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TOLERANCE |
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Religious tolerance (āgamādhivāsanā) is an attitude of acceptance and good-will towards other faiths.
In 256 BCE King Aśoka was expressing a genuinely Buddhist sentiment when he wrote: 'I desire that there be growth in the essentials of all religions. This can be done in several ways, but all of them have their root in restrained speech; in not praising one's own religion and condemning the religion of others, without good cause. And even if criticism is justified it should be done in a mild way. Whoever praises his own religion due to excessive devotion and condemns other religions only harms his own religion. Therefore contact between religions is good. One should listen to and respect the doctrines professed by others. I desire that all should be well-learned in the good doctrines of other religions.' Like many ancient Buddhist sayings this one has a remarkably modern ring to it. Writing in 911 the Arab geographer Abu Zeid al Hasan said of Sri Lanka: ‘In the Island there are a multitude of Jews as well as many other sects, the king permitting the practice of every religion,’ a policy Hasan found difficult to understand. The Catholic monk John de Marignolli visited Sri Lanka in about 1349 and found that ‘the monks made me welcome as if I were one of their own.’ When the first American Protestant missionaries arrived in Thailand in the 1840’s King Mongkut build them a church and asked them to teach him Latin so he could read the Bible and get to know the new religion. See Blasphemy. | Search BuddhismAtoZ.com |
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