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Silencing and Oblivion of Psychological Trauma, Its Unconscious Aspects, and Their Impact on the Inflation of Vajrayāna. An Analysis of Cross-Group Dynamics and Recent Developments in Buddhist Groups Based on Qualitative Data

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Author(s)
Anne Iris Miriam Anders
Keywords
indoctrination and abuse in buddhist groups
vajrayāna
decontextualization of concepts
silencing of trauma
guru yoga
pure view
karma purification
crazy wisdom
mindfulness
trauma

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/3908363
Online Access
https://doaj.org/article/8f57a82a0c2f4be7a87bdc4618b7c6f7
Abstract
The commercialization of Buddhist philosophy has led to decontextualization and indoctrinating issues across groups, as well as abuse and trauma in that context. Methodologically, from an interdisciplinary approach, based on the current situation in international Buddhist groups and citations of victims from the ongoing research, the psychological mechanisms of rationalizing and silencing trauma were analyzed. The results show how supposedly Buddhist terminology and concepts are used to rationalize and justify economic, psychological and physical abuse. This is discussed against the background of psychological mechanisms of silencing trauma and the impact of ignoring the unconscious in that particular context. Inadequate consideration regarding the teacher−student relationship, combined with an unreflective use of Tibetan honorary titles and distorted conceptualizations of methods, such as the constant merging prescribed in so-called 'guru yoga', resulted in giving up self-responsibility and enhanced dependency. These new concepts, commercialized as 'karma purification' and 'pure view', have served to rationalize and conceal abuse, as well as to isolate the victims. Therefore, we are facing societal challenges, in terms of providing health and economic care to the victims and implementing preventive measures. This use of language also impacts on scientific discourse and Vajrayāna itself, and will affect many future generations.
Date
2019-11-01
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:doaj.org/article:8f57a82a0c2f4be7a87bdc4618b7c6f7
2077-1444
10.3390/rel10110622
https://doaj.org/article/8f57a82a0c2f4be7a87bdc4618b7c6f7
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