Why is Buddhism the fastest
growing
religion in Australia?
Darren Nelson
---o0o---
The answer to this inquiry is multi-layered
and complex. It is a tantalising issue because it highlights the changing
spiritual landscape of Australia and provides an insight into just how
multicultural we have really become.
Cultures that were foreign to Anglo-European
Australians are now being adopted by some of them - though not without some
dissenting resistance. This level of resistance in Australian society can be
seen as a litmus test, used to measure future political and religious tolerance
in this country.
The story concerning the rise of Buddhism in
Australia is a compelling tale of a resilient religion that has survived
despite the odds. How is it possible for a 2,500-year-old philosophy, which
began five hundred years before Christianity and one thousand years before the
Muslim faith, to be relevant to modern life in Australia? Considering all the
other ancient religions that have faded from contemporary practice, such as the
sun worshippers of Ancient Egypt, the human sacrifices of the South American
Mayans and the Druids from the Dark Ages of England, Buddhism has outlasted
them all.
It does not preach the dogma of a strange
cult, nor seek converts with evangelistic fervour. Those Australians who
actively convert to Buddhism do so voluntarily, and are usually well-educated
middle-aged professionals who are attracted to a sense of inner peace. This
documentary therefore, seeks to immerse itself in the substance of this
seemingly magnetic Buddhist approach. Perhaps it will be like seeing Australia for
the first time, through ancient eyes.
It is interesting to note that in spite of
the recent increase in Buddhist numbers across Australia, Buddhism has actually
played a part in Australian history for some time. It did not just suddenly
arrive in a recent wave of migrants. Some anthropologists, in fact, have
suggested that Buddhism was possibly the earliest non-indigenous religion to
reach Australia before white settlement.
Between 1405 and 1433 the Chinese Ming
emperor, Cheng-Ho, sent sixty-two large ships to explore southern Asia.
Although there is evidence that several ships from that armada landed on the
Aru Islands to the north of Arnhem Land, it is not known whether they reached
the mainland.
One unproved hypothesis of Professor A.P.
Elkin is that the belief of some Northern Territory Koorie tribes in
reincarnation, psychic phenomena and mental cultivation is evidence of early
contact with Buddhists. Despite certain rock paintings that possibly depict
Chinese junks weighing anchor or images of the Buddha, actual material evidence
remains to be seen.
The first documented arrival of Buddhists in
Australia was in 1848 during the gold rushes, when Chinese coolie labourers
were brought into the country to work on the Victorian gold fields. These
workers represented a transient population that usually returned home within
five years. It was not until 1876 that the first permanent Buddhist community
was established by Sinhalese migrants on Thursday Island. There the ethnic Sri
Lankans built the first temple in Australia, while they were employed on the
sugar cane plantations of Queensland.
From the late 1870’s onwards many Japanese
Shinto Buddhists also arrived and were active in the pearling industry across
northern Australia, establishing other Buddhist enclaves in Darwin and Broome.
Buddhist cemeteries were kept and festivals celebrated. Official government
statistics compiled as part of a national census in 1891 indicate that, at the
time, there were slightly more Buddhists in Australia (at 1.2%), than there are
today (at 1.1%).
Buddhist numbers would have continued to
increase if the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 had not been introduced to
combat the ‘yellow peril’. Alfred Deakin, who was destined to be Prime Minister
three times, drafted the legislation to pacify a somewhat xenophobic Caucasian
electorate. This bill later grew to represent the more broadly implemented
White Australia Policy.
For the next fifty years the benefits of
mind training and meditation, as taught by Buddhism, would be disregarded as
some sort of obscure ‘eastern mysticism’. Except for some remote surviving
pockets of Buddhists (such as Broome and Thursday Island), the religion became
virtually extinct in Australia.
A small group of committed western Buddhists
formed the earliest known Buddhist organisation in Australia, The Little Circle
of the Dharma, in Melbourne in 1925. Progress was slow though, until after
World War II when local enthusiasm for the White Australia Policy began to
decline. In 1951 the first Buddhist nun visited Australia. Sister Dhammadinna,
born in the USA, ordained and with thirty years experience in Sri Lanka, came
to propagate the Theravadin School of Buddhist teaching. She received
nation-wide media coverage.
