The
Buddhist Hour Radio Broadcast for Sunday 26 May 2002
Broadcast
Script 226
Today's broadcast is entitled:
The
Spreading of Buddha Dhamma on this Continent of Australia
by
John
D. Hughes Dip. App. Chem. T.T.T.C. GDAIE. Vice-President , World
Fellowship of Buddhists, Council Advisor, World Buddhist University.
Founder, Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd.
(Research
assistance by his wife, Anita).
I bow to the
power of the Triple Gem, The Buddha, The Dhamma, The Sangha.
This
paper should be read with the viewpoint that the author does not wish
to disparage the motives or actions or intellect of other persons or
their organisations.
The motivation to write some sort of
history of Buddha Dhamma in this country comes from the request of a
Vietnamese organisation to inform others of some earlier happenings.
The restraint and censorship needed includes the modest goal to
produce causes for the prolonged stability of the Vietnamese Buddha
sasene in this country.
The dark view of human nature that
maintains that only national self interest can bring about
celebration of international friendship is discounted.
In
1995, the Supreme Patriarch of the Buddhists of Bangladesh, The
Sangharaja of Bangladesh, His Magnanimous Holiness Most Venerable
Shilalankar Mahathero, from Mirzapore Shanti Dham Bihar, Chittagong,
Bangladesh, wrote to author and prayed for his attainment of
Boddhisattva Parami in this life and wished him to be happy along
with his friends far and near working hand in hand with him for the
spreading of Buddha Dhamma on this continent.
Two hundred
years from now it will be possible to write an accurate history of
Buddha Dhamma attainment in Australia.
Under Buddha Rules, the
names of those persons who have attained stream enterer or better,
cannot be disclosed while they are still alive. There is a Temple in
Burma (Myanmar) which records the names of such persons.
Bodhisattva vow holders not only visit Australia and show the
Way to Australians, but several of these true Guides are taking
rebirth in this land or, if born overseas, have been naturalised to
hold Australian citizenship.
Today, a more complete
understanding of what is Path and what is not Path is available, than
was known to many early non-Asian Australian "Buddhists ",
and sympathisers of "Buddhism".
In retrospect,
early Australian attempts of establishing Buddha Dhamma had small
influence on the population at large.
In a few cases, it is now
clear that some persons who were Buddha followers sought (perhaps
innocently) to twist Buddha Dhamma into a framework to make a
dialectic false mask. A few were fellow travelers with Communism
during the cold war period.
On 20 May 1951, Marie Byles along
with eight people commemorated Vesak in New South Wales, making this
the first Vesak to be celebrated by a group of non-Asian Australian
Buddhists. In terms of real outcome, very little propagation of the
Buddha Dhamma came from this ritual.
On 9 September 1951, a
group of ten people, including Leo Berkeley, gathered with David
Maurice at Cheltenham in Melbourne. In November 1951, instructions on
Burmese meditation were given to a small group interested in Buddha
Dhamma.
Partial evidence that Buddha Dhamma has become mature
and firmly grounded in Australia is the fact that three Regional
Centres of the World Fellowship of Buddhists operate in a unique
manner in Australia today. One of the Regional Centres of the World
Fellowship of Buddhists is operated by the Vietnamese Community who
have Temples in each state of Australia.
For the Buddha
Jayanta Year 2500 B.E. the Foreign Minister of Australia opened a
Buddhist Art exhibition at the Melbourne Museum.
The author
attended this exhibition which was attended by the Minister for
Foreign Affairs and about 30 other persons many of these were not
followers of Buddha Dhamma. Buddha images were borrowed from the
community.
In recent times, any notable Buddhist exhibition
draws thousands of viewers.
As Acharn Tate has noted in his
Autobiography, "if one wants to go to any particular place or
region -
1 One should know their language;
2 One should know
their customs and traditions; and
3 One should know about their
livelihood."
This is all concerned with proper social
discourse and communication with people. However, the lack of
language alone makes the other two points almost problematic.
With
the availability of superior English translators in many Temples,
many noble persons come to teach in this country and meet the
audience they can find determined by the karmic links made in former
times.
