Religion in Inner Mongolia

Religion in Inner Mongolia (2004)[1]

  Worship of Heaven (Tian, Tenger) and aobao (80%)
  Other or none (20%)
The Temple of the Five Pagodas in Hohhot (built in 1732).
Temple of the White Sulde in the town of Uxin, in the Mu Us Desert.

Religion in Inner Mongolia is characterised by the diverse traditions of Mongolian-Tibetan Buddhism, Chinese Buddhism, the Chinese traditional religion including Taoism and Confucianism, and the Mongolian native religion. The region is inhabited by a majority of Han Chinese and a substantial minority of Southern Mongols (the Mongols of China), so that some religions follow ethnic lines.

According to a survey held in 2004 by the Minzu University of China, about 80% of the population of the region practice the worship of Heaven (that is named Tian in the Chinese tradition and Tenger in the Mongolian tradition) and of aobao.[1] Besides, only 3.7% of the population belongs to one of the five government-sanctioned religious organisations of China.[1]

The region was incorporated into China starting from the Mongol Yuan dynasty. Mongolian Buddhism, which is of the same schools of Tibetan Buddhism, was the dominant religion in Inner Mongolia until the 19th century.[2] Its monastic institution was virtually eradicated during the Cultural Revolution, that was particularly tough against the political power of the lamas.[2] Since the 1980s there has been a modest revival, with the reconstruction of some important monasteries and new smaller temples.[2]

At the same time, there has been an unprecedented development of Mongolian shamanism, especially centered around the cult of Genghis Khan and the Heaven, the former being traditionally considered an embodiment of Heaven itself,[3][4] in special temples (many of which yurt-style), and the cult of aobao as ancestral shrines. The cult of Genghis is also shared by the Han Chinese, claiming his spirit as the founding principle of the Yuan dynasty.[5]

In facts, there has been a significant integration of the Han Chinese of Inner Mongolia into the traditional Mongolian spiritual heritage of the region.[6] Reconstructed Buddhist monasteries and folk temples are massively attended by local Han.[6] Moreover, as elsewhere in China, there has been a growing conscious adoption of the Gelug sect, and other Tibetan-originated Buddhist schools, by the Han Chinese.[6]

Main religions

Buddhism

Buddhism (which in Mongolian language is named Burkhany Shashin, "Buddha's religion", or Shira-in Shashin, the "Yellow religion"[7][note 1]) was spread to the Mongols during the Yuan dynasty, under the reign of Ögedei Khan, when Tibetan lamas of the Sakya sect were active at the court.[7] However, in this period Buddhism didn't penetrate among the general population, and its influence greatly diminished with the fall of the Yuan dynasty.[7]

In the 17th century the Gelug sect became dominant in Mongolian Buddhism.[2] It was during the Manchu Qing dynasty that Buddhism among the Mongols reached its peak.[2] With the state's support, it was in this period that most of the Mongolian Buddhist monasteries and institutes were constructed.[2] Inner Mongolia was the centre of Mongolian Buddhism; in the 19th century, of the approximately 2000 monasteries in Greater Mongolia, 1200 were in Inner Mongolia, and 700 were in Outer Mongolia (corresponding to the contemporary state of Mongolia).[8] By 1900, of the 243 incarnate lamas living in the territories of the Mongols, 157 resided in Inner Mongolia alone.[8] The Qing politics draw the most important of these lamas to the capital at Beijing.[8]

However, with the demise of the Qing and the strong influences of modernisation in Inner Mongolia, including the "Enlightenment Movement" and secular education, in the late 19th century and early 20th century Mongolian Buddhism underwent a decline.[2] The situation became worse during the Cultural Revolution of China, in which religious expression was prohibited. More than ninety percent of the Buddhist monasteries in Inner Mongolia were destroyed in the early years of the revolution.[2]

Many lamas and lay Buddhists continued to practice in secret, until the 1980s when the principle of freedom of religion was instituted in China.[2] A slow revival began, with the reconstruction of some of the old monasteries and the establishment of new smaller temples.[2] The revival of Buddhism has been less powerful among Southern Mongols than that among Outer Mongols (of Mongolia proper) which started in the 1990s, partly because the latter was linked to a self-conscious national-spiritual reawakening.[6]

Identification with Gelug and other Tibetan-originated sects is curbed among Southern Mongols also because of the growing adoption of those schools (and their local monasteries) by the Han Chinese.[6] A phenomenon also present in other parts of China, this influence of Tibetan schools among the Hans has been fueled by the proselytic activity of Chinese-speaking Tibetan lamas.[6]

Mongolian shamanism

Main article: Mongolian shamanism

Mongolian shamanism or Tengerism[9] refers to the animistic and shamanic native religion of the Mongols. It is centered around the worship of the tngri (gods) and the highest Tenger (Heaven, God of Heaven, God) or Qormusta Tengri. In the Mongolian native religion, Genghis Khan is considered one of the embodiments, if not the main embodoment, of the Tenger.[3] In worship, communities of lay believers are led by shamans (called böge if males, iduγan if females), who are intermediaries of the divine.

Genghis Khan worship

Main hall of the Shrine of the Lord Genghis Khan, in Ordos City.

