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Decline of Buddhism in the Indian subcontinent

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Buddhism was initially established in India and it flourished there during the early phases of its history. After more than 1500 years, the decline of Buddhism in India, caused by several factors, would lead to the virtual extinction of Indian Buddhism by the beginning of the 13th century.

Integration with life in India

Following the reign of King Ashoka (273-232 BCE), Buddhism had prospered quite well throughout India. However when bereft of political power, it declined. The Sunga king Pusyamitra Sunga (around 185 BCE) was is said to have persecuted Buddhist monks (Shramanas), setting a bounty of 100 gold coins on every buddhist and Jain monks head and the destruction of many stupas. However other Shungas supported Buddhism, the stupa at Bharhut was constructed during the Shunga period. By the 4th to 5th century Buddhism was already in decline in northern India, even as it was achieving multiple successes in Central Asia and along the Silk Road as far as China. In India it found strong ideological opposition for its monastic system. As political patronage failed it came under increasing pressure by Brahmanical Hinduism.

In the 9th CE the Vaishnavas identified the Buddha as an avatāra of the Hindu god Vishnu – which contradicted basic Buddhist understandings about the nature of a Buddha and of nirvāna. Shakyamuni Buddha was often revered as one of the gods, and eventually came to be interpreted as a manifestation of the Hindu god Vishnu.

However, even though there was integration of ideas, the Buddhist sangha was a separate world from the predominant Hindu society. Buddhist monasteries were quite well-funded and life within was relatively easy. To avoid freeloading, many monasteries became very selective about whom they admitted, in some cases based on social class. This further cut off the sangha from Indian society.

Political and military developments

In the Indian sub-continent, ever since the 1st Century BC political opposition from the surrounding Hindu Kingdoms became severe and even in regions of Buddhist preponderance, one often found the indian caste system in operation such as the northwest (Pañjāb) and the lower Gangetic plain (Uttar Pradesh and Bengal). In political contests between Hindu and Buddhist kingdoms, Buddhist rulers were gradually replaced by Hindu ones. By the 4th to 5th century Buddhism was already in decline in northern India, even though it was achieving multiple successes in Central Asia and along the Silk Road as far as China.

After the end of the Mauryans the Sunga dynasty came to power and was hostile to Buddhism. By the 4th to 5th century Buddhism was already in decline in Northern India even though it saw a brief revival under the Guptas in contrast to its countinuing spread eastwards in Central Asia. It continued to prosper in Gandhara under the buddhist Turki-Shahis. Buddhisms spread was driven by powerful monarchs who adopted and supported it, lacking political support it began to decline.

Central Asian and North Western Indian Buddhism weakened in the 6th century following the White Hun invasion who followed their own religions such as Tengri, Nestorian Christianity and Manichean. Their King Mihirkula who ruled from 515 BC supressed Buddhism destroying monastaries as far as modern-day Allahabad before his son reversed the policy. Subsequently the replacement of Buddhist royal lines with hindu royals and the rise of Rajput dynasties further pressured the official sanction of Buddhism.

When Muhammad bin Qasim led the invasion of Sindh he actually found ready help among the Buddhists in his campaign against their Hindu overlord the Raja Dahir. Buddhist commentators would remark upon these events as a comeuppance for the Brahmins while lamenting the effects of Muslim military expeditions on them selves. Beyond the direct political effects, these invasions also impeded commercial ties to the west, weakening the merchant classes who tended to sponsor Buddhism .

By the 10th century Mahmud of Ghazni defeated the Hindu-Shahis effectively removing Hindu influence and ending Buddhist self-governance across Central Asia and the Punjab region. He demolished numerous monastaries alongside temples during his raid across north-western India but left those within his domains and Afghanistan alone even as al-Biruni recorded Buddha as the prophet "burxan".

In 1215 Genghis Khan conquered Afghanistan and ravaged the land indiscriminately, in 1227 after his death his conquest was divided and Chagatai established the Chagatai Khanate and his son Arghun made Buddhism the state religion. He was succeeded by his brother, then his son Ghazan in 1295 who changed the state religion to Islam. After his reign and the splitting of the Chagatai Khanate, little mention of Buddhism can be found in Afghanistan and Central Asia.

Buddhism remained dominant in Northern India during the latter part of the 1st millennium, however it was under constant attack by the rising Rajputs dynasties, as well a revival of Brahmins who aimed at ideologically reintegrating Buddhists into the caste structure by incorporating Buddha into the Hindu pantheon as an avatar of Vishnu. Under the Buddhist Pala dynasty Buddhism once again saw a revival across Northern India. Mahayana Buddhism flourished under the Palas, between the 8th and the 12th century before it collapsed under assault from the Hindu Sena dynasty. In 1200 Muhammad Khilji, one of Qutb-ud-Din's generals, destroyed monastaries fortified by the Sena armies such as Vikramshila, and sacked the great Buddhist university of Nalanda in 1193; his march across Northern India was a major milestone in Indian Buddhism's suddenly precipitous decline as he devasted the last vestiges of Buddhist political prowess and resistance by laying waste their fortified monastaries sending Buddhism into terminal decline.

