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                            Barack
Obama:

                            American
Dhammaraja?

                            Damien	Keown*








                                  The	stated	purpose	of	this	congress	is	‘to	analyze	and	compare
                            the	concept	of	Dhammaraja	in	the	Eastern	context	with	comparable
                            Western	ideas.’	This	is	an	interesting	topic	in	the	context	of	today’s
                            globalized	world,	but	it	presents	a	preliminary	question	we	must
                            address	before	we	can	pursue	the	matter	further.	This	is	that	while
                            there	have	been	many	Dhammarajas	in	the	East	there	has	never	been
                            a	Dhammaraja	in	the	West.	How,	then,	can	we	talk	about	‘comparable
                            Western	ideas’?


                            Buddhism
and
The
West




                                  The	term	‘Dhammaraja’	literally	means	a	‘Dhamma	king,’	or	a	king
                            who	rules	according	to	Dhamma	or	Buddhist	teachings,	and	history
                            tells	us	that	while	Buddhism	spread	widely	in	Asia,	it	was	almost
                            totally	unknown	in	the	West	until	modern	times.	In	the	ancient	world,
                            Buddhism’s	Westward	expansion	proceeded	no	further	than	Iran,	with
                            perhaps	a	limited	presence	in	cosmopolitan	trading	cities	like
                            Alexandria	in	Egypt	or	Antioch	in	Syria.	While	there	was	also	trade
                            between	south	India	and	Rome	during	the	early	centuries	of	the
                            Common	Era,	the	ascendancy	of	Christianity	provided	a	barrier	to
                            Buddhist	proselytization.	After	the	fall	of	Rome	came	barbarian
                            invasions	and	the	rise	of	Islam	which	effectively	put	an	end	to	the
                                                                                                     1
                            Westward	spread	of	Buddhism	from	the	seventh	century	onwards.
                            Only	from	the	end	of	the	fifteenth	century	did	the	kings	of	Europe
                            come	into	diplomatic	contact	with	their	Asian	counterparts,	allowing
                            the	possibility	of	meaningful	comparison.	The	European	sovereigns,
                            however,	were	Christian,	not	Buddhist,	and	in	any	event	their	time	was
                            coming	to	an	end:	within	a	few	centuries	the	Age	of	Revolution	would
                            replace	the	monarchies	with	new	political	institutions	in	which	the	will
                            of	the	people,	as	opposed	to	heredity,	determined	the	exercise	of


                            	 *	 Emeritus	Professor	of	Buddhist	Ethics	History	Department	University	of
                            London,	Goldsmiths
                            	  1 	 Seldeslachts,	Erik.	“Greece,	The	Final	Frontier?	The	Westward	Spread	of
                            Buddhism.”	In	The
Spread
of
Buddhism,	by	Heirman,	Ann	and	Stephan	Peter
                            Bumbacher,	131–166.	Handbook	of	Oriental	Studies.	Leiden,	Boston:	Brill,	2007:131f.
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