Inspired by this visit, the next year the Buddhist
Society of New South Wales was formed under the presidency of Leo Berkley, a
Dutch-born Sydney businessman. This organisation is today the oldest Buddhist
group in Australia. Its membership was, and still is, compromised mainly of
people from Anglo-European backgrounds.
In 1958 the Buddhist Federation of Australia
was formed in order to co-ordinate the growing Buddhist groups that had sprung
up around the country in Western Australia, South Australia, Queensland and
Victoria.
The Buddhist presence in Australia had
depended for the first hundred years on lay people with only the occasional
visits by ordained members of the Sangha (the Buddhist clergy). But in the
1970’s the growing number of Buddhists created a need for resident monks, and a
new phase in Australian Buddhism began.
In 1971 the Buddhist Society of New South
Wales established the Sri Lankan monk, Somaloka, in residence at a retreat
centre in the Blue Mountains west of Sydney. This became the first monastery in
Australia. A succession of monasteries representing different aspects of
Buddhism slowly became established around Australia; in 1975 at Stanmore in
Sydney, in 1978 at Wisemans Ferry in country NSW and in 1984 at Serpentine in
Western Australia.
The charismatic face of Buddhism, the Dalai
Lama, (who was awarded the Noble Peace Prize in 1989 and describes himself as
‘a simple monk’), has travelled the world constantly giving lectures and
answering questions in 20,000 seat pop concert halls. John Cleese speaks out
for him in London, Henri Cartier-Bresson records his teachings around France
and Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys pop group has even interviewed him in Rome
for Rolling Stone magazine.
In the past few years he has opened eleven
Offices of Tibet, everywhere from Canberra to Moscow and last year alone
provided prefaces and forewords for roughly thirty books. The 14th Dalai Lama,
who holds the titles of Ocean of Wisdom, Holder Of The White Lotus and
Protector Of The Land Of Snows, has even served as the guest editor of French
Vogue magazine.
The three visits of the Dalai Lama to
Australia in 1982, 1992 and 1996 were joyful occasions for Buddhists of all
traditions, and huge crowds of Buddhists and the general public gathered to
hear him speak. On the third visit, and despite virulent Chinese protests, the
Dalai Lama met with and was photographed with the Prime Minister of Australia,
John Howard. It was now clearly evident at this stage, that Buddhism had become
a significant minority religion in Australia.
During this visit local celebrities
contributed generously to fundraising activities. For example, Kate Ceberano,
Rachel Berger and Frente were just some of the ‘star-studded cast’ to perform
at the Dalai Lama Lounge Room. They helped to raise $14,000 over three nights.
Mushroom Records released a benefit album called The Mantra Mix CD, featuring
Jenny Morris, Jimmy Barnes and Johnny Diesel. One local advertising agency,
providing their services for nothing, came up with the slogan "You missed
Jesus. You missed the Buddha. Do not miss the Dalai Lama". When was the
last time such hype accompanied the visit of a religious leader?
But Australians are not alone in their
sympathy towards his cause. The issue of Tibetan oppression has come to the
attention of Hollywood and with two new films about his life in the cinematic
pipeline, the Dalai Lamas’ profile has not only moved into the mainstream, but
has (much to the horror of the Chinese Government) gone global.
The first to be released, Seven Years In
Tibet, tells the story of Heinrich Harrer, a mountain climber and Nazi party
member who encounters his own sense of enlightenment after becoming the tutor
to the young Dalai Lama in Tibet in the 1940’s. The film has attracted healthy
attention because it stars Brad Pitt.
The other film is Kundun, directed by Martin
Scorcese. This epic tells the remarkable tale of the Dalai Lama from his point
of view, from his recognition as the reincarnated Buddha of compassion at age
two until his escape to India at twenty-four. Recently released here in
Australia, it was reviewed by Channel Nines’ Sunday program on June 14th and
described as ‘the most beautiful and important film released this year’.