Sad to say, full cognisance of Australian cultural
legal requirements, to operate within the community, has not yet been
realised by all levels of Buddha Dhamma practitioners in
Australia.
When foreigners come to Australia they must obey
Australian safety laws and health regulation guidelines. Ignorance is
no defence at law.
More and more costly legal indemnity is
required for public assemblies. Insurance costs are at an all time
high.
The laws requiring health and safety disciplines are
well funded and supported by the Government, which provides health
inspectors to ensure that regulations are followed.
Health
inspectors, who are paid by public taxes, have the authority to close
down any premises that do not comply with the health regulations.
Essential Services inspectors have the power to fine those who
disregard safety regulations.
For example, if electric wiring
is old and faulty, an inspector can force the owners to install new
electric wiring and appropriate fuses. This is done by fines. On the
spot fines of up to one thousand Australian dollars for each breach,
individuals can be fined up to ten thousand Australian dollars and
companies up to fifty thousand Australian dollars with possible
criminal action charges.
The Government has scientific
research establishments improving understanding of materials science.
New insights into safer ways of buildings and protecting buildings
are common.
Research extends to scientific research on ways
and means to deal with forest fires.
Because of recent fires
in Australia involving fatalities, older dwellings are now perceived
as fire or health hazards.
In Australia, three Temples
have been burnt down to date. It was fortunate the fires did not
spread elsewhere.
Research suggests better provisions can be
made for new buildings, ways of improving older dwellings and
understanding how to house the public with safety.
The new
ways give rise to new Australian standards. Recent improvements are
found in AS 3959, AS 1530.2 or BS4106.
In general, the staff
of Australian local councils are instructed not to push to get the
Council to go to court, but rather to settle problems out of court.
Court is the last resort when all other steps have failed.
In
most cases, the Council officers issue several warnings and seek to
talk to offending rate payers about building regulation infringement
problems with good will to get complaints resolved as soon as
possible. Senior officers are well paid so when matters drag on the
administration costs mount up.
To continue without resolution
is a waste of taxpayers' rates. The author knows of one case in
Victoria where a Vietnamese Nun permitted use of an illegal building
(a garage) to hold services at her Temple.
In spite of
repeated warnings from the local council inspectors of the City of
Maribyrnong that the building did not conform to the safety
regulations, the Nun chose to ignore these warnings for a period of
years.
In the end, the Nun was fined AUS$50,000 under the
Building Act 1993 Building Regulations 1994 Regulation 8.3 of
occupying a garage for use as a meeting place contrary to section 49
of the Building Act.
The Nun ignored warnings because she had
the wrong view that she was exempt from local government rules,
merely on the grounds that she is a religious person. This case is
not an example of religious persecution at all. The same would apply
to any other organisation, religious or non-religious, in Australia.
Ill-advised persons may judge this as a racist act because
the Nun happened to be Vietnamese.
In fact, the council officers
had been forbearing and patient for a long time and their actions
were not taken on any racist grounds. Their actions had nothing to do
with the nationality of the person concerned.
Through
subsequent negotiations with the council over the years the committee
of that temple received approval to remove the old weatherboard
building and replace it with a 1.5 million dollar Temple on the same
site. The author attended the Corner stone laying of this temple on
13 January 2002.
The next generation of Buddhist practitioners
in Australia will have to do a lot of fundraising to bring their
small temples up to the safety standards now required by law in
Victoria, Australia.
It is assumed that other states will
follow this type of legislation.
A very fast cultural learning
curve is recommended when overseas Sangha persons wish to design
traditional Temples in Australia. Cultural surprises in many forms
await persons from a developing country who must come to terms with
the standards of a post-industrial developed country.
Venerables
find out, here the cultural ways of using traditional symbolic icons
in the Temple precinct, or on the facade of their Temples in this
country may be different from what is permitted in their own country.
Dimensions, safety of electric wiring for lighting and safety
of support structures must meet with the building and quality codes
of local authorities.
For example, a Temple in Richmond,
Victoria, had to remove a flashing Quan Yin image from its facade
because the Temple was in a residential zone, and not a commercial or
industrial zone where flashing advertising signs are allowed.
