82 Gordon
Wain
inthelocal
media.
Arkell
is
quoted
as
saying.
‘thecentre
wouldattractworldwide
interest and
many
visitors'
(Illnwnrm
Mercury
198%:
l4),
His viewswere
substantiated
by
Ian
King.
thethenttcisurcCoast
TouristAssociation
manager.
whois
reported
to
have
simply
said
‘[l]t[the
temple]
willbea
greatthing
for
this
city'
(Illawarra
Mercury
l989c:
2).
Comparisons
weredrawntoasimilar
temple
inLos
Angeles
thatdrewover
200,000visitorsa
year.
Theconstruction
ol‘the
temple
would
enrich
Wollongong
culturally. artistically
and economi-
cally.
Wollongong
Council
finally
resolvedto
sellthelandfortheconstruction
ofNan Tien
Temple
on cultural
capital
grounds,describing
the
temple
as a
significant
cultural
andtourist
development
tothebenefitofthe
‘community‘
of
Wollongong.
Asa tourist
attractionthe
temple
reliedon
beingsocially
constructedas
an
exotic
destination.
an
objectrepresenting
the
orient. ratherthan
primarily
as
a
sacred , ln
portraying
the
temple
asanexotic
attraction.underthe
guise
of
discourse
ofmulticulturalism.
Wollongong
Council
reliedonandreiteratedorien-
talismandthebasic
distin onbetweencastandwest.
Ratherthan
challenging
understanding
offaithin
Wollongong.
Buddhismwas
simply
addedasan
exotic
extra.
Consequently.
as
Stratton
(1998)argues.
oneofthe
problems
ofdiscourses
of
multiculturalismisthat
whileitasserts
positives
from
diversity.
itlocatesand
confirmsthe
imagined
differenceswithinbinariesof‘us'and‘them‘.
Stereotypes
ot’cthnic
minoritiesare
redeployed
ratherthanconfronted.Inthiscase.Said
1 l978)
has
dcmonstmtedhowthe
European
discourseot'orientalismwas
underpinnedby
anumber
ofnaturalizedbinaries
(thatis.
as‘civilized'.
‘ordered',‘Christian'.etc).
These
always
set
otT
Europe(thewest)
favourablyagainst
theorient
(the
east).
Hence.
the
belonginggeneratedthrough
a
capitalistimperative
wasbasedon
the
western
assumption
thatthereisan‘us‘and 3
‘them‘,
each
quiteseparate.
clear.
and
unequivocally
selfievident.Asanexotictourist
attraction,
the'alicn‘attributes
ot’thc
templecomplex
in
westerntermsbecamethe
reasonforsocialinclusion
in
Wollongong,
The
'alien'.understoodasabrandtobe
marketed,
in
commodity
ratherthana
livingreligion.
perhapshelped
madethe
temple
less
confronting
for
some
Wollongong
residents.
A
Buddhist
templeportrayed
asa
tourist attraction
provided
a
unique
site
of
spectacle
thatin the I990s
helped
re-image Wollongongaway
frommedia
stereotypesofpollutio unemployment.
crime
and
heavyindustry.
Asabrand.
the
temple
offered
possib
tiesof
pitchingWollongong
tomeetthemarketdemands
ofthosetourists
seeking
the
‘exotic‘orculturaldifference.
For
city
marketers,
the
temple
offeredameans
by
whichto
express
a
new.
unique.
vitality.
and
cultural
diversity
In
short.
Buddhism
provided
asocial
group
to
helpglamorize
the
city
(see
Zukin
1988;l998).
As
elsewhere.
culturaldifferentiation
played
a
key
rolein
the
process
of
re-imaging
(Lovatt
and
O‘Connor1995:
127;
Montgomery
1995:
MS).
As
a
symbol
ofdifferenceand
‘Asian-ness‘.Nan Tien
Temple‘s
social
construction
issimilarto
thatof
Sydney
andMelboumc‘s
Chinatowns
(Anderson
1990:
I37).
NanTien
Temple
asabrandortouristattraction
becomesa
product
and
symbol
ofsome
single.pure
andmonolithic
‘east‘.
a
comparative
setting
against
mainstreamAustralia.