Hollywood’s fascination for Buddhism extends
beyond these two screenplays, with many stars expressing interest in the
religion itself. In February 1997, the karate-kicking action star Steven
Seagall was recognised by the Nyingma lineage of Tibetan Buddhism as the
reincarnation of a 15th century lama. Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys pop group
has organised two huge benefit concerts to publicise the plight of Tibet.
Actor Richard Gere, together with Uma
Thurmans father, Richard Thurman, has opened Tibet House in New York, published
books on the subject, and meditates daily. Other practitioners that have come
to attention include Tina Turner, Harrison Ford (whose wife Melissa Mathison
wrote Kunduns script), Oliver Stone, Herbie Hancock, Courtney Love, composer
Philip Glass (who also worked on Kundun) and REM’s lead singer Michael Stipe.
The momentum of Buddhism’s’ profile is
driven by other, more subtle reminders as well. A new make up is being
advertised as Zen Blush, a new sitcom is called Dharma and Greg, a designer
fruit juice container has on its’ label "Please recycle this bottle. It
deserves to be reincarnated too", and monks star in television commercials
and news items.
Such recent exposure does not take away the
fact that Australians have been quietly turning to Buddhism for some time. The
statistics compiled in the 1986, 1991 and 1996 Commonwealth Government Census
support the view that Buddhist numbers have been steadily increasing. Between
1986 and 1991 the numbers of practitioners rose from 80,387 to 139,847, a
growth of 74%. Due largely to the decrease in immigration numbers in recent
years the percentage growth for Buddhists slowed between 1991 and 1996 to 43%,
from 139,847 to 199,812. This rate of increase is still higher than that of any
other religion.
The three census surveys also indicate that
of the eight Christian denominations listed in the analysis for New South Wales
only three show an increase (Baptist, Catholic and Orthodox), while five
(Anglican, Church Of Christ, Lutheran, Presbyterian and Uniting Church) have
decreased in numbers.
Does the fluctuating demographic between
Buddhism and Christianity point towards dissatisfaction with traditional
Australian religious beliefs? Is Buddhism more competitive than Christianity or
is one spiritual experience simply more meaningful than the other?
Of the 199,812 Buddhists across Australia
today, approximately thirty thousand are Anglo-European’s who have ‘crossed over’,
by choice, to this alternative philosophy. They have turned from ‘Christian
sinner’ to ‘Eastern Mystic’. The slump in immigration figures from Buddhist
countries is apparently not enough to stall the continued growth in Australian
Buddhism, especially now that local support has been established. Back in 1938
a Japanese Shinto monk, noting that it took China three centuries to adopt
Buddhism from India, said introducing it in the West would be like holding a
lotus to a rock and waiting for it to take root.
When the Age of Aquarius spread across the
world in the form of the 60’s alternative hippie counter-culture, there
appeared to be no shortage of poets, artists, actors, writers and musicians
interested in a voyage of inner peace through Buddhist philosophy and
meditative practices. John Lennon used Buddhist mantras’ in the lyrics of his
music such as Across the Universe. Allen Ginsberg used a mantra (Buddhist
blessing) to bless the ground at Woodstock before the first fans arrived. Zen
meditation too, first embraced by the Beat poets in the 1950’s flourished
across first world nations as a healthy alternative to LSD-induced
enlightenment.
More importantly the drug-fuelled 1960’s,
when the Vietnam War was at its height, feminist protestors burnt their bras
and man landed on the moon, saw a relaxation of traditional middle class values
that allowed a greater versatility in public consciousness. During this time,
people had greater access and freedom to experiment with new schools of thought
(feminism, civil rights, the peace movement, alternative lifestyles etc)
without suffering as many social ramifications as in the past.
According to the Reverend Phillip Hughes, a
Melbourne-based religious researcher, "many people thought in the 1960’s
that science itself was not sufficient to really explain existence, but then
they were not keen to go back to the Judeo-Christian tradition with its holy
books, miracles and so forth. Also the need for a sense of peace has become
more apparent".