In
a Melbourne Hindu Temple, two traditional Temple Domes were not
permitted to be erected, because the Temple was in a residential
zone. A large billboard had to be replaced by a smaller one because
local law prohibits in a residential zone the use of "clutter"
which is seen as visual "pollution".
Assimilating
such detail becomes a critical issue for all senior Members of the
Sangha if they are to take on the critical operational role of Abbot
and Chairman of their respective Temple Committees.
Very
senior Abbots giving traditional architectural advice may later find
their high position does not exempt their proposals from local bylaws
and regulations.
Lighting a fire on a total fire ban day is
punishable by heavy fines or imprisonment, or both. It is illegal to
light incense outdoors on total fire ban days, and to plead ignorance
of these laws is no defense.
The reason for this law is that
forest fires have been deliberately lit in Australia and have caused
millions of dollars worth of damage and loss of life. In our local
area, because it is a rain forest, total fire bans exist for three
months of the year. This means that the traditional open fire used
for cooking in some countries is totally prohibited on total fire ban
days in Australia. Temples must fund enclosed kitchens.
Cultural
education, and adjustment to Australian society rules, are required
for foreigners who are used to cooking with open fires in Temple
grounds overseas. As a result of these various things, the appearance
of an Australian Vihara in terms of sights, smells and sounds, is
totally different to that of the traditional Temples in Asian
countries like Thailand and Vietnam.
These changes in sense
bases, where the smell of food being prepared is absent; the smell of
incense is absent; and the sound of fire crackling is absent, means
that overseas-born persons feel a lack of familiarity and comfort
within the Temple grounds of Australian Vihars.
The Most
Venerable Master Hsing Yun has suggested we view our Saha world as
half and half:
"Half are Buddhas, half are devils, half are
male and half are female, half are good and half are bad, half are
wise and half are fools. One cannot own the half that is beneficial
and abandon the rest. Only through tolerance and accepting all, can
we possess the fullness of existence."
The author has
refrained from highlighting the view that there is merit in
documenting the cultural misunderstandings that were made by
foreigners when they advanced Australian Buddha Dhamma.
In
some practices, a person can look at the present human world from a
deva mind, seeing only pleasant positive things. Then, the person
praises the human beings for their many kind actions towards others.
For teaching purposes, we can say that praising the
good deeds of countless human beings can lead a person to be happy
that he or she has a human birth this life and also lead him or her
to a good human rebirth, or even better (say, in one of the 71
trillion pure lands), in his or her next life.
The author was
born in Australia in 1930 to non-Buddhist parents. He has been active
and engaged as a Teacher and writer on Buddha Dhamma for over forty
years.
The author, founded a Buddhist Organisation and a
Temple at Upwey, in the State of Victoria. Its now well-equipped
building is the oldest operating Hall of Assembly and Buddhist
library that has remained in the same location in the State.
The
Centre is a regional Centre of the World Fellowship of Buddhists.
From 1977 to 1979, the author was funded by the Australian
Schools' Commission to document the history, culture and activities
of existing Buddhist Temples in Australia.
During that time,
he met and documented what was taught by the pioneering Monks and
Nuns who set up the first foreign speaking Temples in this country.
The research methodology and language terminology he learned
at that time and extended his practice to become familiar with the
history of Buddha Dhamma in overseas countries.
His findings
have been published in many overseas journals. Over the last two
decades, much of his written output has been published in his
Centre's publication, the Buddha Dhyana Dana Review, the paper
version which used to circulate in over 40 countries.
Recent
issues may be viewed on our internet site at www.bddronline.net.au
Our organisation thinks globally and now has 8 operating
websites.
We plan to place all past Buddha Dhyana Dana Review
issues (with photographs) onto our website
www.bddronline.net.au
Over the last 45 years, the author has
taught over one million persons in 14 countries and has found the
Christian methods of doing missionary work on persons born in Buddha
Dhamma families can be undone.
The key to undoing this work
is for the followers of Buddha Dhamma to follow the methods of the
evangelist to befriend the poorest member in the community to help
them financially or provide medicines if they are unwell.
There
are few persons who would be classified as poor in Australia using
overseas standards.
Government poverty line sets a rich
standard for a rich post industrial country.
