of which required an operation in 2003 7 Thich Quảng Độ asked for his ashes to be scattered at sea 6 The exiled Vietnamese dissident blogger Điếu Cay stated that his death was a great loss for the UBCV as well as the movement for freedom and democracy in Vietnam The Most Venerable Thich Quảng Độ dedicated his entire life to struggling for religious freedom for Vietnam 4 Điếu Cay described him as one of the main pillars of the UBCV withstanding many oppressions and persecutions from the communist authorities but nevertheless remaining steadfast in maintaining the independence of the UBCV and not accepting the administration of the communist regime 4 Thich Quảng Ba the Vice Chairman of the UBCV in Australia and New Zealand stated that Thich Quảng Độ s contributions extended beyond his work as a scholar and translator and that his greatest legacy was his indomitable spirit which made him the conscience of the Vietnam people and shown the path to our generation 5 The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom called his death an incredible loss for the people of Vietnam and said that With his quiet strength and grace he fought for decades to preserve and promote religious freedom in Vietnam 9 Awards EditIn 2001 Thich Quảng Độ received the Hellman Hammet Award from Human Rights Watch for persecuted writers 3 In 2003 Thich Quảng Độ was honored with the Homo Homini Award for human rights activism by the Czech group People in Need which he shared with Thich Huyền Quảng and Father Nguyễn Văn Ly 13 In 2006 Thich Quảng Độ was awarded the Thorolf Rafto Memorial Prize in recognition of personal courage and perseverance through three decades of peaceful opposition against the communist regime in Vietnam and as a symbol for the growing democracy movement Thich Quảng Độ was unable to the receive the award as the government prevented him from attending the ceremony 14 In 2006 Thich Quảng Độ was also awarded the Democracy Courage Tribute by the World Movement for Democracy 4 References Edit Self Immolation Only Possible Recourse RFA 17 February 2012 Previous Recipients of the Homo Homini Award People In Need Archived from the original on 1 May 2011 Retrieved 17 April 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Thich Quang Do is appointed new leader of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam PDF European Parliament 17 August 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k Hoa thượng Thich Quảng Độ hiến dang cả đời đấu tranh cho tự do ton giao BBC 23 February 2020 Retrieved 23 February 2020 a b c d e Tương lai GHPGVNTN sau khi Hoa thượng Thich Quảng Độ qua đời BBC 25 February 2020 Retrieved 28 February 2020 a b c Vietnamese dissident monk a Nobel Prize nominee dies The Straits Times 24 February 2020 Retrieved 24 February 2020 a b c d e f g h Taylor p 310 Diệu Nghiem 23 February 2020 Trưởng lao Hoa thượng Thich Quảng Độ vien tịch a b c d e f g h Vietnam dissident Buddhist monk Thich Quang Do dies at 91 26 February 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2020 a b c Profile on Most Venerable Thich Quang Do Head of the Unified Buddhist Church of Vietnam Biography Que me Archived from the original on 25 January 2016 Retrieved 24 November 2015 a b Taylor p 311 Vietnamese dissident monk who was a Nobel Prize nominee dies at 93 The Japan Times 23 February 2020 Martin Hrobsky 11 April 2003 Homo Homini Awards recognize the work of three Vietnamese activists Radio Prague International Czech Radio The Rafto Foundation 2006 Laureate Thich Quảng ĐộFurther reading EditTaylor Philip ed 2007 Modernity and re enchantment religion in post revolutionary Vietnam Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies pp 310 312 External links EditVideo interview of Thich Quảng Độ under house arrest Oslo Freedom Forum 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thich Quảng Độ amp oldid 1129836498, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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