3.1. Political Context
The reformation of Korean Buddhist education was not the only pressing issue for the nation’s Buddhist revivalists. The introduction of modern pedagogy to Korean Buddhism during the short-lived Korean Empire (1897–1910, K.
Daehan Jeguk) was closely tied to attempts within Korea’s monastic community to organize itself along modern lines, and the history of the MJS at Weonheung Temple, in particular, was intimately bound to these efforts. In contrast with the highly bureaucratic, state-run Buddhism of Korea’s Unified Silla (668–935 CE) and Goryeo (918–1392) Dynasties, Buddhist temples under the Joseon Dynasty had devolved into an informal association of monastic lineages. With the lifting of legal restrictions in 1895, the nation’s Buddhist leaders aspired to restructure Korean Buddhism after the organizational frameworks of Japan’s Buddhist sects. Yet, as Korea’s temples fought to recover from centuries of poverty and marginalization, the religion remained disorganized. In 1899, the Korean government intervened directly to centralize temple administration and protect Korean temples from “attempted power grabs” by various Japanese Buddhist sects (
H. I. Kim 2018, pp. 4, 188). The government designated sixteen major temples around Korea as focal points for reorganization to be overseen by the Office for the Management of the Association of Temples (
Sasa Gwalli So) at Kakhwang Temple, marking the first time in modern history wherein a Korean Buddhist temple functioned as an administrative arm of the government.
In early 1902, the Office for the Management of the Association of Temples moved to Weonheung Temple, a purpose-built temple just outside Seoul’s East Gate and, on January 4th, over eight hundred Buddhists from around Seoul attended the opening ceremony. (
K. Kim 2006, p. 334). In the same year, the Korean government enacted the Ordinance for National Temple Operation (
Guknae sachal hyunhaeng sechik) emulating Buddhism’s organizational structure under Japan’s Meiji Regime (1868–1912). The ordinance united all Korean temples within a single sect, the Joined Order of Seon (“Meditation”) and Gyo (“Doctrinal Study”) (
Seongyo yangjong) to be administered at Weonheungsa. However, this forced reorganization gained little support among the Korean
sangha, as the sect’s administrative powers were held by government-appointed officials, instead of monastics. This government-mandated attempt to centralize Korean temples was largely abandoned with the start of the Russo–Japanese War of 1904 and Japan’s assumption of Korea as a protectorate the following year, leaving Korea’s Buddhist community to again “fend for itself” (
K. Kim 2006, p. 335;
H. I. Kim 2018, pp. 188–89;
Sorensen 1993, p. 53).
In the winter of 1906, a collection of younger, progressive Korean clergy from the wealthier monasteries around Seoul launched the Buddhist Study Society at Weonheung Temple. Led by Wolcho Hong (1858–1934), “one of the principal Buddhist activists of the period” (
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265), alongside Bodam Lee and Wolhae, the BSS identified Japanese Pure Land Buddhism as the closest in practice to Korea’s indigenous Buddhist traditions. Active in Korea since 1897, missionaries from Japan’s Pure Land Jōdoshū Sect (hereafter JDS) had established nearly 200 propagation centers and amassed tens of thousands of Korean followers, prompting the BSS to seek an alliance with the JDS. In the spring of 1906, the BSS launched the nation’s first modern educational institution for Buddhist clergy, the Myeongjin School, at Weonheung Temple under JDS auspices, with the Jōdo priest Inoue Kenshin serving as advisor (
K. Kim 2006, p. 334;
Tikhonov 2010, pp. 264–65); see
Section 3.2 below for further details).
Despite the BSS’s efforts, however, this alliance between the JDS and Weonheung Temple did not last. In 1907, Hoegwang Yi (1862–1933), another “leading reformist” and then widely respected for his doctrinal expertise (
H. Kim 2010, p. 288), assumed the directorship of the MJS. The following year, a gathering of monastic leaders from 52 major temples around Korea formed Weonjong, or “Unified Order”, to advance a “progressive agenda” within the Korean
sangha, reunite the nation’s temples, and protect their interests. Absorbing the BSS, the newly formed order selected Weonheung Temple for its administrative offices and elected Yi as its head. Yet the order lacked social or political influence, much to Yi’s frustration. In an act earning Yi the lasting enmity of later generations of Korean nationalists, in 1910 he secretly negotiated a partnership between the Weonjong and Japan’s Sōtō Zen Sect (J. Sōtōshū) in hopes of securing stronger legal protection for Korea’s Buddhist temples. Adding to his infamy, Yi chose as advisor the Sōtō missionary Takeda Hanshi (1863–1911) (see
H. Kim 2010 for further discussion), a former Japanese intelligence operative notorious for his involvement in the assassination of Joseon Queen Min (aka Empress Myeongseong) in 1895. However, Yi’s attempted Weon–Sōtō alliance sparked protests among the younger progressive monastics at Weonheung Temple. Led by Yi’s colleague Manhae, then an MJS instructor, the dissidents broke from Yi’s Weonjong on “doctrinal grounds” and launched the rival Imjaejong, or “Linchi Order,” which achieved some success in organizing itself as a pan-national organization. With the split, the MJS was dissolved (
H. Kim 2010, p. 289;
H. I. Kim 2018, pp. 190–91;
Tikhonov 2010, pp. 268–69).
