Allaha Express! Self-immolation This article is about the - TopicsExpress



          

Allaha Express! Self-immolation This article is about the ritualistic suicide practice. For the record company, see Self Immolation. Ryszard Siwiec self-immolating in September 1968 in protest against the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia. Self-immolation refers to killing oneself as a sacrifice. While usage since the 1960s has typically referred only to setting oneself on fire, the term historically refers to a much wider range of suicidal options, such as leaping off a cliff, starvation, or seppuku (ritual disembowelling) . Self-immolation is often used as a form of protest or for the purposes of martyrdom. It has centuries-long traditions in some cultures, while in modern times it has become a type of radical political protest. Michael Biggs compiled a list of 533 self-immolations reported by Western media from the 1960s to 2002; this list uses the more general definition of self-immolation (not just burning), including any intentional suicide on behalf of a collective cause.[1] Etymology The English word immolation originally meant (1534) killing a sacrificial victim; sacrifice and came to figuratively mean (1690) destruction, especially by fire. Its etymology was from Latin immolare to sprinkle with sacrificial meal (mola salsa); to sacrifice in ancient Roman religion. Self-immolation setting oneself on fire, especially as a form of protest was first recorded in Lady Morgans (1817) France.[2][3] It was Western media coverage of Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc immolating himself in protest of the Buddhist crisis by the Vietnamese Ngo Dinh Diem regime in 1963 that introduced the word self-immolation to a wide English-speaking audience and gave it a strong association with fire.[4][5] The alternative name bonzo comes from the same era, because the Buddhist monks who immolated themselves were often referred to by the term bonze in English literature before the mid-20th century, particularly when describing monks from East Asia and French Indochina. This term is derived from the Japanese word bonzou (凡僧) for a priest or monk, and has become less common in modern literature.[6] History The self-immolation (jauhar) of the Rajput women, during the siege of Chittorgarh in 1568 Self-immolation is tolerated by some elements of Mahayana Buddhism and Hinduism, and it has been practiced for many centuries, especially in India, for various reasons, including Sati, political protest, devotion, and renouncement. Certain warrior cultures, such as in the Charans and Rajputs, also practiced self-immolation. The act of sacrificing ones own body, though not by fire, is a component of two well-known stories found in the ancient Buddhist text known as the Jataka tales, which, according to Buddhist tradition, gives accounts of past incarnations of the Buddha. In the Hungry Tigress Jataka, Prince Sattva looked down from a cliff and saw a starving tigress that was going to eat her newborn cubs, and compassionately sacrificed his body in order to feed the tigers and spare their lives. In the Sibi Jataka, King Śibi or Shibi was renowned for unselfishness, and the gods Śakra and Vishvakarman tested him by transforming into a hawk and a dove. The dove fell on the kings lap while trying to escape the hawk, and sought refuge. Rather than surrender the dove, Śibi offered his own flesh equivalent in weight to the dove, and the hawk agreed. They had rigged the balance scale, and King Śibi continued cutting off his flesh until half his body was gone, when the gods revealed themselves, restored his body, and blessed him. The Buddhist god of healing, the Medicine King or Medicine Buddha (Bhaishajyaraja) was associated with auto-cremation. The Lotus Sutra describes the Medicine King drinking scented oils, wrapping his body in an oil-soaked cloth, and burning himself as an offering to the Buddha. His body flamed for 1,200 years, he was reincarnated, burned off his forearms for 72,000 years, which enabled many to achieve enlightenment, and his arms were miraculously restored. Zarmanochegas was a monk of the Sramana tradition (possibly, but not necessarily a Buddhist) who, according to ancient historians such as Strabo and Dio Cassius, met Nicholas of Damascus in Antioch around 13 AD and burnt himself to death in Athens shortly thereafter.