Karl Tõnisson
Karl August Tõnisson (Latvian: Kārlis Tennisons; 20 August (Jc 8 August) 1883 – 5 May 1962) also known as Brother Vahindra (Estonian: Vend Vahindra) and Barefoot Tõnisson (Estonian: Paljasjalgne Tõnisson), was an Estonian writer and religious figure. [1] The first Estonian convert to Buddhism, he was generally seen as eccentric but had a significant impact on Estonian views of Buddhism.[2] In 1930 he left Europe for Thailand, later settling in Burma, dying in Rangoon, aged 78.[3]
Early life
Tõnisson was born in Umbusi in 1883 into a Lutheran peasant family.[4] His parents died at an early age (his father in 1891 and his mother in 1895) after which he was raised by his uncle.[5]
Life and writings
In the 1900s Tõnisson travelled to Riga, where he likely met local Theosophists.[5] Around 1910 he moved to St. Petersburg, where he likely met Agvan Dorzhiev and other Kalmyk and Buryat lamas.[5] He converted to Buddhism around this time, and likely helped build the Datsan Gunzechoinei.[5]
At the start of the First World War he was drafted into the Russian army, but released soon afterwards.[6]
In 1915 he moved to Tallinn.[7] In 1917 he returned to Russia, where he stayed until 1923.[8] He spent part of this time guarding the Datsan Gunzechoinei building site.[9]
In 1923 he returned to Latvia after unsuccessfully attempting to return Estonia.[10]
In 1930 he met Friedrich V. Lustig, who became his disciple and followed him on his travels for the rest of his life.[11]
In 1931 the two left Europe for Thailand.[12] During and after World War II Tõnisson and Lustig became involved in Thai politics, raising a Soviet flag on their roof and criticizing Thailand's wartime collaboration with Japan.[13][14] As a result they were expelled From Thailand into Burma in 1949.[15]
They eventually integrated into the Burmese Buddhist community.[16] At one point they lived at Chan Htoon's family shrine.[17] They participated in the third and fourth World Fellowship of Buddhists conferences.[18] The Dalai Lama sent condolences to Lustig when Tõnisson died in 1962.[19]
In various writings, elements of his biography vary, including his date and place of birth.[20]
See also
References
- Talts 2008 67-68
- Talts 2008 68
- Talts 2008 68
- Talts 2015 384-85
- Talts 2015 385
- Talts 2015 386.
- Talts 2015 386
- Talts 2015 387
- Talts 2015 387-88
- Talts 2015 388
- Talts 2015 389
- Talts 2015 391
- Talts 2015 391
- Ford, Eugene.Cold War Monks: Buddhism and America's Secret Strategy in Southeast Asia. Yale University Press, 2017. Pages 19-20
- Talts 2015 391
- Talts 2015 391
- Talts 2015 392
- Talts 2015 392
- Talts 2015 393
- Talts 2015 386-87
Sources
- Belka, Lubos (1999) Buddhism in Estonia, Religion, State and Society, 27:2, 245-248, DOI: 10.1080/096374999106656. https://doi.org/10.1080/096374999106656
- Talts, Mait (2008). “The First Buddhist Priest on the Baltic Coast”: Karlis Tennison and the Introduction of Buddhism in Estonia. Folklore. Vol. 38. Pages 67-112. doi:10.7592/FEJF2008.38.talts
- Talts, M. (2015). "Karlis A. M. Tennisons and Friedrich V. Lustig – the first ‘practicing’ Buddhist in Estonia." In When Gods spoke. Researches and Reflections on Religious Phenomena and Artefacts. Studia in honorem Tarmo Kulmar (pp. 379–405). University of Tartu Press. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/292286463_Karlis_A_M_Tennisons_and_Friedrich_V_Lustig_-_the_first_%27practicing%27_Buddhist_in_Estonia
- Aasma, Aro-Ats (2023) E-book: "Mettā: A Biography Of One Of The First Buddha Monks From The West"
- Tõnisson, Karl