Potential Buddhists are attracted to the
Dharma (Buddhist teachings) not only to take refuge from a world of chaos and
confusion, but also to re-invent their own personal sense of a meaningful
spirituality in a society of high-tech consumerism, commercialism, violence and
apathy. Compared to the Christian beliefs many Anglo-European Australians grew
up with, Buddhism does not require its adherents to remain faithful to a
specific dogma.
It is not a faith. It is not technically a
religion either, though when discussing systems of worship it is easier to work
with that label. It is more a psychology and a philosophy wrapped around a
moral code of mind training.
The founder of Buddhism, Siddhartha Gautama
(born in 563 B.C.), turned his back on the royal family he had been born into,
to live life as a simple ascetic monk. At the age of thirty-five he became
enlightened and ‘saw things as they really are’, having achieved a mental state
of absolute egolessness, where he no longer felt any sense of narcissism or
craving.
He became the first Buddha and was quick to
teach his disciples that he was not a god, should not be revered and no rituals
should be developed around his teachings. Heaven and hell, he taught, are not
external places that we travel to after we die; they do not in fact exist. Rather,
both places dwell only in the hearts of people. People are either good or bad,
pious or evil. Paradise exists within our spirit, it is here and now, and not
some destination in the after-life.
Meditation, he believed, is the process
required for all adherents to achieve Buddhahood. This is one of the main
differences between Buddhism and other religions. Practitioners are offered an
ultimate goal, enlightenment itself, which is equivalent to the level attained
by the Buddha himself. He taught that everyone is capable of achieving this,
providing equality to all his followers.
This is a radical departure for
born-Christians to realise when they first start studying the principles of
Buddhism. The best a faithful Christian could hope to achieve with his devotion
was entry to heaven as an angel where he is still subject to the will of a
greater being who could smite him anytime at will. The Buddha teaches his
disciples too become the same as he, which is why he is not a god. In Buddhism
there is no pecking order in the after life, because that would require the
presence of an ego, which is the Buddhists life work to gradually eliminate.
Buddhism dispenses with the notion of a
Supreme Being, as does science, and explains the origins and workings of the
universe in terms of natural law. All of this certainly exhibits a scientific
spirit. The Buddha advised that we should not blindly believe him but rather
question, examine, inquire and rely on our own experience. This scientific
approach of cause and effect was not overlooked by Albert Einstein in the
1930’s:
"The religion of the future will be a
cosmic religion", he said, "it should transcend a personal God and
avoid dogmas and theology. Covering both natural and spiritual, it should be
based on a religious sense arising from the experience of all things, natural
and spiritual, and a meaningful unity. Buddhism answers this description. If
there is any religion that would cope with modern scientific needs it would be
Buddhism".
While the antipodean blossoming of Buddhism
seems to have gone from strength to strength since the 1980’s, this has not
always been the case. It is in the Buddhist principle of godlessness that the
journalist can find opposing and dissenting voices to the Buddhist cause. This
theological bone of contention is the main source of friction with other
religions.
On Wednesday, the 18th of January 1995, Pope
John Paul II arrived in Sydney and attended an Interfaith Gathering in the
Sydney Domain. Representatives from major religions, including Protestant,
Orthodox and Coptic Christians, Jewish and Muslim were invited to share the
platform with him. Notable by its absence was Australia’s’ third largest
religion, Buddhism.