Australian
Buddhists are returning to their traditional role of providing
further education for educated persons. The reason for doing this is
to follow the Buddhas teachings on what creates long life
stability for the congregation. Morality is at a low point in
Australia. The mental health of Australians as evidenced by the
suicide rate is deplorable.
Many do not know how to live well
or die well. The Austin hospital in Melbourne is using Sri Lankan
Buddha Dhamma practice to ease the pain of the terminally ill.
As
the population ages, the terminally ill in Nursing Homes are
increasing. More and more nursing professionals are trying to learn
from Tibetan Buddhist texts how to help the dying person. Australians
may have lost the will to nurse their aged at home.
They are
wealthy enough to hand over their aged and demented to Personal
Carers. To live in harmony, persons must be educated to assemble in
harmony.
Harmony does not mean the richest donors are accorded
the seats at the front of the congregation.
In Buddhas
day one of the richest persons, Anathapindika gave everything to
Buddha and could walk around almost unrecognised in what has been
termed Anathapindikas pack.
As a layman, he was given
no special seating near Buddha during assemblies.
There is
little evidence that such wise practice is practiced among followers
in Australia.
Will that be our next major victory?
It
is postulated that, the current Buddha Dhamma growth in Australia, to
the rank of having the third most followers, arises from many persons
wanting to know the nature of death and dying processes.
All
across the land, Buddha Dhamma persons advice minimizes the
grief of relatives when their loved ones pass away.
At the
funeral ceremony of a very senior Monk who passed away in Bangladesh
some years ago, there were 200,000 persons at the ceremony and a
national religious holiday was declared. The radiance given to his
people by the passing away assembly and cremation lasting 3 days
would last many generations for the people of Bangladesh. The event
was covered by national television.
Both, the simple and
educated Buddhist persons of Bangladesh intuitively felt the radiance
of this great noble person who had passed away sharing his merit with
all including those he had served by setting up orphanages, schools
and charitable works. The Venerable was an Arhat ( a totally
liberated being) at his passing away time.
Nothing like this
grand event has happened in Australian history to date.
The
last breath of a departing great Thai Monk appeared on a Thai
national television program.
Unfortunately, as great Buddha
Dhamma teachers resident in Australia tend to return to their native
land to pass away among their family, few persons in Australia have
witnessed a full cremation ceremony of a noble person with the full
assembled Sangha.
When a similar thing to this happens,
locally, Australian history will be made.
So when that major
event happens in the future, the national consciousness of ordinary
and educated Australians will change for the better as the
possibility of better rebirth becomes better known.
The author
predicts that within a decade, 28 percent of Australians will feel
favourably inclined to visit Buddhist services at least once a month
and may choose Buddhist ceremonies for their funerals.
The
opportunity of starting small Temples in residential areas has
finished.
The next Australian historical landmark has been
flagged by the infrastructure underway in Victoria for the first one
billion dollar Buddha Dhamma complex.
A Taiwanese Master is
funding and guiding this complex project. It will be world class with
two crematoriums.
It will become a national icon.
An
estimated seven billion dollar outlay is needed over Australia, as
hundreds of the older Buddhist temples need to be refurbished to meet
the new standards of occupational health & safety or be fined out
of existence.
Publication costs in Australia are high.
The
Vietnamese in Australia are well served by many overseas publication
enterprises in the Vietnamese language.
Their organisation in
France globalised the unified propagation of traditional Vietnamese
culture and practice.
For example :
La Dissemination Du
Dharma
Hoang Phap is a Buddhist Journal in the Vietnamese
language. Our organisation has received several issues for our
multi-lingual library. This Journal is associated with Monastere
Bouddhique Linh-Son. Inquiries regarding this publication should be
addressed to: Thich Giac-Hoan, 9, Avenue Jean Jaures, 9434o
Joinville-Le-Pont, France. The issue N0. 26 includes 14 pages in the
French language.
The present writer, considers this step adds
greatly to the power of this Dharma Journal, since many Westerners
have the ability to read French, and lack the ability to read
Vietnamese.
Recently, the French section has been
discounted.