A cult of Genghis Khan had existed until the 1930s, centered around a shrine which preserved mystical relics of Genghis, that was located in the Ordos Loop of Inner Mongolia.[10] The Japanese, during the occupation of China, tried to take possession of the relics in order to catalyse a pro-Japanese Mongol nationalism, but they failed.[10]

Within the Mongolian People's Republic (1924–92) the Mongolian native religion was suppressed, and Genghis' shrines destroyed.[10] In Inner Mongolia, otherwise, the worship of the cultural hero persisted; the hereditary custodians of the shrines survived there, preserving ancient manuscripts of ritual texts, written partially in an unintelligible language called the "language of the gods".[10]

With the establishment of the People's Republic of China, the Chinese rallied Mongol nationalism to the new state and constructed the Shrine of Genghis Khan (or Shrine of the Lord, as it is named in Mongolian[11]) in Ordos City, where they gathered the old sanctuary tents, confirmed the guardians of the cults in office, and subsidised annual sacrifices.[10]

The shrine in Ordos has since then become the focal point of a revival of Genghis Khan's cult throughout Inner Mongolia.[4] The Han Chinese themselves pay homage to him as the spiritual foundation of the Yuan dynasty.[5] Various other temples of Genghis Khan, or branches of the shrine in Ordos, have been established in Inner Mongolia and northern China.[12][13]

Aobao worship

An aobao in Inner Mongolia.

Aobaoes (敖包 áobāo) are sacrificial altars of the shape of a mound that are traditionally used for worship in the indigenous religion of Mongols and related ethnic groups.[14] Every aobao is thought as the representation of a god. There are aobaoes dedicated to heavenly gods, mountain gods, other gods of nature, and also to gods of human lineages and agglomerations.

The aobaoes for worship of ancestral gods can be private shrines of an extended family or kin (people sharing the same surname), otherwise they are common to villages (dedicated to the god of a village), banners or leagues. Sacrifices to the aobaoes are made offering slaughtered animals, joss sticks, and libations.[14]

Chinese traditional religion

Main article: Chinese folk religion

Many Han Chinese throughout the region of Inner Mongolia practice their native religion. It consists in is the worship of the shen (神 "expressions", "gods", "spirits"), that is to say, the powers of generation, of nature, interpreted through Chinese culture. On the human sphere, they are ancestors and progenitors of families or lineages, and divine heroes that made a significant imprinting in the history of the Chinese civilisation.

Confucianism

Confucius, the important philosopher of the Spring and Autumn period, is worshipped throughout northern China, and Inner Mongolia as well, as a culture hero, an embodiment of the god of culture (文帝 Wéndì). Many cities have a temple dedicated to the god of culture as Confucius (文庙 wénmiào), whereas in southern China the god is more often worshipped as Wenchang Wang. Confucianism, the school of thought or religion founded on Confucius' teachings, is mainly a holistic moral code for human relations with emphasis on the importance of tradition and rites.

Taoism

There are many Han Chinese Taoist communities in Inner Mongolia. The Temple of the Great Clarity (太清宫 Tàiqīnggōng) is an example of Taoist temple in Hohhot.[15]

Abrahamic religions

Christianity

The Church of the East was an important religion among the Mongols at its peak of diffusion, and Inner Mongolia hosts archeological remains of the ancient Christian communities.[16] It was reintroduced in China, after having disappeared among the Han Chinese, by the Mongol themselves, when thet invaded the country in the 13th century establishing the Yuan dynasty.

Protestantism was introduced in the 19th century. Ignoring the Qing dynasty policy that prevented them from entering Inner Mongolia and Manchuria, Christian missionaries, along with an ever-increasing number of Han Chinese settlers, entered the region and proselytised there since the last decades of the century.[17]

Islam

Inner Mongolia has a small population of Hui Chinese who are Muslims.[18]

See also

Notes

  1. "Yellow religion" (translated 黄教 Huángjiào in Chinese) is the popular Mongolian name of Buddhism. It is a synecdoche originating from the Gelug sect, also called the sect of the Yellow Hat because its masters wear a yellow hat while performing religious services. However, it may also refer to yellow shamanism, that is a type of Mongolian shamanism which uses a Buddhist-like expressive style.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Fenggang Yang, Graeme Lang. Social Scientific Studies of Religion in China. BRILL, 2012. ISBN 9004182462. pp. 184-185, reporting the results of surveys held in 2004 by the Minzu University of China.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Wallace, 2015. p. 282
  3. 3.0 3.1 Man, 2004. pp. 402-404
  4. 4.0 4.1 Man, 2005. pp. 22-23
  5. 5.0 5.1 Man, 2005. p. 23
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Goossaert, Palmer. 2011. p. 369
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Wallace, 2015. p. 281
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Heissig, 2000. p. 1
  9. Michael Stausberg. Religion and Tourism: Crossroads, Destinations and Encounters. Routledge, 2010. ISBN 0415549329. p. 162, quote: «Julie Steward, alias Sarangerel Odigon (1963-2006), a woman with a Mongolian (Buryat) mother and a German father, born in the United States, started to practice shamanism (or what she would refer to as "Tengerism") as an adult; she then moved to Mongolia where she strived to restore and reconstruct the "ancient and original" religion of the Mongolians. Among her major moves was the founding of a Mongolian Shamans' Association (Golomt Tuv) which gave Mongolian shamans a common platform and brought them into touch with shamans in other parts of the world, with the prospect of starting a shamanic world organization. Through some books Sarangerel also spread her Mongolian message to Western audiences. She traveled widely, giving lectures and holding workshops on Mongolian shamanism. Moreover, she started a Mongolian shamanic association of America (the Circle of Tengerism).»
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Bawden, 2013.
  11. Man, 2005. p. 22
  12. 成吉思汗召.
  13. 成吉思汗祠.
  14. 14.0 14.1 Li, 2006. pp. 58-59
  15. Taiqinggong: 内蒙古呼和浩特市太清宫采影.
  16. Halbertsma, 2008.
  17. Standaert, 2000. p. 346
  18. Dorothy Perkins. Encyclopedia of China: History and Culture. Routledge, 1998. ISBN 1579581102. p. 233

Sources

External links