Both the Weonjong and Imjaejong Orders were again short-lived. Following Japan’s formal annexation of Korea with the signing of the Japan–Korea Treaty of 1910 on August 22nd, the newly appointed Japanese Governor-General Terauchi Masatake (in office 1910–1916) became concerned over the growing schism within Korean Buddhism. In 1911, the colonial government passed the infamous Temple Ordinance (
Sachalryeong, J.
Jisetsu Rei), which remained in effect through the length of the Japanese Occupation, reconstituting the Joined Order of Seon and Gyo to be headquartered again at Gakhwang Temple. Sidelining the involvement of any Japanese Buddhist sects, the ordinance granted the Japanese Governor-General exclusive authority over the order, the temple properties, and the appointment of their abbots. Consequently, only monastics with pro-Japanese affiliations were granted appointments, leading to widespread discontent among the Korean
sangha. Power struggles ensued between pro- and anti- Japanese monastics, leading to the latter’s expulsion from prominent monasteries (
H. I. Kim 2018, pp. 190–91;
Sorensen 1993, p. 53). Despite its assumption of direct control, the Japanese colonial administration adopted a firm yet benevolent approach in their governance of Korean Buddhism, coupled with the provision of economic incentives to secure compliance. While the Korean
sangha generally opposed these stringent government controls, it lacked the fervor and cohesion necessary to offer effective resistance (
Sorensen 1993, pp. 55–56). It also set the stage for Korean Buddhism’s post-war “Purification Movement” (
Jeonghwa undong), in which the nation’s celibate monastics struggled to expel fellow clergy who had adopted the Japanese practice of clerical marriage, denouncing the latter as Japanese “collaborators” (
P. Park 1998, p. 131).
3.2. Operation of the Myeongjin School 1906–1910
It was in the midst of this political turbulence and organizational instability that the BSS launched the Myeongjin School at Weonheung Temple in 1906. In addition to their affinity with Japanese Pure Land Buddhism, the BSS sought a partnership with the JDS due to the importance the sect placed on education in their proselytization efforts. Along with sponsoring scholarships for Korean monastics to study in Japan, in 1901 the JDS began opening modern, Japanese-style schools for Koreans in various cities including Gaeseong, Hannam, and Haeju. Speaking at Weonheung Temple’s opening ceremony in 1902, the JDS leader Hiroya Sansi had declared “Buddhism develops when knowledge is developed, not when temples are built… Buddhist schools must be established in (Seoul) to educate monks”. As such, the JDS was amiable to the partnership. Thus, with JDS support, the BSS applied to the Korean government’s Interior Ministry (
Naemubu) upon its founding, to open a modern Buddhist educational institute, the first of its kind in the nation. Permission was granted on 19 February 1906 (
S. Kim 2003, pp. 137–38).
On 10 April, the BSS dispatched an announcement of the school’s opening to all major temples throughout the nation. The message begins by lamenting that, over the course of Buddhism’s millennium-long history in Korea, the Korean sangha has remained steadfast in its adherence to the Buddhist precepts, yet never before has it faced such difficulties. “There is not a single monk who isn’t despondent”, it continues, “(O)ther religions are rising up everywhere these days… destroying Buddhism, taking away Buddhist properties, and using it to run their schools”. The announcement goes on to blame these “deplorable” circumstances on the Korean Buddhism’s “ignorance” of worldly studies and the modern global developments, before quoting the BSS’s JDS advisor Genshin Inoue that, “if you want to save Buddhism”, “(t)he best way” is to engage in modern education. Seeing this as an opportunity for “Korean Buddhism to now reemerge”, the message announces the school’s starting date and a curriculum including “Buddhist doctrines and new modern studies, texts of other religions, and Western traditions, mathematics, and foreign language.” The message then requests that recipients inform their subsidiary temples of the news before inviting them to send two students to enroll at the school at the end of the month, along with sufficient clothes and food. It closes by declaring that “(i)t will be a great boost to Korean Buddhism” for their monastics to engage in “new modern studies.”