[7][8] Self-immolation has a long history in Chinese Buddhism. The relevant terms are: wangshen Chinese: 亡身 lose the body or Chinese: 忘身 forget the body, yishen Chinese: 遺身 abandon the body, and sheshen Chinese: 捨身 give up the body. James A. Benn explains the semantic range of Chinese Buddhist self-immolation. But abandoning the body also covers a broad range of more extreme acts (not all of which necessarily result in death): feeding ones body to insects; slicing off ones flesh; burning ones fingers or arms; burning incense on the skin; starving, slicing, or drowning oneself; leaping from cliffs or trees; feeding ones body to wild animals; self-mummification (preparing for death so that the resulting corpse is impervious to decay); and of course, auto-cremation.[9] The monk Fayu 法羽 (d. 396) carried out the earliest recorded Chinese self-immolation.[10] He first informed the illegitimate prince Yao Xu 姚緒 – brother of Yao Chang who founded the non-Chinese Qiang state Later Qin (384-417) – that he intended to burn himself alive. Yao tried to dissuade Fayu, but he publicly swallowed incense chips, wrapped his body in oiled cloth, and chanted while setting fire to himself. The religious and lay witnesses were described as being full of grief and admiration. Following Fayus example, many Buddhist monks and nuns have used self-immolation for political purposes. Based upon analysis of Chinese historical records from the 4th to the 20th centuries, Benn discovered, Although some monks did offer their bodies in periods of relative prosperity and peace, we have seen a marked coincidence between acts of self-immolation and times of crisis, especially when secular powers were hostile towards Buddhism.[11] For example, Daoxuans (c. 667) Xu gaoseng zhuan 續高僧傳 Continued Biographies of Eminent Monks records five monastics who self-immolated on the Zhongnan Mountains in response to the 574-577 persecution of Buddhism by Emperor Wu of Northern Zhou (known as the Second Disaster of Wu).[12] While self-immolation practices in China were based upon Indian Buddhist traditions, they acquired some distinctively Chinese aspects. An unburned tongue (cf. Anthony of Padua), which supposedly remained pink and moist owing to self-immolation while chanting the Lotus Sutra, was based on the belief in Śarīra Buddhist relics; purportedly from a masters remains after cremation.[13] Burning off fingers was a kind of gradual self-immolation, often in commemoration of relics or textual recitations. The Tang Dynasty monk Wuran 無染 (d. c. 840) had a spiritual vision in which Manjusri told him to support the Buddhist community on Mount Wutai. After organizing meals for one million monks, Wuran burned off a finger in sacrifice, and eventually after ten million meals, had burned off all his fingers.[14] Xichen 息塵 (d. c. 937; with two fingers left) became a favorite of Emperor Gaozu of Later Jin for practicing finger burning to memorialize sutra recitions.[15] Buddhist mummies refers to monks and nuns who practiced self-mummification through extreme self-mortification, for instance, Daoxiu 道休 (d. 629).[16] Spontaneous human combustion was a rare form of self-immolation that Buddhists associated with samādhi consciously leaving ones body at the time of enlightenment. The monk Ningyi 寧義 (d. 1583) stacked up firewood to burn himself, but, As soon the torch was raised, his body started to burn like a rotten root and was soon completely consumed. A wise person declared, He has entered the fiery samādhi. [17] A Hindu widow burning herself with the corpse of her husband (suttee), 1657 James A. Benn concludes that, for many monks and laypeople in Chinese history, self-immolation was a form of Buddhist practice that modeled and expressed a particular bodily or somatic path that led towards Buddhahood.[11] Jan Yun-Hua explains the medieval Chinese Buddhist precedents for self-immolation.[18] Relying exclusively on authoritative Chinese Buddhist texts and, through the use of these texts, interpreting such acts exclusively in terms of doctrines and beliefs (e.g., self-immolation, much like an extreme renunciant might abstain from food until dying, could be an example of disdain for the body in favor of the life of the mind and wisdom) rather than in terms of their socio-political and historical context, the article allows its readers to interpret these deaths as acts that refer only to a distinct set of beliefs that happen to be foreign to the non-Buddhist.