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The
Buddhist History of Kerala
Tamil
Sangam-works like Manimekhalai indicate that there were Buddhists
in Tamil Nadu and that the Buddhist missionaries were active in
spreading their religion. According to the Sangam tradition,
there was a famous Buddhist chatty a (temple) at Vanchi (Karur)
and a Palli Bana Perumal became a Buddhist.
The
Cheras were originally Mundas, many of whom were Buddhists even
before their arrival in Tamil Nadu. It was they as well as
the Buddhist missionaries from the Maurya Empire that brought the
religion of Buddha to the South. They were distinctly a powerful
minority in Tamil Nadu and were subjected to per-secution by the
Brahmin Counsellors of the Dravidian Hindu Kings during the ascendancy
of Brahminical Hinduism in the South. Aalavaipathikam records
that around 640 A.D., Sambanda Murti, a Brahmin, won over the Pandya
royal family and caused the massacre of 8,000 Buddhist monks in
Madurai; Buddhist nuns were reportedly made into devadasis and relocated
in the Hindu temple precincts. The persecution and eventual exodus
of Buddhists from Tamil Nadu to Kerala in the seventh century was
occasioned by the fall of the Buddhist Kalabhras at the hands of
the Pandyas.
The
Buddhists came to Kerala and established their temples and monasteries
in different parts of the country. The following Hindu temples
were once Buddhist shrines: the Vadakkunnathan Temple of Trichur,
the Kurumba Bhagavathi Temple of Cranganore, and the Durga Temple
at Paruvasseri near Trichur. A large number of Buddha-images
have been discovered in the coastal districts of Alleppey and Quilon;
the most important Buddha-image is the famous Karumati Kuttan near
Ambalappuzha. Buddhism probably flourished for 200 years (650-850)
in Kerala. The Paliyam Copper Plate of the Ay King, Varaguna (885-925
A.D.) shows that the Buddhists enjoyed some royal patronage even
in the tenth century.
The
decline of Buddhism started in the eighth century with the arrival
of the Aryan missionaries and the Brahminical religion. As
mentioned earlier, the Brahmin scholars defeated Buddhist
monks in debates and established the superiority of the Hindu religion.
Adi Sankaracharya, the Hindu revivalist, was also responsible for
the fall of Buddhism; he founded Hindu monasteries and trained Hindu
priest-scholars to combat his Buddhist adversaries. Buddhism
faded away gradually and completely disappeared during the reign
of the Vaishnavite Kulasekharas in the eleventh century. What
actually happened was that Buddhism was reabsorbed into Hinduism
from which it broke away. Many Keralites, like the Ezhavas,
who were most likely Buddhists once, gradually became Hindus.
Buddhism
has left its impact on Kerala. The images and tall rathas
(cars) used in temple processions, and utsavams (fairs) are said
to be Buddhist legacies. The Ayurvedic system of medical treatment
is also a gift of Buddhism. Buddhists opened schools [in pallikudam
and ezhuthupally. Pally is the Buddhist term for school)
near their monasteries. Kerala temples show traces of Buddhist
art and architecture. Amarasimha, the author of the popular
Sanskrit text-book used in Kerala schools until recently, was a
Buddhist. Kumaran Asan, the great Kerala poet, was influenced
by the great Buddhist religion and wrote the famou, Buddhist poems:
Karuna. Chandala Bhikshuki, and Sri Buddha Charitam.
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