To encourage the return of wider circulation of
Hoang Phap, we reprint Venerable Dr. Thich-Nuyen-vis comments
from page 43 of this Journal:
La revue "Hoang Phap" (la
dissemination du DHARMA), parue depuis 1975 dans le but dcxpliquer
la philosophie et la pratique du Bouddhisme a la communaute
vietna-nienne en France et a 1etranger, prend, a partir de ce
numero, un nouvel essor.
En effet, suivant la demande de nos
amis Francais. 'Hoang Phap" comporte dorenavant une vingtaine de
pages en Francais concernant la philosophie, les histoires, les
anectotes, la poesie, 1information des activites bouddhiques,
etc...
Cette nouvelle entreprise exige un renforcement de notre
equipe de redacteurs qui reste actuellement insuffisant comme nos
moyens financiers. Cest pourquoi nous faisons appel a votre
precieuse et active cooperation pour rendre notre revue plus
attrayante et plus utile. Veuillez nous envoyer vos textes, poemes,
informations, contributions, conseils, et faire connaitre "Hoang
Phap" a eos amis.
There are hundreds of examples of the
commercial success in Australia of the Vietnamese who became
Australian citizens.
Many used their locally generated wealth
to build new Temples.
Historically, most Temples started in a
small way.
For example, The Vietnamese Buddhist Association
of Queensland was founded in 1978 by a group of dedicated Vietnamese
Buddhists in Brisbane in the hope that our Buddhist community can
have the opportunity to observe and to practise our traditional
Buddhist way of life.
There were approximately 6,000
Vietnamese living in Brisbane at that time and the majority of them
were Buddhists. The Association was open to everyone regardless of
their religion and race. Annual membership fee was $2.00. In May 1981
the Association obtained a place to serve as its temple, located at
Corinda, Brisbane.
Reverend Thich Nhat Tan came to Brisbane
in April that year from a refugee camp in Thailand as the resident
monk of the new temple. As the spiritual leader of the Vietnamese
Buddhist community, Reverend Thich Nhat Tan conducted regular
chanting and teaching at the temple at 3.00 p.m. every Saturday and
also at 7.00 p.m. on the 15th day (full moon) and the last day of the
lunar month. Everyone was welcome to participate.
The
teachings were normally given in Vietnamese, though these were
translated into English if needed. The temple was open for members
and guests every night from 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. and all day Saturday and
Sunday.
It is a tradition that, the most Venerable senior
Monk dictates the terms of conduct to all.
Where a mother
Temple is overseas, new requirements observed there, soon find their
way to Australian Temple policies.
For example, on l7th May,
1983, the Venerable M aster Hsuan Hua, Abbot of Tathagata Monastery
and Chancellor of Dharma Realm Buddhist University, City of Ten
Thousand Buddhas, Talmage, California, 95-81, announced new
requirements for those who wish to become "left-home people".
These are in addition to the three year course of training, which
includes daily bowing, vows and repentances, as well as a full
program of study.
This attempt at professionalisation of the
Sangha tends to trickle down to other places, including Australian
Temples.
The local Vietnamese training of new Monks is to send
them to the rich American Temples for some time.
Overseas, in
Buddhist lands the national unifying aspect of Versak is well
recorded.
The observation of Versak is celebrated by
Australian Buddha Dhamma Orders without too many foreign Buddhist
Monks and Nuns in attendance. Due to language differences they never
found much common practice to join together on this day.
This
has changed now that the common language used is the English
language. Government policies assisted foreigners to learn our local
language.
Yet, overseas, government policies tend to unite the
different orders because they could proclaim Versak a national
holiday.
Our organisation was advised by Mr. Aggi Tjetje
President of Gabungan Tridharma Indonesia and the World Fellowship of
Buddhists Indonesian Regional Centre and also the Chairman of the
Council for Co-ordinating of Buddhist Schools in Indonesia, that the
Indonesian Government had proclaimed Vaishak Day a Public Holiday in
1983.
This means all public offices would be closed on this
National Day.
We congratulated the Indonesian Government on
this recognition of the importance of Vaishak world wide.
Some
Australian organisations think nationally. The inclination of the
Vietnamese policies have been to involve Australians.
Many
efforts were made to bring disparate Buddha Dhamma organisations to a
common platform. One of the earlier attempts was the Buddhist Council
of Brisbane. Our archives note the following information on this
early effort.