Planning for the school continued and, after briefly considering naming it after Weonheung Temple, on April 10th the BSS formally christened their new institute the
Myeongjin Hakgyo, or “School of Advancement in Enlightenment,” combining the Chinese Characters
myeong (明), from
myeongdeok, or “reveling virtue,” and
jin (進) from
jeongjin, or “devotion.” (
Dongguk University 1976, pp. 12–13). Yet, Tikhonov notes the possible political expediency in the name’s association with Japan’s then-ruling Meiji Regime, whose title also means “enlightened rule” (
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265).
On 10 April, the BSS additionally ratified the MJS’s charter, establishing the school’s purpose to be that of educating monastics through modern teaching methodologies in order to cultivate clergy with a wide base of general knowledge who will be able to lead Korean Buddhism in the modern era (MJS Charter Article 1, (
Dongguk University 1976, p. 277). The MJS’s initial charter further outlined key guidelines governing MJS admissions, curriculum, evaluation, and conduct. These provisions included the establishment of a student quota of 35 per grade with additional spaces for auxiliary departments (Article 1), a two-year study term (Article 2), and a five-hour daily class schedule, in addition to mandatory gymnastics and meditation practice (Article 3). It further stipulated that only monastics aged 13 to 30 who had completed professional monastic training at their temples would be eligible for enrollment, while the academic year would comprise two semesters, with specific dates outlined for each (Article 4). The school’s evaluation procedures would encompass monthly, semester, and graduation tests, with grading thresholds set for passing and achieving honors (Article 9). The charter also addressed disciplinary measures, incentives for academic excellence, and a mandatory monastic dress code (Article 9). Moreover, it obligated all MJS graduates to teach in Buddhist schools or temples for a minimum of six years following graduation, functionally establishing the school as a Buddhist teacher-training facility (Article 9,
Dongguk University 1976, pp. 277–79).
With Bodam Lee serving as the MJS’s first director, the school’s starting faculty included Lee himself, as professor of Buddhist Doctrine, Wolcho Hong as instructor of History of Religions and Propagation Methodology, along with Dongjin Park as instructor of Religious Studies, Buddhist Studies, Philosophy, and Propagation. Non-Buddhist courses were taught by Myungchil Lee, instructor of Mathematics, Sciences, and Metrology, and Haeyoung Shin, instructor of Law and Economics. The renowned scholar Neunghwa Yi (1869–1943), a pioneer in the field of modern Korean religious studies, additionally served as professor of Language and Religious History (
Dongguk University 1976, p. 14). Guest lecturers also made frequent appearances at the MJS, including Hyojeong Yun, a prominent pro-Japanese progressive Korean Buddhist activist (
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265).
Initially established as an “Ordinary School” (
Botong hakgyo), corresponding to the high-school-level educational institution, in 1907, the MJS transitioned into a college-level institution (
godeung jeonmun hakgyo) following government approval as the level of student enrollment increased (
Nam 1983, pp. 102–3). MJS classes followed a standard modern format resembling Japanese educational models, and offered a comprehensive curriculum encompassing “general knowledge” courses alongside its Buddhist studies, including four semesters each of Japanese language, sports, mathematics, and historical geography, in addition to two semesters of law, land surveying, and philosophy (
Kaplan 2020, pp. 49–50;
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265). In spite of their demanding daily schedule, which included two hours of Seon (J.
Zen) meditation, the new students were nevertheless reportedly eager and enthusiastic (
Dongguk University 1976, p. 14).
Despite the Pure Land focus of the JDS, the MJS Buddhist studies curriculum covered a diversity of texts valued within East-Asian Mahayana Buddhism. The MJS’s first semester included classes on the
Brahma’s Net Sutra, alongside Dushun’s (557–640) commentary on the
Avataṃsaka Sūtra (C.
Huayan fajie guanmen), as well as the three Pure Land Sutras, namely the
Longer Sukhāvatīvyūha Sūtra (aka the Infinite Life Sutra/The Larger Amitabha Sutra),
Amitayurdhyana Sutra (aka the Contemplation Sutra), and the
Shorter Sukhāvatīvyūha Sūtra (also known as the Amitabha Sutra), while the second semester covered the
Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra (C.
léngqié ābáduōluó bǎojīng), alongside the
Outline of the Tian-Tai Four Teachings or
Cheontae sagyoui composed by the tenth-century Korean monastic Jegwan (?–970). The third semester’s curriculum included
The Enlightened Verses and
The Nirvana Sutra (C.
Dàbānnièpán-jīng), and the fourth included the
Transmission of the Lamp (C.
