Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Discussion of ordination, the Vinaya and monastic life. How and where to ordain? Bhikkhuni ordination etc.
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Still Searching
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Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Still Searching »

Obviously, being attracted to any gender is forbidden in the monk lifestyle because dating & sex is not allowed.
Some transgender people are transgender because they prefer to be the opposite gender, not only because they're attracted to the same or opposite sex.
Some can be Asexual, meaning no attraction to anyone at all and just live a life as someone else because they feel more comfortable in that particular body.

So, are transgender people forbidden from joining a Buddhist Monastery even if they vow to live a pure life and give up everything to be fully committed?
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by LonesomeYogurt »

I don't think there is a specific prohibition, but it might be difficult from a practical standpoint. It depends if the person is post-op or not; if someone was born a man, but now is physically a woman, I don't think that would be a problem at all as long as they had a way to provide for any medications or on-going treatments. If someone had a physically male body but identified as female, that would be a more complex issue.
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Monkey Mind »

I am not sure where you are, but in the USA there is also the health insurance issue. In the USA, there is state-by-state differences about whether or not insurance companies will pay for transgender treatments, e.g. hormone injections. So if you live in a state that does not mandate inclusion of transgender treatments and you are expected to pay for these out-of-pocket, then a monastic life will be problematic.
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Cittasanto »

Still Searching wrote:Obviously, being attracted to any gender is forbidden in the monk lifestyle because dating & sex is not allowed.
Some transgender people are transgender because they prefer to be the opposite gender, not only because they're attracted to the same or opposite sex.
Some can be Asexual, meaning no attraction to anyone at all and just live a life as someone else because they feel more comfortable in that particular body.

So, are transgender people forbidden from joining a Buddhist Monastery even if they vow to live a pure life and give up everything to be fully committed?
I have a suspicion there is a thread that deals with this directly.
and there was the first female to male change involving the head of the FWBO/Tiratana which may be linked in it.
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by cooran »

Hello Still Searching, all,

Transgendered people and buddhism
http://sdhammika.blogspot.com.au/2009/1 ... dhism.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by James the Giant »

Have a read of this... Pandaka seems to be related sort-of to the theme...
It talks of eunuchs, which I guess technically a post-op transsexual woman (previously man) is.
But transgender is a different thing, that's not going all the way to transsexual, right?
It's just identifying with another gender, not necessarily acting, dressing, or having surgery to be more like the other gender.
Hmm... so maybe this Pandaka thing isn't so relevant. Anyway, I'll post it here.

Pandaka is usually translated as eunuch, but eunuchs are only one of five types of pandakas recognized by the Commentary to Mv.I.61:

1) An asitta (literally, a "sprinkled one") -- a man whose sexual desire is allayed by performing fellatio on another man and bringing him to climax. (Some have read this as classing all homosexual males as pandakas, but there are two reasons for not accepting this interpretation:
(a) It seems unlikely that many homosexuals would allay their sexual desire simply by bringing someone else to climax through oral sex;
(b) other homosexual acts, even though they were known in ancient India, are not included under this type or under any of the types in this list.)

2) A voyeur -- a man whose sexual desire is allayed by watching other people commit sexual indiscretions.

3) A eunuch -- one who has been castrated.

4) A half-time pandaka -- one who is a pandaka only during the waning moon. (! -- The Sub-commentary's discussion of this point shows that its author and his contemporaries were as unfamiliar with this type as we are today. Perhaps this was how bisexuals were understood in ancient times.)

5) A neuter -- a person born without sexual organs. This passage in the Commentary further states that the last three types cannot take the Going-forth, while the first two can (although it also quotes from the Kurundi that the half-time pandaka is forbidden from going-forth only during the waning moon (!).)

As for the prohibition in Mv.I.61, that pandakas cannot receive full ordination, the Commentary states that that refers only to those who cannot take the Going-forth. However, in the context of this rule, and other rules in the Patimokkha where pandakas enter into the calculation of an offense, the Commentary does not say whether pandaka covers all five types of pandakas or only those not allowed to ordain. In other words, in the context of these rules do "sprinkled ones" and voyeurs count as pandakas or men? In the context of this rule the practical implications of the distinction are minor: If counted as men, they would be grounds for a dukkata; if pandakas, grounds for a thullaccaya.
However, under Pc 6, 44, 45, & 67, the distinction makes the difference between an offense and a non-offense, and so it is an important one to draw. There seems good reason to count them as men under all rules, for if they could ordain and yet were considered pandakas under these rules, the texts would have been obliged to deal with the issue of how bhikkhus were to treat validly ordained pandakas in their midst in the context of these rules. But they don't. This shows that the issue never arose, which means that, for the purposes of all the rules, these two types of individuals count as men.

Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Buddhist Monastic Code 1
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It's worth noting this is all commentarial. It's not in the suttas said by the Buddha.
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by drifting cloud »

The Thai concept of "kathoey" (ladyboy) might be more relevant here than descriptions of "eunuchs". Are kathoeys allowed to ordain?
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Bankei »

about 2 days ago there was an article in a major thai newspaper about the former miss tiffany ordaining as a monk. miss tiffany is a famous ladyboy beauty pagent. miss tiffany still retained her male member but had breast enlargments done. she had these removed and then became a monk. she or he intends to ordain for life according to the article.

i took a photo of the front page of the article and can post it if anyone interested.

Bankei
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Lazy_eye »

Interesting story, Bankei! There's a link to the Bangkok Post article here:

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/local/3 ... s-monkhood
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Bankei »

here it is
Attachments
former miss tiffany
former miss tiffany
20130515_0936441405723703.jpg (247.64 KiB) Viewed 11087 times
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by Bankei »

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Bankei
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by gavesako »

This is a bit of a controversial topic for the Vinaya experts, and I don't think that we would allow such a person to become a monk in the Western Sangha. But in Thailand there are always more options... Amazing Thailand!

This related article just came out recently:
In an article in volume 3 of the journal, Paisarn Likhitpreechakul examines the textual evidence for the Buddha’s banning of “pandakas” from receiving ordination. The exact meaning of the term pandaka has always been unclear. It has usually been interpreted as referring to someone of indeterminate gender, which in turn has been used as a justification for refusing monastic ordination to homosexuals, hermaphrodites, eunuchs, and transgender persons, and sometimes for holding wider social stigma against such people as well. But Likhitpreechakul calls attention to an overlooked commentarial tradition that suggests that the term pandaka refers to a man who cannot emit semen: i.e. that the issue is impotence, not gender. This would have clear implications for the LBGTQ communities of traditional Buddhist nations, and perhaps for Buddhists in the West as well.

http://ocbs.org/ojs/index.php/jocbs/article/view/28
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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by gavesako »

Another related story:

Ladyboy monk's full about face
He grew up identifying as a woman and spent his mother's money on make-up and surgery, but a brief stint in the clergy helped offer Numnow a new outlook

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/investi ... about-face
Bhikkhu Gavesako
Kiṃkusalagavesī anuttaraṃ santivarapadaṃ pariyesamāno... (MN 26)

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Post by Ryan »

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Re: Becoming a Monk: Are Transgender People Welcome?

Post by waterchan »

Ryan wrote:
gavesako wrote:Amazing Thailand!
Indeed! Perhaps, weird Thailand!

I wonder whether this is the Thai alternative for a bhikkhuni ;)
:lol:

That was hilarious :D
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