THE BUDDHIST COUNCIL OF BRISBANE.
A FORUM OF
BUDDHIST GROUPS
CHAIRMAN'S NOTE:
It seems significant that
the formation of the Council should occur one hundred years after the
first Buddhists settled in Queensland. The pioneering spirit is again
to the forefront as we break new ground again .
New ground it
is indeed, since new groups in developing their identities, have
often been more aware of inter-traditional differences rather than
similarities. In the search to become one with the Buddha's
qualities, to embark on a course of-dialogue and exchange is of real
benefit and in true spirit of the Dharma. A real step towards an
integrated identity for Buddhism in Brisbane.
Acknowledgement
must go to Klaas de Jong who took the initiative and convened the
Council in May 1982. May all beings be happy, Loden Sherab.
CHAIRMAN: Rev. Loden Sherab (Loden Compassion Mahayana Centre )
SECRETARY: Mr. Klaas de Jong (Dhammadinna House)
The Council
was convened in mid-1982 to discuss interests in common to the
various Buddhist Organisations in Brisbane.
Membership stands
at seven groups, each of whom nominate two delegates to regular
meetings. The groups and their delegates are:
Brisbane Buddhist
Vihara
Anil Biswas
Duleendra Mendis
Brisbane Zen Group
Gregg Howard
Kim Lewis
Buddhist Society Of Queensland
Victor Gunasekara
Lyn Cameron
Chenrezig City Centre
Peter Fenner
Inta McKimm
Dhammadina House
Klaas de
Jong
Loden Compassion Mahayana Centre
Rev. Loden Sherab
Lama
Lhundup
Vietnamese Buddhist Association of Qld.
Trung Viet
Nguyen
Nguyenthi Tuyetnga
A major aim of the Council is
the exchange and presentation of information about member groups,
thereby fostering goodwill in the Buddhist community and promoting
interest in Buddhism generally. It can also provide a common voice if
needed.
The first project of the Council was a Directory of
Buddhist Groups in Brisbane. A regular news-sheet is also planned to
publicise the activities of the various member groups and items of
interest to all.
Over time they lost global interest through
a Melbourne group who had a link to the World Fellowship of Buddhists
but did not attend international conventions.
In the history
of Australian Buddha Dhamma the most influential figure is the Most
Venerable Thich Phuoc Hue. On the Authors electronic Database
holding history of Buddha Dhamma over the years, 70 references appear
to this great leader who has received an Order of Australia.
The
Vietnamese Buddhist Society of New South Wales was formed in December
1979. They rented and maintained a temporary Temple for practice and
religious functions and provided support for newly arrived
Vietnamese, including financial aid within the constraints of the
Society.
They completed the Pagoda, Phap-Bao Centre in
Bonnyrig, NSW which was officially opened by the Honourable F. J.
Walker Q.C., M.P., Minister for Youth and Community Services &
Minister for Housing, and the Most Venerable Thich Phuoc Hue,
President of the Vietnamese Buddhist Federation of Australia.
The
building of this pagoda cost $300,000 in the first stage of a 3 stage
building project due for completion in 1989.
On 5 April 1985,
the first Biannual General Meeting of The Vietnamese Buddhist
Federation of Australia and New Zealand was held over four days in
Melbourne. The General Meeting was opened by the Most Venerable Thich
Phuoc Hue and addressed by a Representative of the Commonwealth
Minister of Ethnic Affairs.
It is a remarkable achievement for
the Vietnamese Buddhists in Australia to have established well
organised Buddhist Associations and Societies, initially at a State
level, and now, Nationally, within ten years of the majority of
Vietnam refugees first entering this country.
Since April
1975, of the sixty thousand Vietnamese people arriving in Australia,
twenty-five thousand have settled in New South Wales and some
seventy-eight percent of these have a Buddhist religious
background.
In Victoria twenty-eight thousand Indo-Chinese
refugees have settled in Melbourne. About ten thousand are Vietnamese
and twelve thousand ethnic Chinese from Vietnam.
