At lot of the tales of corruption out of China are sad, sordid stories. This one is too, but it’s also pretty funny, in an ironic sort of way.
China has appointed Shi Yinle, former abbot of White Horse Temple, as the new head of the Shaolin Temple—just two days after the monastery confirmed that longtime abbot Shi Yongxin was under investigation for alleged financial crimes and sexual misconduct, according to the South China Morning Post.
“Sexual misconduct.” Yeah, I bet Chinese officials frown on monks making the sign of the two-humped ox. While there are exceptions, that “refraining from sex” part is usually non-negotiable for the monastic lifestyle. “I want to be a lifeguard, but I don’t want to get wet.” Good luck with that.
As for the “financial crimes,” it doesn’t sound like he was trying very hard to escape the wheel of existence, does it?
“In accordance with the regulations on the appointment of abbots of Chinese Buddhist Temples, after democratic evaluation and approval by the Shaolin Temple and following the relevant procedures, Venerable Yinle was invited to be the abbot of the Shaolin Temple,” the temple said Tuesday.
Shi Yongxin, who led Shaolin for over 25 years, has been stripped of his Buddhist credentials, and companies linked to him have been deregistered. The Buddhist Association of China condemned his actions as “severely damaging to the reputation of Buddhism and the image of monks” and confirmed that his ordination certificate was revoked.
I doubt Yongxin has damaged the reputation of Buddhism at large, but rather the Chinese communist-approved version. Indeed, the very nature of Buddhism, which sees the world of the senses as an illusion, would seem to be fundamentally opposed to a political creed founded on “scientific materialism.” It seems the latter would inevitably corrupt the former. And so it has.
The Shaolin Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Henan and birthplace of Zen Buddhism and Shaolin kung fu, announced that Yongxin was accused of embezzling temple funds, misusing assets, and maintaining long-term improper relationships with multiple women, fathering children in violation of monastic vows.
The SCMP writes that on Tuesday, the abbot’s courtyard was sealed off for “cultural relic preservation,” and an inscription honoring Yongxin’s leadership was covered. Locals criticized the disgraced abbot as a “playboy monk” who “tarnished the image of Buddhism.”
The overarching ethos of modern China seems to get rich by whatever means necessary, no matter the consequences or shortcuts taken along the way. Yongxin seems to have taken this ethos to heart over the teachings of the Buddha.
But to be fair, he’s not the first monk to take this route, as Thai monk Wirapol Sukphol, a “fugitive Buddhist monk with a penchant for aviator sunglasses, Louis Vuitton luggage and travelling in private jets,” was sentenced to over 100 years in prison for money laundering, as well as raping a 13 year old.
The illusory world seems to be a constant temptation…