Buddhism in Australia Traditions in Change

(vip2019) #1
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


  1. 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).
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