Huynh Phu So
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- This is a Vietnamese name; the family name is Huỳnh, but is often simplified as Huynh in English-language text. According to Vietnamese custom, this person properly should be referred to by the given name Sổ.
Huỳnh Phú Sổ (1919 – 1947) was the founder of the Hòa Hảo religious sect based on Buddhism.
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[edit] Early years
Born in the village of Hoa Hao in 1919, So was the son of a moderately wealthy peasant. Plagued in his youth by illness, he was a mediocre student and graduated from high school only because of his father’s influence. His father sent him to Nui Cam in the Seven Mountains to learn from a hermit who was both a mystic and a healer. After some training, So made his mark during a stormy night in May 1939, having returned to his village after his master’s death.[1] While in an agitated state, So appeared to have suddenly been cured of his illnesses[2] and started to propound his religious teachings, which was based on Buddhism, on the spot. According to observers, he spoke for several hours spontaneously “with eloquence and erudition about the sublime dogmans of Buddhism...The witnesses to this miracle, deeply impressed by the strange scene, became his first converts.” His simplified teachings were designed to appeal primarily to the poor and the peasants. He attempted to win supporters by cutting down on ceremonies and complex doctrines, eschewing the use of temples. He won over followers by offering free consultations and performing purported miracle cures with simple herbs and acupuncture, and preaching at street corners and canal intersections.[1]He quickly built up a following in the southern Mekong Delta and was looked to by his disciples for guidance in their daily lifestyles. In a time of colonial occupation, a native religion appealed to the masses who were displaying nationalist sentiment. Unlike Gautama Buddha or Jesus, So was Vietnamese. As a result, So became a nationalist icon and became a wanted man for the French colonial authorities, having gained 100,000 followers in less than a year. He predicted that politics would be the cause of the his premature death.[3]
The cult must stem much more from internal faith than from a pompous appearance. It is better to pray with a pure heart before the family altar than to perform gaudy ceremonies in a pagoda, clad in the robes of an unworthy bonze.[1]
[edit] Proselytising and imprisonment
In early 1940, after a few weeks in retreat to compose and put on paper oracles, prayers and teachings, So launched a major campaign through the Mekong Delta. He recruited tens of thousands of converts to his movement, many of whom followed him around in his travels. His reputation grew immensely after a series of his predictions came true; the outbreak of World War II, the fall of France to Nazi Germany, and Japanese invasion of French Indochina. His prediction of a Japanese invasion prompted many rice farmers to deser their farms en mass and flee to the hills. His critics derided him as the "mad bonze". As his movement became politicised, it began to attract aspiring politicians, with the likes of Le Cong Bo, a prominent landowner and its future military commanders Tran Van Soai and Lam Thanh Nguyen. Nguyen claimed that So had cured him from illness.[3]
Fearing anti-French demonstrations and revolts would occur as a result of So’s following, French governor Jean Decoux decided to act. In August he was detained in the psychiatric hospital at Cho Quan hospital near Saigon under the reasoning that he was a lunatic. So famously succeeded in converting his psychiatrist, Dr. Tam, who became an ardent supporter (Tam was later executed by the Vietminh for his activities). A board of French psychiatrists declared him sane in May 1941, reporting that he was "a little maniacal, very ignorant even in Buddhist practices, but a big talker."[3] He was exiled upon his release to the coastal town of Bac Lieu in the far south. His key supporters were sent to a concentration camp in Nui Bara. The French restrictions strengthened his nationalist appeal, and Bac Lieu soon became a place of Hoa Hao pilgrimage, although it was far from the sect’s strongholds.[3]
In 1942, the French could no longer withstand the growing popular reactions generated by So’s oracular pronouncements and political instructions. They exiled him to Laos. By that time the Japanese had taken over French Indochina, but had left the French apparatus in place, intervening only when they saw fit. The Japanese intercepted the transfer of So with the help of some Hoa Hao followers and brought him back to Saigon. The Kempeitai kept him under protection and the Japanese authorities rebuffed French protests and demands for extradition by saying that he was held as a "Chinese spy".[4] He avoided slurs of being a Japanese collaborator by predicting their demise, but his contacts with them allowed his supporters to gain weapons.[5]
[edit] Military campaign
In 1945, as the Japanese were defeated and Vietnam fell into a power vacuum, So ordered the creation of armed units for campaigns against the local administration, landowners and French colonial forces. This led to the Hoa Hao becoming less of a religious and more of a military-political movement, as people such as landowners converted in the hope that they could buy protection.[6] As the Hoa Hao began battling the French, they also came into conflict with other military organizations such as the Vietminh and Cao Dai who were also fighting the French. The Hoa Hao were in control of most of the Mekong Delta and was unwilling to tow the Vietminh line from Hanoi. On September 9, a confrontation arose when a band of 15,000 Hoa Hao, armed with hand-to-hand weapons attacked the Vietminh garrison at Can Tho. With their antiquated weapons, So’s men were slaughtered, losing thousands. So’s brother and the brother of his commander Soai were captured and executed. The return of French forces helped to keep the Hoa Hao and the Vietminh apart, but the Hoa Hao periodically sought vengeance on the Vietminh by tying sympathisers together and throwing them into rivers to drown. The Vietminh were worried by So’s nationalist credentials and social structure, and attempted to co-opt him into a National Unified Front. It was dissolved in July 1946 after it was apparent that So would not follow the Vietminh. So entered politics openly by creating the Vietnam Social Democratic party, known as the Dan Xa. this defiant move made him a target of the Vietminh as relations deteriorated.[5]
The southern Vietminh leader Nguyen Binh, realising that So would not subordinate himself to the Vietminh, set up a trap. So was caught in April 1947 and executed. His body was dissected into many pieces and scattered so that his followers could not gather them and turn it into an object of veneration or as a shrine.[7] After his death, the Hoa Hao’s political and military power diminished as the various commanders began infighting without a centralised leadership structure and without a leader.
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Buttinger, Joseph (1967). Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled. Praeger Publishers.
- Fall, Bernard (1963). The Two Viet-Nams. Praeger Publishers.