5
Changes
and
challenges
to
Vietnamese
Buddhism inAustralia
TuongQuang
Luu
This
chapter
will
examinethe
development
oftheUnited
VietnameseBuddhist
Fongregation
in
light
ofthe
growth
oftheVietnamese
Buddhist
community
inAustralia.Itwill
identifychallenges
faced
along
the
way
andcurrent sues
that
this
organization
mustnowovercome.Fromits
very
modestanddifficult
beginning.
the
congregation
cameto
maturity
asa
religiousbody
withina
relatively
short
period.
butwhetherits
leadership
team can
renewitselt‘to
stay
relevanttothe
youngergeneration
ofVietnamese
Australiansremainsto
beseen.
Historical
developments
Very
fewVietnameselivedin
Australiauntilthelate[9505whenVietnam
joined
theColomboPlan.Inthe 19605
and
19705,
many
thousands
ofyoung
Vietnamese
were
sponsored
underthe
Cnlomho Plan to
pursue
their
tertiary
education in
Australia.
They
were
among
the
bestand
brightest
ofVietnam's
youth.
chosen
tobetrainedoverseasas
technocratsforitsfuture
development.
However.
before
1975.
a
permanent
Vietnamese
community
inAustralia
hardly
existed.
apart
from
a
few
hundredwhohadsettledin
Australiaas
spouses
or
throughadoption.
When
Saigon
fellin
April
l975,
several
hundredVietnamesestudentswerestranded
andallowedtoremaininAustralia.A
year
aftertheFallof
Saigon.
there“ere
2427 Vietnamese-bum residentsof
Australia
(Department
of
Immigration
and
MulticulturalAffairs
2000),
However.
this
newlydeveloping
community
wasfacedwith
significant
issues.
FourierVietnamesestudentswere
divided
among
themselvesduetotheir
political
allegiances.
Thosewhochoseto
support
thenew
power
backhomewerereluctant
to
beinvolvedinthe
growing
Vietnamese
refugeecommunity.
Othersformed
pan
of
the
educated
component
ofthe
early
socialstnictureofVietnameseAustralians
in
thelate
19705,
suchasDrTran
My-Van
fromtheAustralianNationalUniversity
tn
(Fanberra,
then later in
Darwin,
or Phan
Dong
Bich and
Tran Tan
Tai.
engineeringgraduates
fromthe
University
ofNewSouthWalesand
the
University
of
Adelaide,
respectivelyThey
undenook
voluntary
work
alongside
Australian
friendsfrom
non-govemmentorganizations
toassist
the
newly
arrived
refugees'
culturalreorientation.
Challenges
(a
VietnameseBuddhism
135
The Vietnamese-loom
population
increased
dramatically
and
continuously
through
thefour
subsequent
censuses:41,096
in
1981.
83.028in 1986. l21,813
in 1991 and150.941
in1996.
In 1996 therewere
also
46,756second-generation
Australians
of Vietnamese
background (Department
of
immigration
and
Multicultural
AlTairs
2000).
Substantial
changes
toAustralia‘s
immigration
and
refugeepolicies
inthe 19905
sawa
rapid
decline
inVietnamese
arrivalsfrom 1996
onwards.
The
community‘s
growth
inthe
subsequent
decade
wasdue
mainly
to
the
Australian-born
secondand
subsequentgenerations
ofVietnameseBuddhists,
who
liaie
fundamentallychanged
not
only
the
demographics
of
theestimated250.000-
strong
VietnameseAustralian
community.
butalsoits
spiritual
needs,
after
only
threedecadesofrescttlement.
Difiicultfirst
steps
anditdecadeofachievements
The
presence
ofVietnamese
Buddhist
monastics and
temples
evolved
slowly.
Before 1980 there was
not a
single
Vietnamese monk
residing
in Australia.
letalone a Vietnamese
Buddhist
temple.
Dr
Hoang
Khoi recalls that,
as a
postgraduate
student at
the
University
of
New SouthWales,
heand
hisfellow
Buddhistadherentsheld
meditationand
prayer
sessions
in
private
and
sometimes
celebrated
major
Buddhist
eventssuch
asVesakatan
innersuburbThai
Temple
|hat
practised
Theravada
Buddhism
Thiswasnot ideal
as mostVietnamese
are
Mahayana
Buddhists.
Theneedfora
Vietnamese-speaking
monkand
aVietnameseBuddhist
place
of
worship
and meditation
became
moreacute
asVietnamese
refugeesbegan
inarrivein
greater
numbersafter
- In 1980
asmall
group
ofVietnamese
Buddhistswelcomed
thefirst
VietnameseBuddhist
monktoAustralia
froma
refugeecamp
in
HongKong.
Senior
Venemble
ThichTacl’huoc.
Hehadbeen
a
high-ranking
memberoftheUnified
BuddhistChurch
ofVietnam
in
Saigon,
which
wasbanned
by
thenewcommunist
authorities
after1975.Another
refugee
monk
whocamefrom
Malaysia,
Senior
Venerable
Thich
Htiyen
Ton,
soon
joined
himin
Melboume.Athird
monk,
VenerableThich
Bao
Lac,
camefrom
Japan
and
settled
in
S_\dne}
in
February
1981.
The
growing
Vietnamese
Buddhist
community
realized
quickly
that
building
a
place
of
worship
would
prove
farmore
difficultand
complicated
than
origi-
nally
thought,
'l‘oday's
seemingly
well-established
l’huoc
llueand
i’hap
Bao
monasteriesin Western
Sydney
and other
similar
Vietnamese
temples
in
Brisbane,
Canberra. Melbourne.
Adelaide
andPerth.
disguise
the
problems
0f
neighbourhoodprotests.
landuse
zoning
and local
govemmeni
bttilding
tegulations
thathadtobeovercome
when
locating
house-temples
in
residential
areas.‘Buddha
worship
in
a
garage‘
was
the
description
givenby
the
Sidney
Morning
Heraldtothe
very
modestbrick
veneerhouse
thathoused
thefirst
l’liuoc Hue
Temple
in the
working‘class
suburb ofFairfield.
New
South
Wales.
inthe
early
19305,
Theissues
faced
by
house-temples
in
residential
areasremain
basically
unchanged
three
decadeslater
(Skennar
2005:
seealso
Skennar,
this
volume).