Buddhism in Australia Traditions in Change

(vip2019) #1
66

Sally


McAra

(the
patriarch

oftheUnited
VietnameseBuddhist

Congregation


inAustraliaand

New

Zealand).
Having
people

with

high-level


connections

helps


to

gain


media

attention.TheDalai
Lama‘svisitisthebest

example


ofthis.Hisvisitalsolendsthe

project


Further

legitimacy


insofaras

peoplerespect


him.Aslan

says.

‘tohaveHis

Holinesscomehereis

really

likethefinal

stamp

of

approval'

(Nexusn.d.).


With

currency


not

only


in
theTibetanBuddhistworldbut
alsointhe

eyes

of/tustralian

mediaand

Bendigo


elites.whowere

impressed
by

theoccasion.Char/2n

5114sz


Edition.the

project‘snewsletter,


documents
thesevisitsandtheirstatementsof

support.


along


with
thoseof

importantlocal,


nationalorinternational

figures.


for

instance,

various

Bendigomayors.


state
membersof

parliament,


andadirector

fromthe

Taipei


EconomicandCulturalOfficein
Melbourne.

Cosmo-multiculturalism

WhenI talkwith

tertiary-educated,


urban
Australiansaboutthe

stupaproject.


they


ofienexclaimin
astonishment:

‘WhyBendigo?‘


For
instance,

Idescribed


the

stupa's


scaleandcostto

‘William’,

the
schoolteacherhusbandofa

Melbumian

colleague.Noting


that
hisincredulous

response

wasan
echoofnumerous

others

fromurban
Australians.

I
askedhim:‘Whatisit
about

Bendigo


that

makes

you

say

that?’His

understanding


wasthat

Bendigo


isa
conservative

place


andthatto

builda

stupa

there,


rather
thanin
Melbourne,

seemedoutlandish.

Presumably.


he


thought


thatTibetanBuddhism
wastoo

cosmopolitan


forasmall

city

like

Bendigo


orthat
multiculturalismis

primarily


a

big-cityphenomenon.


White
Australianstaketwo
distinct

managerial


stancesVissi'IvVlS


immigrants


(Hage


199d:


20]
).

Thefirstisthatof
White‘cosmo-multicultuialists'.alsoreferred

to

as


‘white

cosmopolites'.


who
considercultural

diversity

as

something


that

enrichestheir
lives.These

people


constitutea
hitheno

unrecognized


‘national

type‘

that

represents

themulticulturalcra

(”age

[998:

200).

incontrastwith

those

whomliteratureon
Australiannationalismidentifiesin
relationtoearlier

periods"


This ‘white

cosmopolite'
type

is

implicit

indiscoursesof
whitemulticulturalism

(Hage


l998:

ml)

andthese

people


are

'pically

urbananddetachedfromtheir

rooisxbut


withBritishor

European


on
usandamiddle-or

upper-class


hahiius

that


disposes


themtowards

‘appreciating


and

consuming“high-quality"


commod-

itiesand

cultures.
including

“ethnic"culture.‘
Whitemulticulturalists

envisage


themselves inthe
centreofthisnew

diversity


that

immigmnis


have

brought.


The

othersideofthisisthat

they


considerthesuburbsand

regional


citiesand

towns

tobedeficientbecause

they


lack
that

diversity,


henceWilliam'sattitudetowards

Bendigo.


Whilewhitemulticulturalismconsidertheir
own livesenriched

by


the new

minoritygroups.they


sharecertainfeatureswith
thosewho

oppose

immigration

becauseboth

categories


considerthemselvesastheones
whoshoulddetermine

how
much
immigrationthey

will tolerateand. asa

corollary.


howmuch
the

newcomers

may.metaphorically


or

literally.change


the

existinglandscape.
Hage‘s

critical

point


isthatwhitemulticulturalism
entailsanethosthatcelebratestheideal

ofcultural

diversity

whilein

pracliceenabling


urban
whiteAustralianstoretain





Buddhifyirlg/iustralia


67

their
‘governmental position

through


a

process

of

incorporating


Australia's

multicultural
realityby

constmcti

iintoa

reality

ot‘iamed

ethnicitiesstructured

around

a

primary

Whiteculture‘
(Hage

1998:
209).
Aspects

ot‘these

pro—


and

anti-multiculturalist

discourses

canbediscernedin

public


responses

tothe
stupa

project.


