What
is the reason for the androcentric nature of the Tripitaka?
I am focussing
my answer only within the Theravada context which preserved
the teachings in Pali. Theravadins believe that their teaching
is most authentic from a historical point of view. We need to
understand that the Tripitaka that we know of was not a written
work from the Buddha's time. Religious knowledge was to be practised
and handed down from teachers to chosen disciples. Hence no
religious teaching was recorded. This applied also to the teaching
of the Buddha. The Tripitaka was first recorded in Sri Lanka
not before 450 B.E. (about 90 B.C.)
What was
recorded was according to the understanding of the monk recorders.
What they chose to record was subjective, hence it is understandable
why the Tripitaka is androcentric. The Tripitaka was recorded
by men who were ridden with Indian social values. They were
men who by the vinaya, were expected to lead lives of purity.
The most immediate obstacle to their chastity was the opposite
gender. Many teachings as preserved by these men therefore projected
women (embodiment of their obstacles) as evil, unclean, etc.
This is a necessary barrier to fence themselves off from failing
into the pit of the unchaste. While reading the Tripitaka one
must remind oneself of this limitation in order to sift the
essence from its social contextual limitations.
Looking
at the teaching from the Paramattha level, one sees clearly
that Buddhism is free from gender bias, Buddhism is the first
religion in the world to recognise the equal spiritual potentiality
of men and women. This provides a special place for Buddhism
which started in India to lift up to the world spiritual level
without boundary in race, caste, or gender.
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