Ching-te Ch’uan teng lu) and Yongmin Yanshou’s (904–975)
Records of the Source-Mirror (C.
Zongjing lu). The lengthy
Avataṃsaka Sūtra (
Daebang gwangbul hwaeomgyeong) was studied over two semesters in the final year (
Kaplan 2020, p. 50). While the Pure Land Sutras valued by the Jōdoshū were addressed in the first semester, the remaining texts were central to a variety of Buddhist schools, including Yogacara (
Yusik), Madhyamika (
Samnon), Tendai (
Cheontae), Huayen (
Hwaeom), and Chan (
Seon), each of which has exerted a lasting influence over Korean Buddhism’s historical development. The inclusion of courses on these texts was not only directly inspired by the curricula then offered within Korea’s traditional Buddhist seminaries (see
Kaplan 2020, pp. 12–39 for further discussion), but additionally reflected Korean Buddhism’s overall syncretic tendencies.
Even with the clear influence of Korean Buddhist tradition, however, the MJS was not without its critics within the monastic community. Opposing the school’s modern educational style and connections to the Japanese, a conservative faction of monastic actively protested the MJS’s opening and a month later attempted to take control of Weonheungsa with the express purpose of closing the school. However, their efforts failed and the conservative monastics were expelled from the temple, with one unsuccessfully attempting to launch a rival educational institute at Bongeun Temple (
Kaplan 2020, p. 49;
Dongguk University 1976, p. 14).
With the removal of opposition from within Weonheung Temple, approximately 50 MJS entrants began their first year of studies, to be joined by 55 additional students in 1907. Yet, despite the zeal of these pioneering students, many of whom reportedly stayed up all night studying (
Dongguk University 1976, p. 14), they appear to have faced difficulties. According to the surviving records, the school produced only 11 graduates in 1908 and 7 in 1909, a cumulative graduation rate of less than 20%. According to Korean scholar Doyoung Nam, it has been suggested that many dropped out due to the school’s strict rules and associations with Japanese Buddhism, yet there is presently no evidence supporting such assertions. Nam instead proposes the MJS’s early students interrupted their studies to serve as teachers at branch schools being established by the BSS around the country, returning later to complete their diploma (
Nam 1983, pp. 118–19). However, Nam’s claim is also not supported by MJS graduation records, as the reopened school only produced four graduates in 1912, nine in 1913, and five in 1914 (Dongguk University Graduation Records). Due to the paucity of surviving records, it is unlikely scholars will know the exact reasons behind this high rate of student attrition at the MJS. Yet, given the novelty of the modern education system being piloted by the school within the Korean Buddhist context, the loss of such a high percentage of its early students is not unexpected.
Graduating from the MJS in 1908, the famed reformer Manhae returned in 1909 after a year in Japan to found the MJS-affiliated Metrology Research Institute (
Myeongjin Cheuklyang-gangseupso). Manhae was additionally appointed as the school’s land surveying instructor and, as Tikhonov notes, “was known of his enthusiasm for this rather mundane pursuit” (2010, p. 265). The inclusion of courses on land surveying and law within the MJS curriculum speaks directly to the one of the primary concerns of MJS students, and Korea’s Buddhist monastic community, at the time, namely safeguarding monastic landholdings from theft by what Tikhonov describes as “greedy officials and local worthies watching for an opportunity to enrich themselves” (
Kaplan 2020, p. 76;
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265). Manhae’s own “enthusiasm” for land surveying was likely bolstered by his 1908 success in defending his temple’s land holdings in court against those fraudulently seeking to claim ownership (
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265).
3.3. Impact, Influence, and Subsequent History
Despite the school’s initial high attrition rate, the students who did successfully graduate from the MJS in 1908 and 1909 would go on to have an outsized impact on Korean Buddhism in the colonial period. In addition to the influential Manhae, MJS’s 1908’s graduating class included the translator Jinho An (1880–1965), who published translations of nearly 40 Buddhist scriptures along with materials for Korean monastic seminaries that are still in use today, the Buddhist modernist Sangro Gweon (1879–1965), and Korean independence activist Jonguk Yi (
Kaplan 2020, p. 49;
Nathan 2018, pp. 67–68;
Tikhonov 2010, p. 265).
