Lineage of Resistance: When Asian American Buddhists Confront White Supremacy
Buddhist Peace Fellowship (BPF) has recently taken up a focused look at the topic of anger – a topic that’s been a popular concern for Buddhists across time and space, and in this particular Trump moment in American civilization, an especially relevant issue. For Buddhists of color in the U.S., anger may often accompany us in distinct ways on our path in the dharma. The suffering of delusion, greed, and hatred entails dealing with the effects of institutionalized white-supremacist delusion, capitalist greed, and ongoing histories of anti-People of Color sentiment used to justify white domination. As Rev. Zenju Earthlyn Manuel so skillfully illustrates in her book The Way of Tenderness (offered as an online seminar starting June 5th with Rev. Zenju herself), these effects are experienced in immensely embodied ways.For Asian American Buddhists, particularly those of us who were raised Buddhist, the systemic causes that effect anger are omnipresent in the very foundations of what often gets labeled as “American Buddhism.” In mainstream discourse, the "post-racial" ideological deployment of the phrase “American Buddhism” seldom includes Asian American Buddhists, an exclusion that quietly situates whiteness at the center.The power dynamic of white supremacy in American Buddhism is such that rendering Asian American Buddhists invisible serves as the very mechanism that also hides the fact of white domination and appropriation, under the guise of “common-sense” objective neutrality. More than simple inclusion politics, the issue of Asian and Asian American Buddhists erasure from the history and contemporary landscape of American Buddhism evidences a pattern of epistemological hegemony that traces back to European imperial conquest. As indigenous Maori scholar Dr. Linda Tuhiwai Smith notes in Decolonizing Methodologies, colonial conquest often entails a process of delegitimizing the knowledge systems of local populations so that colonizing forces can impose a system of superiority to exert authority and control. In the American Buddhist context, the epistemological hegemony is enacted through the combined logic of European enlightenment rationality as filtered through mainstream white supremacist pursuits of Buddhist enlightenment. Even if one isn’t aware of such dynamics, the effects still shape the embodied experiences of Asian American Buddhists in dangerously internalized ways. If one does think about, and I’ve spent some time thinking about it, it’s enough to make one mad. Really mad.So what does one do with all this anger? Well, if you’re like me, sometimes you go online and you read Angry Asian Buddhist.Over the years, I’ve had the great fortune of connecting with Angry Asian Buddhist blogger, Arun Likhati, and developing a meaningful spiritual friendship with him—one that has been built in large part by our mutual feelings of anger towards the racist discourse and exclusionary politics of white mainstream Buddhism. It was on his blog that I came across a posting entitled, “Our American Tradition,” regarding 18th generation Buddhist priest and former BPF President, Rev. Ryo Imamura, and the controversy around his 1992 letter to Tricycle magazine. Writing in response to the magazine editor’s statement that Asian American Buddhists “have not figured prominently in the development of American Buddhism,” his letter pointed out quite firmly that immigrant Asian Buddhists were in fact, the bearers of Buddhism in the U.S.
“[I]t was my grandparents and other immigrants from Asia who brought and implanted Buddhism in American soil over 100 years ago, despite white American intolerance and bigotry,” Imamura writes.


April 25, 1992
Tricycle
Letters to the Editor
In the Winter issue, editor Helen Tworkov made the inaccurate and racist comment that "Asian-American Buddhists...so far...have not figured prominently in the development of something called American Buddhism." I would like to point out that it was my grandparents and other immigrants from Asia who brought and implanted Buddhism in American soil over 100 years ago despite white American intolerance and bigotry. It was my American-born parents and their generation who courageously and diligently fostered the growth of American Buddhism despite having to practice discretely in hidden ethnic temples and in concentration camps because of the same white intolerance and bigotry. It was us Asian Buddhists who welcomed countless white Americans into our temples, introduced them to the Dharma, and often assisted them to initiate their own Sanghas when they felt uncomfortable practicing with us. And it was in our battered and brutalized ancestral homelands that white American GIs and the tourists who followed were introduced to the peace and harmony of the Dharma in the aftermath of our many genocidal wars in Asia.
We Asian Buddhists have hundreds of temples in the United States with active practitioners of all ages, ongoing educational programs that are both Buddhist and interfaith in nature, social welfare projects...everything that white Buddhist centers have and perhaps more. It is apparent that Tworkov has restricted "American Buddhism" to mean "white American Buddhism", and that her statement is even more misleading than one claiming that Americans of color did not figure prominently in the development of American history.
It appears to me that white and Asian Buddhists live in two discrete worlds and practice different forms of Buddhism although they may use the same names and terminologies. Do not mistake me to say that white Buddhists do not practice authentic Buddhism; I am not saying that. It is just a very different form, one that is innovative and exciting in its own right. It is eloquent, dramatic, intellectual, impatient, proud and so very clear. In contrast, we Asian are like Hun-Tun (Chaos) and like tofu, seemingly lacking the seven discriminating holes in the head and persisting unobtrusively in new and often hostile environments. White Buddhists treat their teachers like gurus or living Buddhas whereas we Asians regard ours to be fallible human beings who represent an honored tradition and not themselves. White Buddhist centers rise and fall dramatically like the ocean waves whereas Asian temples seem to persist uneventfully and quietly through generations. White practitioners practice intensive psychotherapy on their cushions in a life-or-death struggle with the individual ego whereas Asian Buddhists seem to just smile and eat together. It is clear that, although they may adopt Asian Buddhist names, dress and mannerisms, white Buddhists cannot help but drag their Western Judeo-Christian identities and shadows with them wherever they go. This certainly makes for an exciting and dramatic new form of Buddhism.
As an 18th generation priest of the Jodo Shin sect and a past (and only Asian-American) president of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship, I believe my perspective is quite unique for this journal. Certainly I may have made some gross generalizations, but they contain enough validity to be voiced here, even though I am neither a white practitioner nor one of their recognized teachers.
I enjoyed reading the Winter issue of Tricycle and will encourage other Asian Buddhists to do the same, especially since we would probably never publish such a professional-looking and articulate journal ourselves. In contrast, our publications are quite amateurish-looking and probably uninteresting to those outside of our communities. I am sure that Tricycle will become a very popular journal for the white Buddhist community and would like to convey my congratulations. In closing, please remember that we Asian Buddhists do exist (if only in the background) and that we have feelings that can also be bruised by unthinking comments.
Gassho,
Ryo Imamura
P.S. Please do not reprint this letter in Tricycle if you do not print it in its entirety.
cc: Joanna Macy, Masatomi Nagatomi & Gary Snyder
Funie Hsu is an Assistant Professor in American Studies at San Jose State University. She has a background in education, having taught elementary school in Los Angeles Unified, received a Ph.D. in Education from UC Berkeley, and continued her research on U.S. empire and education as a UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow at UC Davis. She comes from a multicultural, multilingual (Hoklo, Hakka, Mandarin, English) family and is the daughter of working class Taiwanese American immigrants. She grew up with Buddhist practice and feels strongly about including the experiences of Asian and Asian American Buddhists in discussions of Buddhism in the U.S. Coming from a vegan/vegetarian Buddhist tradition, she is also passionate about including non-human animals in our work for collective liberation.