[18] Jimmy Yu has shown that self-immolation cannot be interpreted based on Buddhist doctrine and beliefs alone but the practice must be understood in the larger context of the Chinese religious landscape. He examines many primary sources from the 16th and 17th century and demonstrates that bodily practices of self-inflicted violence, including self-immolation, was ritually performed not only by Buddhists but also by Daoists and literati officials who either exposed their naked body to the sun in a prolonged period of time as a form of self-sacrifice or burned themselves as a method of procuring rain [19] In other words, self-immolation was a sanctioned part of Chinese culture that was public, scripted, and intelligible both to the person doing the act and to those who viewed and interpreted it, regardless of their various religion affiliations. During the Great Schism of the Russian Church, entire villages of Old Believers burned themselves to death in an act known as fire baptism.[20] Scattered instances of self-immolation have also been recorded by the Jesuit priests of France in the early 17th century.[citation needed] However, their practice of this was not intended to be fatal: they would burn certain parts of their bodies (limbs such as the forearm or the thigh) to symbolise the pain Jesus endured while upon the cross.[citation needed] A 1973 study by a prison doctor suggested that people who choose self-immolation as a form of suicide are more likely to be in a disturbed state of consciousness, such as epilepsy.[21] In her article Can the Subaltern Speak?, philosopher Gayatri Spivak discusses how self-immolation is a way Hindu law regulated women in pre-colonial India. According to Spivak, the necessity to commit self-immolation imprisons women in a double bind in colonial and postcolonial India.[22] In Spivaks postcolonial framework, the woman who commits self-immolation takes the form of the subaltern. Political protest See also: List of political self-immolations A number of Buddhist monks (including the most famous case of Thích Quảng Đức) immolated themselves by burning in protest of the discriminatory treatment endured by Buddhists under the administration of President Ngô Đình Diệm in South Vietnam — even though violence against oneself is prohibited by most interpretations of Buddhist doctrine. The twenty-third chapter of the Lotus Sutra recounts the life story of the Bodhisattva Medicine King, which served as the main inspiration for the monks and nuns who self-immolated. In the Sutra, the Medicine King demonstrates his insight into the selfless nature of his body by ritualistically setting his body aflame, spreading the light of the Dharma for twelve hundred years. Thich Nhat Hanh adds: The bodhisattva shone his light about him so that everyone could see as he could see, giving them the opportunity to see the deathless nature of the ultimate.[23] The widespread coverage of the self-immolations of the Buddhist monks in western media established the practice as a type of a political protest. Self-immolations are often public, dramatic, political, and thus newsworthy. They can be seen as a type of altruistic suicides for the collective cause. Unlike suicide attacks, self-immolations are not intended to inflict physical harm or material damage.[1] They attract attention and become glorified as martyrdom, because of the perception of great pain, but they do not guarantee death for the burned. While the burning of vital tissue can be very painful during self-immolation, shock or asphyxiation quickly make the event painless,[21] as do the onset of third-degree burns which destroy the nerve endings. Suicides by self-immolation have led to numerous copycat suicides: researchers have counted almost 100 self-immolations covered by the New York Times and The Times between 1963 and 1971.[24] Most of these suicides occurred in Asia and in the United States during protests opposing the Vietnam War. In 1968 the practice spread to the Soviet bloc with self-immolation of Polish accountant and Armia Krajowa veteran Ryszard Siwiec, as well as that of Czech student Jan Palach in protest against the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. As a protest against a Soviet rule in Lithuania, 19-year-old Romas Kalanta set himself on fire in Kaunas. Non-political suicides by fire also became more prevalent. The practice continues with India leading – as many as 1,451 and 1,584 self-immolations have been reported in 2000 and 2001, respectively.[25] A particularly high wave of self-immolations in India has been recorded in 1990 protesting the Reservation in India.