Boonkumkhaoyai : The Thai-Isan Epitomic Model of Buddhist Economy and Dhammic Socialism
Abstract
In Northeast Thailand, or Isan, there are twelve distinct ceremonies
known as PrapheniHeetSibsong that mark the entire lunar calendar.
Each of these ceremonies is an occasion for merit-making, observance of
the precepts, and cultivation of morality (sīla), meditation (samādhi) and
wisdom (paññā). Based mostly on Buddhist principles, each ceremony
in the entire corpus of PrapheniHeetSibsong points towards a gradual
progress along the spiritual path, and has since time immemorial formed
the warp and woof of the traditional Isan way of life. Although Isan is
generally regarded as the poorest and the most ‘backward’ region in the
country, a close look at how the northeasterners have entwined their lives
with the twelve-month tradition reveals the richness of the Buddhist
ethico-religious and cultural heritage that has remained intact to the
present day. In this paper we focus on one unique ceremony, Boonkumkhaoyai
(previously known as “Boonkhunlarn”), literally translated into
English as “merit-making by offering the giant paddy heap”, that marks
the second lunar month and falls approximately in the month of January.
It is an ancient traditional ceremony that is held at the end of the harvest s
eason in order to create harmony and mutual co-existence among all
people in the village. In Boonkumkhaoyai, villagers co-operate to form the
giant paddy heap by donating unhusked rice for the purpose of supporting
and promoting various projects related to community welfare, propagation
of Buddhism and Isan culture. Viewed from the socio-ethical perspective,
this particular agro-based ritualistic ceremony seems to epitomize the
culture of merit-making ingrained in the traditional Isan way of life.
Although merit-making in some urban and cosmopolitan settings has
been adversely affected by the rapid modernization, consumerist culture
and capitalistic mode of growth that took place in the last few decades,
Isan people, on the other hand, have successfully preserved the culture of
merit-making by still adhering to its pristine values and practicing it within
the folds of PrapheniHeetSibsong. Therefore, merit-making still exists as
a spontaneously thriving tradition and has not yet turned out to be a fe
tish and a means to ‘bartering’ of merit. In this paper we analyze various
socio-ethico principles that form the foundational base of Boonkumkhaoyai.
Through our analysis we aim at showing that Isan peasantry’s
inherent zeal to practice generosity at a communal level for the welfare of
the entire community and society at large brings into fusion two distinct
trends of the Buddhist weltanschauung, namely, Buddhist economy and
Dhammic Socialism.
Keywords: Boonkumkhaoyai,Thai-Isan, Epitomic, Model,
Buddhist,Economy ,Dhammic, Socialism
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