The organisers told SBS Radio that they were
unaware that Buddhism was Australia’s’ third largest religion and besides that
there was no national leader of Buddhism, so who were they to invite? The
Sydney Morning Herald reported that "somebody in the State Government had
forgotten to invite the Buddhists". This is unlikely, as the New South
Wales Government is very aware of the presence of Buddhists in this state and
often invites Buddhist representatives to State functions. A more likely
explanation is that the Vicar of Rome holds Buddhism in very low esteem as is
evident from the following extract from his book, Crossing The Threshold Of
Hope:
"Buddhism is in large measure an
‘atheistic’ system. We do not free ourselves from evil through the good which
comes from God; we liberate ourselves only through detachment from the world,
which is bad. The fullness of such a detachment is not union with God, but what
is called nirvana, a state of perfect indifference with regard to the world. To
save oneself means, above all, to free oneself from evil by becoming
indifferent to the world, which is the source of evil. This is the culmination
of the spiritual process. Christian mysticism is born of the Revelation of the
living God. This God opens Himself to union with man, arousing in him the
capacity to be united with Him, especially by means of the theological virtues
- faith, hope and above all, love".
Graeme Lyall, Chairman of the Buddhist
Council of New South Wales, strongly refutes the Catholic position. "The
Oxford Dictionary defines ‘atheism’ as ‘disbelief in the existence of God’
", he said, "the Buddha is described as the teacher of ‘gods and
men’, so how can Buddhism be an atheistic system? Religious arguments often
come down to the use of religious language. We must ascertain to what we are
referring to when we use the term ‘God’.
What is a ‘living God’? Anything that is
living is subject to death and decay, so why should we place ourselves in the
hands of something, which, like ourselves, is impermanent? If he is referring
to the old man with a white beard who sits in the sky taking notes in his
little black book ready for the day of judgement, then he is out of step with
modern theological thinking and most other theologians.
Modern theologians, such as Paul Tillich,
suggest that the term ‘God’ refers to the ‘ground of being’ - the very fact of
existence. No Buddhist would argue with this, but they may be reluctant to use
the term ‘God’ to describe it".
Lay’s implication that the Pope is out of
touch appears to be more than just a knee-jerk defence, when you consider that
the ranks of Catholics themselves are split on the issue. Irish-born Father
William Johnston, a Jesuit priest, spoke of his sympathy to Buddhism when he
visited Sydney in early January 1997. Here to attend the Religion, Literature
and Arts Conference at the Australian Catholic University, Father Johnston
spoke of the Christian churches need to introduce aspects of Eastern Mysticism
- such as meditation, yoga and Zen - if they want to increase numbers attending
weekly services.
"Some Catholics are very nervous about
meditation but there is a lot to learn from it and yoga and Zen", he said.
"The Catholic Church has always kept meditation very strongly in its
religious orders; our problem is that we didn’t teach it to the laity, who are
now looking for it".
Father Johnston, director of the Institute
of Oriental Religions at Tokyos’ Sophia University, has lived in Japan since
1951 and believes Christianity has become ‘too legalistic’, with ‘too many do’s
and don’ts and not enough vision and enlightenment’.
Besides the Catholic Churches’ potentially
bilateral reaction to Buddhism, local opposition to the arrival of Eastern
Mysticism has also occurred in the steel manufacturing town of Wollongong, an
hours drive south of Sydney. There the Anglican Bishop of Wollongong, the Reverend
Reg Piper has weighed into the debate expressing his annoyance not only at the
presence of Buddhism, but the presence of a philosophy he sees as evil.
The contest began when a Taiwan-based
Buddhist sect, Fokuangshan, opened a huge fifty million-dollar temple just
south of the steel city in Berkley. The monks there planned to promote their
style of ‘humanistic’ Buddhism, which emphasises the ‘oneness and co-existence
of the global village’.
The Fokuangshan sect was founded in the
mid-1960’s and has more than one hundred branches world-wide (including
Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth) with 1.5 million members and its own university,
several schools, an organ donor bank, a retirement home, even a cemetery. This
growth is due to its’ charismatic founding father, the Venerable Hsing Yun. The
size of the Wollongong temple, called Nan Tien, is second only to their
headquarters in Taipei.
Bishop Piper’s concerns are not shared by
other Christian churches such as the local Uniting Church, which has adopted a
user-friendly approach to the temple. On Tuesday, the 18th of June 1996, Bishop
Piper appeared on the ABCs’ 7.30 Report to voice his opposition.
Bishop Piper: See when you have the bible
view of humankind, generally, if it is outside the framework of the truth - the
bible terms it as evil.
