28 David
Emma-Liliaam]WinIrm
Higgins
hindsight.
the
earlycooperation
betweenthesetwo
contrasting
constitucncieswas
remarkable,
withthe 80
hectares
occupiedbyup
to 30 residents
living
the
hippy
dreamwith allits
lifestyleimplications
and
regularly
visited
by
devoutAsian
Buddhistswhocameto
give
dana,eammeritandenacttheir
time-honouredrituals.
Atthetimetherewere
noknown
precedents
forsucha
centreandlittle
thought
was
given
tothe
principles
ofassociation
underpinning
whatsoonbecameone
ofthe
country's
most
imponant
incubatorsofwestern
dhanna
practice.
WBD‘s
establishment
predatedtoday's
majorexamples
of
largelay-based
dharrnicinsti-
tutionsinthewest.
Itsnewsletter.Budhi‘
Leufiproclaimed
thencwinstitutionto
bea‘Buddhist
monasteryrlaycommunityiretreat
centre'.withanabbot
(Phra
Khantipalol
anda
committeeof
lay
residentsin
charge,
Its
rudimentary
consti-
tution
required
that
any
futureabbot.likethefirst
incumbent,
he‘aBikkhuof
the
Dhammayut
Theravada
tradition'.
but
beyond
that
itneitherlaidclaimtothe
centrefor
anyparticular
Buddhistsectnor
specified
what
wasmeant
by
theword
‘monastery'
inits
mixedself-characterization.
Formostofthe
community.
theword
‘monastery‘(or
warin
Thai)
was.inthe
absence of
any
alternative
model.
etTectively
contenninouswith
any place
of
Buddhist
practice.
Thereis
scantevidencethat
anyone
involvedintendedWBD
to
operate
asanorthodox
Theravadin
monastery:
itwassurrounded
by
wilderness
rather
thana
supportive
townor
village
thatcoulddeliverthe
necessary
support
suchan
institution
requires
ona
daily
basis.
By
thesame
token.
theinvolventent
andenthusiasm
ofthe
lay
residentsoverWBD'sfirstdecadeisstillevident
today
inthe
manybuildings
completed
in
that
period
including
a
large
meditationhall
thatis
alwaysgreatly
admired.italso
sported
a
rudimentaryprimary
school for
children
living
in
the
community
Womenwere
prominent
inits
affairs:
ithosted
retreats
by
monasticand
lay
teachersof
Theravadin.
ZenandTibetan
persuasion.
Thosewholed
early
retreatsthere
includedRobertAitken,
Joseph
Goldsteinand
ThichNhatHanh.
Inthelate
19805.
however.
WBD
began
to
experiencedifficulties.
thefirstof
whichshowedhowexternal
forcescould
impact
onsuch
hybrid
institutions.The
hardening
ofeconomic
conditionsandthe
tightening
of
government
labourmarket
and
welfare
policies
madeit
increasingly
difficult
forWBDresidentstotaketime
out
fromnormal
employment
andtheirnumbers
dwindled
precipitously:
suchthat
asmall
and
numerically
volatile
community
ofsix
orsowaslefltomaintainits
now
considerableinfrastructureand
mountitsrctrcat
program.
Thesecond
difliculty
WBDfaced
revealedthe
fragility
oftheethical
compromise
involvedin
melding
the
trappings
of
monasticismwith
lay
associational
expecta-
tions.
Thecentre's
subsequent
travails
exemplify
thetensionsbetweentraditional
Asian
Buddhismand modern
westerndhanna
practice.
Phra
Khantipalo
who.
in
Ayya
Khema's
long
absences.dominatedthelifeof
WBD.began
to
question
tlteThemvadin
orthodoxy
in
general
andits
gender
orderin
particular.