Locating
aBuddhist
temple
in
Wollongong
83
Conclusion
Theaim
ofthis
chapter
wasto
explorewhy
the
southern
hemisphcrc'slargest
Buddhist
temple
complex
waslocatedin
Wollongong.
Oncedubbedthe‘Sheffield
oftheSouth‘.
Wollongong
ismorenotoriousinlhc
settlerand
migrant
Australian
geographicalimaginations
forcoalandsteel
production
ratherthan
spirituality,
This
required
examining
thedifferentsetsofideasor
discoursesdrawnon
bykey
politicians
andleaders
ofdifferent
religiousgroups
that
helpedgivemeaning
to
the
proposed
site.
Drawing
ondiscourse
of
geomancy.
theF0
Kuang
Shah‘s
fengshuiinlerpret~
ation
ofthe
locality
earmarked
FlagstafTHill
asan
auspicious
sacredsite.
Equally.
whenframedwithindiscourse
ofmulticulturalism.bothChristian
ministriesand
political
leaders
agreed
the
templecomplexbelonged
in
Berkeley.
Further.
when
framed
by
the discourse
of
oricntalism.
the
templc
oll'cred
Wollongong City
Councilwitha
unique
tourist
attractionwithwhichtobrandthe
city.
litthe
[9805.
these
social conditions
were
exceptional.
Atthis time local
council
planning
decisionselsewhereinNew
SouthWalesofiencontinuedto
portray
Buddhistand
Islamic
places
of
worship
as‘outof
place‘
inAustraliansuburbs.
Yet.thedifi‘erent
ways
inwhich
religious
and
political
authorities
spoke
of
the
templecomplexbelonging
withinthesuburbof
Berkeley
alsohas
important
implications
forthe
roleofBuddhistsascitizens.TheChristian
clergy
ollenheld
an
ambivalent
position.
TheChristianministries
envisaged
the
temple
as
only
materiallybelonging
in
Wollongong
as
part
ol'amulticultural
society.
but
spirit-
ually
‘outof
place'.
Hence,
Christianministriesconceived
ofBuddhistmonksand
nunsas
havingonly
alimitedrole.As
part
ot‘multiculturalism,
themonksandnuns
provided
spiritualguidance
forBuddhists
already
resident
inAustralia.
However.
any
attempt
to
spread
theirfaith
beyond
theconfinesofthe
temple's
boundaries
was
interpreted
as
contrary
tothe
identity
ofAustraliaasa
Christiannationand
damaging
to
the
self-identity
nt'AustralianChristians.Buddhists
werewelcomed.
buttheirfaithhadtohe
spatially
containedwithinthe
temple,
Local
politicians
also
employed
multiculturalismintheir
arguments.
However.
in
theircase
they
tendedto
empltasin:
Buddhismintermsol'a
taxonomic
object,
basedon awestern invented
understanding
ofthe
orient.
rather
than a
living
reltgion.
Suchromanticizednotionsallowedthe
promotion
ofNan
Tien
Temple
as
anitemof
curiosity.
a
camivalesque
leisure
space
ofritual
inversionfromthe
dominantauthorizedculture.Local
politicians‘
discourse
surrounding
Buddhism
was
entrenched in
positive
exoticassociations.
Ponrayed
in
this
way.
NanTien
Temple
belonged
in
Wollongong
asamechanismto
culturally
enrich
the
city.
although
the
temple
is
socially
constmctcd asan
object
from
elsewhere. from
a
culture
portrayed
asstatic and traditional.Culturaldifference
undcrstood in
this
way
framedthe
temple
as
part
ofAustralia‘smulticultural
selectionhosof
costumes.
dancesandfoods.
Consequently,
thelocal
citizenship
role
forBuddhists
wasone
inwhich
they
couldbeeither
displayed
andmarketedasasite
of
spectacle
to
potential
touristsor
paradedthrough
thestreetsof
Wollongong
duringspecial
multicultural
events.
suchas‘Vivttla
Gong‘.
Inthis
role.
while
communicating
a