[1] Tamil Nadu has the highest number of self-immolations in India till date. It is considered to be the capital of Self-immolation in India. Since 2009, at least 120[26] Tibetans have self-immolated, more than 40 have died. The Dalai Lama has said he does not encourage the protests, but he has praised the courage of those who engage in self-immolation. However, the Chinese government claims that he and the Tibetan exiled government are inciting these acts.[27] In 2013, the Dalai Lama questioned the effectiveness of this tactic. He has also stated that the Tibetans are acting of their own will and he is powerless to influence them to stop carrying out immolation suicides.[28] A wave of self-immolation protests occurred in conjunction with the Arab Spring protests in the Middle East and North Africa, with at least 14 recorded incidents. These actions helped inspire the Arab Spring, including the 2010–2011 Tunisian revolution, the main catalyst of which was the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi, the 2011 Algerian protests (including many self-immolations in Algeria), and the 2011 Egyptian revolution. There have also been self-immolation protests in Saudi Arabia, Mauritania, and Syria.[29][30] During the United States federal government shutdown of 2013, a man poured gasoline over his body and set himself on fire on the National Mall in Washington DC. He died in the hospital shortly afterward.[31] See also 2013 Bulgarian self-immolations Buddhist views on suicide List of self-immolations in Telangana Self-immolations in Tunisia Self-immolation protests by Tibetans in China References ^ a b c Biggs, Michael (2005). Dying Without Killing: Self-Immolations, 1963–2002. In Diego Gambetta. Making Sense of Suicide Missions. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-929797-9. ^ The Oxford English Dictionary, 2009, 2nd ed., v. 4.0, Oxford University Press. ^ immolate, Oxford Dictionaries. ^ In Terrifying Color: Vietnamese Buddhist Monk’s 1963 Self-Immolation. thoughtcatalog. January 10, 2011. ^ Sanburn, Josh (January 20, 2011). A Brief History of Self-Immolation. TIME World. ^ Dictionary: bonze. Dictionary.reference. Retrieved 2014-04-20. ^ Strabo, xv, 1, on the immolation of the Sramana in Athens (Paragraph 73). ^ Dio Cassius, liv, 9. ^ Benn, James A. (2007), Burning for the Buddha: self-immolation in Chinese Buddhism, University of Hawaii Press, 9-10. ^ Benn (2007), 33-34. ^ a b (2007), 199. ^ Benn (2007), 80-82. ^ Benn (2007), 144-147. ^ Benn (2007), 135-6. ^ Benn (2007), 149-150. ^ Benn (2007), 97. ^ Benn (2007), 179. ^ a b thichnhattu. The Self-Immolation of Thich Quang Duc. Buddhismtoday. Retrieved 15 March 2012. ^ Yu, Jimmy (2012), Sanctity and Self-Inflicted Violence in Chinese Religions, 1500-1700, Oxford University Press, 115-130. ^ Coleman, Loren (2004). The Copycat Effect: How the Media and Popular Culture Trigger the Mayhem in Tomorrows Headlines. New York: Paraview Pocket-Simon and Schuster. p. 46. ISBN 0-7434-8223-9. ^ a b Prins, Herschel (2010). Offenders, Deviants or Patients?: Explorations in Clinical Criminology. Taylor & Francis. p. 291. ^ Sharp, J. (2008). Chapter 6, Can the Subaltern Speak?. Geographies of Postcolonialism. SAGE Publications. ^ Nhá̂t Hạnh. (2003). Opening the heart of the cosmos: Insights on the Lotus Sutra. Berkeley, CA: Parallax Press. p. 144. ^ Maris, Ronald W.; Alan Lee Berman, Morton M. Silverman, Bruce Michael Bongar (2000). Comprehensive textbook of suicidology. Guilford Press. p. 306. ISBN 978-1-57230-541-0. ^ Coleman, Loren (2004). The Copycat Effect: How the Media and Popular Culture Trigger the Mayhem in Tomorrows Headlines. New York: Paraview Pocket-Simon and Schuster. p. 66. ISBN 0-7434-8223-9. ^ Tibetan dies after self-immolation, reports say. Fox News. 21 July 2013. ^ 6:27 am GMT 13 Mar 2012 (13 March 2012). Teenage monk sets himself on fire on 53rd anniversary of failed Tibetan uprising. London: Telegraph. Retrieved 29 March 2012. ^ Dalai Lama doubts effect of Tibetan self-immolations. The Daily Telegraph (London). 13 June 2013. ^ Self-immolation spreads across Mideast inspiring protest. ^ Second Algerian dies from self-immolation: official. ^ washingtonpost/local/man-who-set-himself-on-fire-on-mall-dies/2013/10/05/2fc2932e-2ddf-11e3-b139-029811dbb57f_story.html External links The Self Immolators. A chronological list (bookform) containing the biographies and last statements of all known self immolators since Thich Quang Duc in 1967
Posted on: Sun, 06 Jul 2014 03:58:52 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015