He
had
nurturedanecumenical
attitudeto
dharma
practice
atthe
centre.
including
an
early
sympathy
forthe
Mahayana.
and
became
increasingly
interestedinit.Inthelate
19805,heannouncedthe
conclusionthatthe
‘eight
seriousconditions‘
imposed
on
nunsand
ascribedtotheBuddha
inthePalicanon
—
theTheravada'5maindoctrinal
Emergenceofseculzir
insight
prov/ice
29
support
for
subordinating
and
marginalizing
women
7
were.intact.
iipocryphal.
‘Duetotheformulationoftheseconditions.we
may
concludethat
they
arealater
insenion
by
someonewhowasbiased
against
theordinationot‘ttoment'he
it
role
inBodhi
Leaf119901l0l.
His
high
standi
gamong
bothwesternandAsianTheravadinscontributedtoair
atmosphere
oicrisisaroundhis
supposedupostasy
andmadethewe
'
onceat
theWat's
‘parallelcongregations'
difficulttosustain.Theissuesheraised
brought
into
sharp
relieffundamental ditferenees between the
givens
ofTheravadrn
Buddhismandthe
widespread
view
among
western
practitioners
thatBuddhism
was
inherentlyprogressive
andoifereda
range
of
possibilities
inassociational
principles.
Phra
Khantipalo
disrobedandaTheravadinfactioncame
together
and
imposed
anewconstitutionin [992.Itrewrote
history
and
stipulated
thatWBD
had
always
been
7
andmusteverremain
»
anorthodox
Thai-style
Theravadin
monastery.
Truetomonastichierarchical
assumptions.
thenewconstitutionvested
all
powerexclusively
infiveself-selectedtrusteeswhoheldofficeuntildeathor
resignation,
afterwhichthe
surviving
trusteesalonewouldchoosethe
replace-
ments.A
Laotian-hom.
Thai-trainedmonkwas
appointed
'interinrabbot'andis
stillinoffice 18
years
later.
Itwasone
thing
toassertTheravadinmonasticisin.but
quite
anothertomake
a
monastery
workinthemiddleoftheAustralianwildemess.Asa
visiting
senior
monk from
England,Ajahn
Viradhammo,
pointed
out in
1994.
no Theravadin
monastery
could survivethere and recommended that WBD should
operate
instead a a
'lay-based
retreat centre‘ with
hennitage
facilities for
visiting
monasticstThenewtnisteesfollowedthisadviceanda
fragilecompromise
was
restored.Underthedetacto
management
ofa
lay
committee.
WBDreturnedto
itsformerroleasa
busy
andeclecticretreatcentreforthenextit)
years.
Periodic
eruptions
occurredwhenorthodoxTheravadinmonkscameonextendedretreats
andtriedtoasserttheir
authority
and
gender
exclusions.butthecommitteelearncd
todissuadetheirvisits.Muchmore
importantly.
thecentrehostedthe
majorlay
insight
retreatsinthe
Sydney
area.
onesoftenled
by
overseasorinterstateteachers
andinthe
Sydneyregion
itactedasthe
spiritual
home
orlayinsightpractitioners
outsidetheGoenkaandMahasitraditions.Once
again.
women
playedprominent
rolesinits
spiritual
life.
WBDhadbecomeadefacto
voluntary
association.
but thetrusteesrefused
to
negotiate
any
constitutional
changes
thatwouldhaveseentheir
power
diluted
orthe
possibility
ofafutureturntoTheravadinmonasticism
compromised.
This
institutional
incongruityeventually
doomedthe
compromise.
From 2000 aseries
ofinterventiot'is
by
thetrustees
(who
hadturneddirectorsonWBD‘s
incorporation
in
intothe
management
ofWBDledto
increasingly
severeconflictsthat
erodedthe
laysuppon
base.
so
undermining
WBD's
ability
tomountretreatsand
evenmaintainits
buildings
andland.In
early
2005 thedirectors
responded
with
anew
attempt
toturnWBDintoaTheravadin
monastery
in
practice,including
reducedretreat
activity
andtheenforcementofthe
vinaya(traditional
rules)
onthe
monasticfacilities.which
essentially
banishedwomento
separate
facilities
yet
to
bebuilt.