After the Mongol invasions of Islamic lands across Central Asia, many Sufis also found themselves fleeing towards India and around the environs of Bengal. Here their influence, caste attitudes towards Buddhists, previous familiarity with converting Buddhists, a lack of Buddhist political power, Hinduism's revival movements such as Advaita and the rise of the syncretic bhakti movement, all contributed to a significant realignment of beliefs relegating Buddhism in India to the peripheries.

Assimilation, conversion, and destruction

While the exact cause of the decline of Buddhism in India is disputed, it is known that the mingling of Hindu and Buddhist societies in India and the rise of Hindu Vedanta movements began to compete against Buddhism. Many believe that Hinduism's adaptation to Buddhism resulted in Buddhism's rapid decline while others point to the aggressive attitudes adopted by various Hindu kings. Particularly important were Hinduism's revival movements such as the adpotion of the Buddha into the Hindu pantheon, Advaita Vedanta and the Bhakti movement, both of which showed the influence of Buddhist thought. Some scholars believe that the influence of Bhakti was synergistic with oppressive caste and social situations, in that Bhakti made conversion to Hinduism a more comfortable alternative for oppressed Buddhists.

When Islam arrived in India, it sought conversion from, not assimilation to or integration with, the already present religions. Under Sufi influence and the pressures of caste and with no political support structure left in place to resist social mores many converted to Islam in the Bengal region. The new Muslim rulers left in place the Brahmin-controlled caste system that reinforced Hindu social norms . However, the destruction of many monasteries and stupas resulted in the Buddhist order being almost entirely eradicated, because most of the tradition was kept up by monks, not lay-people.

At the beginning of the modern era, Buddhism was very nearly extinct in mainstream Indian society. Some tribal peoples living in the territory of modern India did continue to practice Buddhism. In Bengal, the Bauls still practice a syncretic form of Hinduism that was strongly influenced by Buddhism. There is also evidence of small communities of Indian Theravada Buddhists existing continuously in Bengal in the area of Chittagong up to the present . Buddhism continued to prosper in the nearby countries of Nepal, Tibet and Burma, as well as in more distant locations, such as China and Japan.

Survival of Buddhism in India

Buddhism started to decline in India gradually after about 5th century. However it continued to have a significant presence in several regions.

Buddhist institutions flourished in eastern India right until the Turkish invasion. It still survives among the Barua, a community of Bengali/Magadh descent that migrated to Chittagong region. Indian Buddhism also survives among Newars of Nepal.

In Orissa, Mahima Dharma, a derivative of Buddhism, survived until 18th century.

The Kayasthas, a community of scribes in North India, had been a supporter of Buddhism since the early period. They continued to support Buddhism until about 12th-13th century in some regions.

It survived in Kashmir valley until 13-14th century, perhaps slightly longer in the nearby Swat Valley. In Ladakh region, adjacent to Kashmir valley, Tibetan Buddhism survives. Tibetan Buddhism must have been popular in Kashmir at one time, as we learn from Rajatarangini of Kalhana.

In Tamilnadu and Kerala, Buddhism survived until 15-16th century. At Nagapattinam, in Tamil Nadu, Buddhist idols were cast and inscribed until this time, and the ruins of the Chudamani Vihara stood until they were destroyed by the Jesuits in 1867 . In south in some pockets, it may have survived even longer. The worship of Dharma Shasta may be a relic of Buddhism in Kerala.

Revival

main article: Neo-Buddhism

In recent times, Buddhism has seen a revival in India, partially because of the more liberal laws concerning religion, and also because of the presence of Tibetan Buddhists. Additionally, many Dalits who felt oppressed under the caste system of Hinduism in various parts of India are turning to Buddhism. This movement was initially led by B. R. Ambedkar in 1956, who organized a mass conversion for himself and approximately 400,000 of his followers to Buddhism due to its casteless, more liberal nature.

See also

Historical Chronology

  • 515 Huna king Mihirkula destroys Buddhist institutions
  • 680 Tibetans join Shahis agains the Umayyad forces in Bactria
  • 715 Arab general Qutaiba retook Bactria from the Shahis and destroys Nava Vihara
  • 735 Barmakids converts from Buddhism in Bactria
  • 750-1150 Mahasiddhas promote tantrika Budhism
  • 788-820 Sankaracharya founds the smarta sect of Hinduism and debades Buddhists
  • 879 Hindu Shahis retook Kabul and Nagarahara, Hinduism and Buddhism again flourishes
  • 913 - 942 reign of Nasr II, Buddhist statues still made in Samarkand
  • 1114-1154 Gahadvala Govindchandra constructs viharas in North India
  • 1193 Nalanda destroyed by Khilji forces
  • 1200 Vikramshila and Odantapuri destroyed by Khilji forces
  • 1295 Arghun's son Ghazan succeeded to the Khanate throne and destroyed the new Buddhist monasteries
  • 1389-1413 Sikander the iconoclast destroys the great Buddhas of Kashmir.
  • 16th cent Buddhism still flourishes at Nagapattinam in Tamilnadu
  • 19th cent. Baruas and Newars remain as the last of the Indian Buddhists
  • 1891 Anagarika Dharmapala visits India, Buddhism reemerges in India
  • 1923 Rahul Sankrityayan becomes a Bhikkhu
  • 1955 Ambedkar becomes a Buddhist, founding the neo-Buddhist movement.

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