Buddhism in Australia Traditions in Change

(vip2019) #1
24 David
Bubna-Lr‘licandWintrm

Higginr

totalizingassumptions


of

postmoderntheory.


In
what
follows,then.

we

present

Australian

developments


in

insight(vipassana)


meditation

practice


as

specific


illustrationsof

global


trendsratherthanas

components

ofanational

exception-


alism.Morethan
ever

today,


littlesensecan
bemadeofBuddhismin

any

one

country

without
referencetothis

global


context,

Theauthors
arebothveterandharma

practitioners


andhave

gleaned


thelocal

historicalcontent

presented


inthis
articlefi‘omtheirownactive

engagement

in

(oflen

intermingling)


Zen,

Theravadinand

insightgroups


ontheAustralianeastern

seaboardoverthe
lasttwodecades.Thefirst
namedauthor

recentlycompleted


a

doctoral
dissenationontherelationbetween

experiential


outcomesof

long-tenn

Zenand

insight


meditation

practice
among

seniorteachersofthe

discipline


in

variouswestern

countries,

ontheone

hand,


and.ontheother.thefoundational

assumptions


about
the selfin economic

theory.


The second authorfulfilled

teaching


and
administrativerolesin

(amongothers)


WatBuddhaDhammaandthe

Buddhist

Library

and
MeditationCentrein

Sydney


(which

featureas

prominent

examples


inthe

following)

and isamemberofthe

Insight


Teachets‘Circleof

Australia.Theevents
describedinthis

chapter


aredrawn
fromdiscussionswith

key


actors.firsthandand

participant

observationsof

significantmeetings


anda

continualflowofinlemal
writtenandverbal
communicationswithinthe

organiz-

ationsconcerned.

Background:

modern
and

global

Buddhist

developments

intheWest

In
onesense.thereis

nothingspecial


about

adapting


Buddhismtoanew
cultural

environment

,


in”“
case.

the
west.itisa

process

thathasoccurred

many

times

before.forinstance.inChinafrom
thefirst

century

CE:

Faureeven

argues

that

this

example


isstill

unfolding(1993).


Anotable
(albeit

not

unprecedented)


feature

ofthe
western

adaptation,however,


is
therelative

eclipse


ofmonasticismandthe

emphasis


on

laypractice


in

lay
settings.

Monasticismhas

historicallyunderpinned


anddominated
Buddhistsurvivaland

development


in
mostothertimesand

places


and

lay


dharma

practice


has

typically

functionedasamere

adjunct


ofmonastic

practice.


Many

ofthe

generation

ofteacherswho

brought


seriousdharma

practice

to

thewestfromtheW
onwards

(including

RobenAitken.Christina
Feldman~

Joseph


Goldstcin.

Jack

Kornfield,

Sharon

Salzberg


and

ChristopherTitmuss)

hadreceivedintensive
monastic

training

in

Asia.

Despite


the

acknowledged


legacy


ot‘monastieinstitutionsin
Asia.

theseteachersreturnedto
thewestand

insight(or
vipassana)

teachersin

particular


taught


dharma

practice

in

ways

that
madeno

necessary

referencestothemonasticworldatall.
Instead.

they

established

pioneering(and


these

days,internationallypivotal)lay


institutions

for
intensivemeditation

practice,

aboveallGaiaHouseintheUnited

Kingdom

and the

insight

Meditation

Society

and

Spirit

RockintheUnitedStates
This

development


diffused

throughout

otherwestern
countries,

notleastthe

English»

speaking


ones

,


a matterwewillreturnto

when

considering

the
Australian

example,


*

Emergence


afreculurinsightpractice

25

Atfirsttheabandonment

ofmonastic

integuments


excited littlecomment.

Withsome

exceptions


in

Burma,

monasteriesinAsianeither

taughtlaity


thefiner

points


ofmeditationnoroffered

themintensiveresidentialmeditationretreats.If

laypeople


inthewest

sought


these
boons,

thena

degree


ofinstitutional

creativity

was

self-evidentlyrequired


to

provide


them.

That

creativity

was
successful,

butit

oftentooktimeforthe

all-important

ethical

implications


inherentininstitutional

choiceto

crystallize.


when

they


did so.the

ensuing


tensions

highlighted

the

way

inwhichwesternformsof
association,

above

allthemodelofthe

voluntary

association,


restedonthecorewesternmoralvaluesof

equality,


inclusivenessand

collectiveself-rule.

Inthis

embryonic


decadeofthe
19705,

thewestwas

coming


undertheinfluence

ofsecond-wave
feminism,

the

peace

movement,

variousother

demoelatic

protest

movements andthebroader
counterculture,

all ofwhich

sought


tocultivatethe

valuesin

question.


Buddhismassuch

enjoyed


a ‘radical‘

reputation


inthe
west,

thankstosuchinfluencesastheBeatPoetsand

popularwritings


aboutBuddhism.

such
asthoseofAlanWatts,Thus
many

westernBuddhists took

for

granted


an

elective

affinity


7


the institutional

hallmarks oftraditional Buddhism

notwith»

standing


,


betweenthe
dharma,

onthe

one
hand,

andthe

egalitarian,


universalist

zeitgeist


ofthe
1970s,

ontheother.Inseveral

western
countries,

Buddhist

intentional

communities

sprangup

andmeldeddharmie

principles


withcountercultural

ideals.

In

hindsight,


the

irony


of

imputing


radicalism to

religious

or traditional

Buddhism is clear. As with

any

other
large-scale

institutionalized
religion.

Buddhistmonastieisminitshomelandswas
stronglyaligned

with
sociopolitical

elitesand

adapted


totheir

hegemonic


values.

Buddhistmonasticinstitutions

were


socially


and

politically

embedded:

theyperformed


social-integrative


and

regime-

legitimizing


firnctions,

Many

westerndharma

practitioners


onlygradually


came


to
realizethattheseinstitutions

presented


atableau

ol'resilient
hierarchy

authori-


tarianism,
patriarchy.dogmatism,

ritualism,

social

conservatismand
superstition.

But

bybracketing


these
featuresof

inheritedinstitutional

formsasmere

culturally


biased


interpretations


ofthe
dharma,

western

practitioners


tendedtomvralrze

the

moral

significance


ofsuchformsofassociation.

.


_


Acouple


offactorsfedthisnaiveté.
First,

theAsian
de-emphasis

ofintenstve

lay


practice
encouraged

an

assumption


inthe

westthatother

valueswould

‘ofcourse


assert
themselvesonce

laypeople


accounted

fora

majority

ofserious

practitioners,


Second.a


significant
group

ofwesterners

wereawareof

Buddhism‘s

historical


relianceonmonastic
institutionsand

atfirstsaw

thatreliance

asinevitablein

the


west
aswell.

Third,

monasticinstitutions

that

had

developed


in
relationship

with


laycommunities
had,
necessarily,

learned

that

survival

depends


on

deflecting

conflictwith
them.Theresultwasinstitutional
practices

that honed

theartof

sending
conciliatorysignals

while
resisting

substantive
changc-

_.


Fourth,


monastic
Buddhism

itselfatfirst

appeared


adaptable


when

quasi-monastic


dharmic
movements

emerged


and

established

themselves
internationally.

Themost

notable
ofthese

hybrids


wasthe
(interdenominational)

Friendsofthe

Western


Buddhist


Order,


foundedinBritain

in 1968‘

Thismovement
sought

to

partially


replicatefull-blownmonasticism,
maintaining

a

range

ofmonastic
organizational
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