受人口老龄化和低出生率影响,日本很多寺庙近年开始面临香火传承危机。为了让寺庙后继有人,寺庙僧侣以及尚未婚配的僧侣子女纷纷参加由佛教宗派组织的相亲会,寻找伴侣。
Japan's Buddhist1 monks2 are taking action in their mission to find successors to their temples – by attending matchmaking parties to find a wife.
A number of matchmaking events involving Buddhist monks, who are permitted to marry and have families in Japan, have taken place in the capital.
The daughters of temple owners without clear male successors have also been drawn4 to these events in order to meet potential monk3 husbands.
Ageing populations and shrinking birthrates combined with the often solitary5(独居的) life of a monk have resulted in growing concerns surrounding the hereditary6(遗传的) succession of temples.
As a result, one such matchmaking event was recently organised by a consultation7 office at the headquarters of the Buddhist order Nichiren Shu.
"We would like to give people the opportunity to find a good marriage match," a spokesman for Nichiren Shu told The Telegraph.
"This is for the second or third male children of temple owners, monks from lay families and temple daughters who need to meet monks to take care of the temple for future generations. Followers8 who want to marry with monks can also attend." Their most recent event took place on the 30th floor of a skyscraper9 in the Odaiba area of Tokyo and involved rows of shaven-haired monks in suits sitting at tables and being formally introduced to suitable young women.
Among the 51 participants was a 27-year-old monk from Kurashiki, Okayama prefecture, who told the Asahi Shimbun: "It's very hard to find a young woman who wants to marry a monk unless we take very proactive(主动的) approaches in meeting such women." It was not just the monks who were concerned about the future of the family temples: another guest was a 24-year-old woman from Ichinomiya, Aichi Prefecture, who told the paper: "My father is a temple mater and I have three elder sisters. I want to find someone who will take over my father's temple." Meanwhile, another 37-year-old woman who attended without any temple connections in her family described the practical and financial appeal of potentially partnering a monk.
"If you marry a monk who owns a temple, as opposed to marrying a businessman, you do not need to worry about your husband being laid off as a result of his company's restructuring," she said.
Buddhism10, the nation's second major faith after Shinto, has suffered a steep decline in popularity in recent years, with many temples facing financial difficulties as a result.
A growing number of innovative11 projects have been developed by Buddhist temples in Japan in order to revive interest and income – from opening jazz lounges and beauty salons12 to catwalk shows and hip13 hop14 concerts.