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