Reporter: Is it a deception?.
Bishop Piper: In that respect, yes. While
ever it is not based in the truth of Christ, it would be a deception. Because
Buddhism is basically an atheistic religion. There is no god.
Reporter: Why is that a problem?.
Bishop Piper: Because God has revealed
himself through Christ. Christ has been raised from the dead. He said he is
God. There is no other way to the truth and no other way to really live except
through Christ.
The growing curiosity about Buddhism has so
worried Bishop Piper that he has made a video called In Search Of Paradise - A
Biblical Response To Buddhism. It is to warn all Christians of the evil
deception of Buddhism, that has arrived to convert them.
Reverend Shin of the Nan Tien temple remains
perplexed with Bishop Pipers attitude. "We don’t convert people to
Buddhism or change their religion", he said. " As long as they feel
comfortable with any of the practices or any of the beliefs and it is good for
the society, good for them and good for the family, that is the most important
thing. Whether they decide to become Buddhists or not - that is not our
concern".
Local opposition to Buddhism also extends
beyond the Christian clergy. A survey by the Federal Office Of Multicultural
Affairs, conducted in 1988, found that 41% of the general population did not
wish to have a Buddhist as a workmate. Only Muslims fared worse.
Despite this, on Sunday 8th February this
year Australian Buddhists were delighted to learn they had a friend in a high
place when the Governor-General, Sir William Deane, expressed his support at
the opening of the Rahula Community Lodge in Canberra.
"A report from the Bureau of
Immigration, Multicultural and Population Research a couple of years ago,
showed that over the ten years to 1991 Buddhism was by far the largest growing
religion in our country: an increase in the order of some 300%" he said.
"To a significant extent, of course, the figures reflect the substantial
increase in migration from south-east Asia over that period.
But the second largest national group were
Australian-born Buddhists - many from non-Asian cultures attracted by both the
philosophy and the practice of Buddhism, with its emphasis upon the search for
inner peace and understanding. I offer my very best wishes for the success of
all that you hope to achieve in the years ahead as future stages of the centre
are completed. May all your endeavours prosper and bring joy to those whom they
are intended to help".
Buddhism continues to maintain a steady
trickle of recruitment at the grass roots level. According to the Venerable
Pannyavaro, a monk based in Surry Hills in Sydney, young people are still
attracted to Buddhism because they are looking for an alternative to established
Christian churches and they can explore Buddhism without feeling obliged to
join.
"A lot of young people in the twenty to
mid-thirty age group are coming because they don’t feel imposed upon", he
said, " and there are deeper meditative techniques they can draw
upon". The Buddhist website he operates (http://www.buddhanet.net) gets an
average 9,000 ‘hits’ a day. Venerable Pannyavaro offers cyber-nirvana at this
site in the form of online meditation sessions where people can log on,
meditate and contemplate the infinite.
There are now more than ninety Buddhist
temples and organisations in New South Wales, sixty-five of them in Sydney. The
bulk of the two hundred people who each week visit the Buddhist Library,
Meditation and Information Centre in Camperdown in Sydney are in the thirty to
fifty age group. About eighty-percent are from a non-Asian background.
Much to the horror of the Christian clergy
(if they ever find out), Buddhism is even being taught in one New South Wales
primary school during religious scripture classes. In early 1995 at Blackheath
Primary School a group of parents approached the principal, Kate Allan, asking
the school to provide Buddhist instruction as well as the traditional Catholic
and Protestant options. Now, forty-five of the schools three hundred and fifty
students attend classes in Buddhism.
"The move came from the
community", Allan says. "In the mountains we have quite a diverse
community and it was the choice of the parents to have these classes - it was
not something imposed on the whole school".
Answering the question of Buddhism's growing
popularity in is clearly going to be a rich and involved conclusion. This
religion seems to have, at first glance, a vigorous influence on the world
stage. Just when you think you have examined the issues thoroughly, you
suddenly discover that you are still only looking at the tip of the iceberg.
Source: quangduc.com