新冠肺炎对日本宗教的影响

Levi McLaughlin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020年6月3日,东京佛教高等学府大正大学区域规划研究中心公布了一项调查结果,该调查向全国各地的寺庙僧侣询问了他们在日本大流行关闭期间的经历。总体而言,日本在新冠肺炎疫情初期的经历似乎没有许多人预测的那么可怕。亲自出席仪式是日本佛教寺庙的社会和经济命脉,就像神道教神社、基督教教堂和其他宗教组织一样。对某些仪式反应的认可和对其他仪式的公开谴责加剧了社会认可的佛教和神道教传统与所谓的新宗教之间的分歧。宗教援助提供了日本应对COVID-19的另一种历史,从该国最不稳定的居民的角度讲述了这一历史。新冠疫情直接导致佛教的声音在政府中被边缘化,并增加了鼓吹日本再军事化愿景的民族主义者的机会。©2022选择和编辑事项,Dorothea lddeckens, Philipp Hetmanczyk, Pamela E. Klassen和Justin B. Stein;个别章节,贡献者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of COVID-19 on religion in Japan
On 3 June 2020, the Regional Planning Research Center at Taisho University, an institution of Buddhist higher learning in Tokyo, publicized results of a survey that canvassed temple priests across the country about their experience with Japan’s pandemic shutdown. Overall, Japan’s experience with COVID-19 appeared less dire than many had predicted would be the case in the pandemic’s early phases. In-person attendance at ceremonies is the social and economic lifeblood of Buddhist temples in Japan, as it is for Shinto shrines, Christian churches, and other religious organizations. Approval of certain ritual responses and public opprobrium for others sharpened divides between socially sanctioned Buddhist and Shinto traditions and so-called New Religions. Religious aid providers afford an alternative history of Japan’s experience with COVID-19, one told from the perspective of the country’s most precarious residents. COVID-19 has contributed directly to marginalizing Buddhist voices in the government and increasing opportunities for nationalists who promote a vision of a remilitarized Japan. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Dorothea Lüddeckens, Philipp Hetmanczyk, Pamela E. Klassen, and Justin B. Stein;individual chapters, the contributors.
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