The initial opposition of conservative monastics within Weonheung Temple notwithstanding, the opening of the MJS appears to have been met with enthusiasm within the wider Korean
sangha. Tikhonov notes that, after the MJS’s launch, “modern Buddhist school mushroomed in all corners of the country,” refuting criticisms from Christian Nationalists that Buddhism was incompatible with modern civilization (2010, p. 266). The BSS opened approximately 30 MJS branches at temples throughout Korea over the next five years. In 1906, eight MJS branch schools were established at major monasteries around Korea, namely Yongjoo, Gunbong, Tongdo, Haein, Seokwang, Beomeo, Seonam, and Daeheung Temples. In 1907, twelve more were launched, including at Wibong, Daeseung, Gimryong, Namjang, Yongmun Myeongbong, Gwangheung, Yoojeom, and Shingye Temples. In 1908, three additional subsidiaries were founded at Jikji, Haein, and Eunhae Temples, while 1909 saw the founding of branches at Hwaeom, Cheoneun, Taean, Gwaneum, Bomyeong, Songgwang, Daewon, Namjang, Seongbul, Obong, Bohyun, and Gaewon Temples. Four additional subsidiaries were established: Ssanggye, Gimryong, Hwajang, and Boseok Temples. According to Tikhonov, by 1910 nearly all of Korea’s provincial temples had founded their own “new learning” academies, whose most motivated graduates continued their academic careers, eventually forming the “new intellectual core” of Korean Buddhism in the Colonial Era (
Tikhonov 2010, p. 267).
Over the following half-a-century, the institute first launched as the MJS would undergo numerous structural alterations and closures in parallel with Korea’s tumultuous modern history. In 1907, MJS administration was assumed by the controversial Hoegwang Yi, who made significant changes to the school during his tenure, including expanding the duration of the MJS’s program to four years, mirroring higher education in Europe and Japan. In April 1910, Yi renamed the school the Buddhist Pedagogical Institute (
Bulgyosabeomhakgyo), reflecting the school’s intended purpose as a Buddhist teacher-training facility. However, the school officially closed later that year owing to financial difficulties and internal discord over Yi’s attempts to ally Korean Buddhism with Japan’s Soto Zen Sect (see
Section 3.1). In fact, as both Yi and Manhae were employed as MJS faculty in 1910, it is likely that the MJS stood at the center of the schism between Yi’s Weonjong Order and Manhae’s rival Imjae Order, although no surviving records have been found elaborating on the role that the school may have played in this conflict.
With Japan’s annexation of Korea in 1910 and the passing of the Korean Education Ordinance (
Joseon Gyoyooklyeng) in August 1911, severely restricting the activities of private schools, the institute remained closed. Reopening in 1914 as the Buddhist Academy of Higher Education (
Bulgyo godeung gansuk) with 26 students, the academy closed yet again in 1915 only to be revived in 1918 as the Central Seminary (
Joongang hakrim) with added classes covering Japanese content. Despite this further Japanization, the school again faced closure from 1922 to 1928, only to reopen as the Buddhist Specialized School (
Bulgyo jeonsoo hakgyo) in 1928 with 31 students. In 1930, the institution was rebranded as The Central Buddhist Specialized School (
Joonang Bulgyo jeonmun hakgyo) and finally accorded university status by the colonial government, granting the school much-needed legitimacy and stability. Now open to lay students as well as monastics, the school produced over 200 graduates over the following decade. In June 1940, the institute’s name was changed again to Hyehwa Professional School (
Hyehwa jeonmun hakgyo), after the neighborhood around its campus and the Buddhist ideology of “gracefully edifying the world.” Yet, for more than the first half of the 1940s, the school’s activities were increasingly subordinated to the Japanese war effort, before the school closed again in 1944 (
Hwang 2011).
Following liberation from Japan, the school reopened in September 1946, expanding its scope and scale to become Dongguk University. Upon its re-establishment, the institution underwent a notable transformation, transitioning away from its origins within the monastic education towards a more secular framework, rendering it less exclusively Buddhist in nature. While maintaining a Buddhist Studies Department, the university diversified its academic offerings to include departments in Korean Literature, English, and Sociology. Subsequently, in 1953, it opened a Law School and a Department of Agriculture, initiated a graduate program, and began conferring internationally recognized secular degrees—B.A, M.A, and Ph.D.—to its graduates. Over the remainder of the 20th century, Dongguk continued to augment its secular departments, attracting a growing number of lay students, including non-Buddhists. Presently, even within Buddhist Studies, Chan Studies, Indian Philosophy, and Cultural Heritage departments, only approximately a quarter of the student body is comprised of monastics. Yet, regardless of the degree to which Dongguk University has remained a purely Buddhist educational institution, its impact is undeniable, as it has produced approximately 350,000 graduates since its founding. Routinely ranking among the nation’s top ten universities, Dongguk University presently has an enrolment of around 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students at its various campuses (
https://www.dongguk.edu/eng/, accessed on 8 April 2024;
Kaplan 2020, pp. 52–54).