Outofcharacter

withthearea?

The

planningapplication


forthe

stupa

wasfiledin

April

1999.

underthecouncil‘s

categories


of

‘place


of

assembly/worship‘


and‘touristestablishment.‘

The

appli-

cation

passed


withtwo submissions
against

iiandone

infavour.Thecouncil

minutesfor

the

meeting


thatdiscussed

the

stupaapplication


recordthat

approval


was

granted


and

concludethatwhile

the

stupa

willhave‘some

localvisual

impact'

and

generate

traffic,

itwillbeof

‘major

economic

importance


tothe

Municipality.

asitwillattract

visitorsandtourists

to

Bendigo

fromaround

Australiaand

the

world'.

The

countryside


aroundAtishriCentre

is

primarilypastoral


farmlandwithareas

ofstateforest.
Apart

fromthelow

hillssuchasthoseon

whichthe

monastery

and

stupa

sitearesituated.

thenear

flat

landscape


andtrees

allownowide
vistas,

meaning


that

the

stupa

will

mostly

not

bevisiblefromafar.

Both

objections


came

from

couples


wholivedonblocksofland

withinafewkilometres

ofthe

proposed


stupa.


Onenoted

thatthe

stupa

would

be

‘very

vividinits

culours‘which‘wouldbe

detrimentalto

thenatural

surroundings


ofthisarea.’Toreinforce


this

argument.

the

authorsadded

that thecouncil

required


them‘to

paint


our

zincalumeshedsamuted

colourand

screenwithtrees.A
building

suchasthis

.


pa

being


so

high


would

he

impossible


toscreenfromthe

neighbours


insuch

a

way

Thesecond

objection


maintained

thatthe

stupa

would

be‘outofcharacter

withthe
area'.becoming

the‘dominant

visualfeature'

inthe

neighbourhood,


and that

‘[a]building

based

ona
design

fromlSth

century

Tibet

hardly

fits

appropriately


intoa20th
century

semi

ruralVictorian

setting.‘


This

objection


also
expressed

concemabouttraffic.

security(includingunspecified


undesirable

people


who

might


cometothe

Buddhist

centreandthenintrude

on

neighbouringproperties)


andtheremovalof

nativeflora.

Thislast

point,they


maintained,

‘fiiesinthe

faceofthe

general


thrust

ofeducation

towardsconservation

ofnaturalenvironments.

Beneaththe

points


the

objectors


made

liesanother concern
arising

outof

resistancetothe

dominantdiscourseofmulticulturalism.

Those

opposing


the

stupa

intermsofits
alleged

cultural

incongruity


seemtofearthat

they


have

lostcontrol

ofthcnationand

are

beingincreasingly


displacedbymigrants


and

Aboriginals

using


what

Hage


callsa‘discourse

of

Anglo

decline~

(Hage


l998:
20).

I


spoke


tooneofthe
objectorsbytelephone.

whotoldmethatsheand

herhusbanddid

notwanttosee

the

stupa

overthe
treetops

fromtheirhouse

andasked:

‘Why

don't

theyput


itintownnearthe

ChineseMuseum‘l‘Forher,

themuseum

(the


most

prominent


markerof

Bendigo’s


Chinese

heritage)


andthe

stupa

wereboth

‘Asian'and‘cxotic'

andtherefore
belongedtogether.

Withtheother

stupa

critics

discussedhere.7


sheconsidereda
Tibetan-stylestupa

tobe

incompatible


withhow
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