1
The
emergence
ofsecular
insight
practice
in
Australia
DavidBubna—Litic and Winton
Higgins
In
Australia overthelastthree
decades.
secular
insight
(vupassana)
meditation
practice
has
increasingly
drawn
away
fromit 'Ihentvadin
origins,
thus
cxemplie
fying
a
widertrendinwestemBuddhistcirLi soverthesecondhalfof
thelast
century
to loosen
tieswith theirAsiantraditionsof
origin.
in 1998 Batehelor
articulated the
divergencebydrawing
acontrastbetween
’religions
Buddhism‘
and ‘dhanna
practice‘
in
his Buddhism wilhoui
Beliefs
(Batehclor l998a).
a
contrastwithresonancesin
the
changes
now
unfolding
inAustralia.He
elaborated
his
keyconcepts,
notleast
the
"deepagnostieism'
hediscernedintheBuddha's
own
teaching.
inother
writingspublished
inthesame
year(Batchelor
1998b:
[9980‘
Thecontrast
acknowledges
a
strongtendency
towardssecularizationmthe
rc-rcndering
ot'Buddhismin
culturallyappropriate
termsforwesterners
who.from
the
l970s.
began
to
practise
meditation
seriously
in thistraditionin
significant
numbers.
As
Gombrichand
Obeyesekere
remind
us.however,
this
trendnowvisiblein
western
countriessuchasAustraliahasAsian
(not
leastSri
Lankan)
precedents
going
backtothelastthreedecadesofthenineteenth
century
(1998:
chapter
6).
'lhe
elementsot‘thatearlierAsianBuddhistconfrontation
with
modernity
included
a
fresh
re-rcading
ot~canonical
texts.
promotion
of
serious
Ia)
dharma
practice.
scepticism
towardsclaimsto
onhodoxy.
monastic
authority
andthe
efficacy
of
ritual.anddismissalofthefolkloricaccretionsto
popular
observance.Allresur-
faced
inthelatetwentieth
century
developments
in
westerncountries.
In
Australia, however,
their
expression
hasbeen
mediatedand
complicated.
both
throughbeing
meldedwithcentralwestemmoral
concepts
and
through
the
growth
ofseriousdhanna
practice
fromthe
[9705.
ata
timewhenthecenitudes
of
modernity
wereto someextent
giving
way
toan
embraceof
uncertainty,
ambivalenceand
fragmentation.
Thisembracehasotlen
attractedthecatchall
(but
contestedand
unstable)term.
‘postmodemity'.
Wethus
needtohold
lightlyany
classificatory
schema
—
beit‘traditional'versus‘modem‘
BuddhismorMartin
Baumann's
(200I)suggested
heuristic
perindization
ol~
Buddhismintocanonical.
traditional,
modernand
today‘s
‘global‘stages
(
1998:
chapter
6).'
Nevertheless.as
long
aswehonourits
heuristicintent.
appreciation
ofBuddhism'scurrent
global
character
helpfully
sensitizesustothe
dangers
of
accounting
forcurrentdevel»
opmenls
in
parochial(western
or
national)terms.
while
avoiding
the
ironically