In an
article from "The Age" newspaper in Melbourne 18 May 1985
p.6 titled "VIETNAMESE WORK HARD AT MAKING AUSTRALIA HOME",
a survey by The Victorian Ethnic Affairs Commission was quoted as
follows;
"Considering the short time they have been
living in Australia, the Indo-Chinese were adapting particularly
well. They were joining unions and taking up Australian citizenship
and they had established informal networks to receive information
about Australian society and where they could obtain help".
The
literature of Vietnam is as distinctive as the prevalent indigenous
Buddhist tradition which is a remarkably successful and is an
influential amalgam of Chan (Zen) and Ching - Tu (Jodo) known locally
as Thien or Tinh - Do respectively.
In the history of
Vietnamese Buddhism, the practice of Thien (Mahayana) is a profound
and powerful inner life, long and persistent training and a strong,
firm will.
For Thien the technique of right eating and
drinking, of right breathing and right meditation are far more vital
than mere beliefs. Thien is an attitude or method for arriving at
knowledge and action.
The growth of Theravada Buddhism took
place very late in the countries history, when it took root in
the Southern part of Vietnam.
The Vietnamese in Australia are
in the Mahayana tradition and they reflect this unique blend of Zen
and Pure Land practice.
The Vietnamese persons became very
proficient at integrating into a foreign community and have
government officials attend their ceremonies.
A typical
celebration was held on the 2529th Vesakha Day, Sunday, 2 June, 1985,
by the Vietnamese Buddhist Association of Victoria.
The
function was held in the main hall at the Footscray College of TAFE
and there were over seven-hundred and fifty people in attendance.
Venerable Thich Phuoc Nhon, President of the Vietnamese
Buddhist Association of Victoria, opened the Ceremony.
Guest
speakers included Mr. Ross Smith M.P, a Liberal member who was
representing Hon. G.J.Kennett of the Victorian Legislative Assembly,
Leader of the Liberal Party, Victorian State Opposition, Mrs
Evelyn Mary De Bonnaire,
Mayor of Footscray City Council and
Mr John Hughes, President of the Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey)
Ltd.
The following extracts are from the opening speech for
the 2529th Vesakha Day given by Venerable Thich Phuoc Nhon:
In
the old times, our precedent Masters had walked thousands of miles
painfully to found-and-preserve the Noble Teachings of Salvation for
us to inherit today.
Thus, now, we cannot afford to
negligently let all our Masters' tremendous efforts be washed away in
the ocean, but right now we have to cultivate these Noble Teachings
by purifying our own inner motives and establishing our own right
virtues for they are essential belongings which we shall bring with
us in the journey to the "Perfect Land" after leaving our
bodies in this perplexed life.
Therefore, above all, whatever
we have intended to do now is also to pay tribute to our Grand
Masters. The Australian Government, particularly the State Government
of Victoria, is the great helper to our Buddhists.
Therefore,
let us carry out the Virtues of Compassion and Benevolence in this
new society, and let us harmoniously live with other ethnic
communities in every cultural and sociological aspect in an attempt
to build our second homeland as a bright nation under the light of
Lord Buddha's Compassion.
On behalf of the Vietnamese
Buddhist Association of Victoria, I sincerely thank all levels of the
Australian Government, and Australians at large, the Vietnamese
community's associations and organisations and all other friendly
religious groups for contributing their ideas and encouragement to us
in every aspect of our activities in order to bring benefits to our
Association.
Particularly, the presence of our Association
can contribute our tiny part to the common aims of this multicultural
nation.
The Ceremony also included the singing of the
Buddhist Anthem by The Buddhist Youth Society and Prayer and Chanting
which were led by the Venerable Thich Phuoc Nhon.
At the
completion of the Ceremony a Vietnamese dinner was served and the
final activity of the evening was a musical concert.
The
merits of this action bring solidarity and harmony to all Buddhist
Groups in Australia.
An article in The Vajra Dhatu Sun May
1985 Vol six No. 4 p.1. illustrates a similar level of organisation
and development of Vietnamese Buddhist groups in the United States of
America.
"It has been nearly 10 years since the majority
of Vietnamese refugees entered the United States of America and in
that time the Unified Buddhist Churches of Vietnam have succeeded in
establishing themselves wherever Vietnamese refugees have settled.
The main Temple is in Los Angeles, but there are Vietnamese Temples
in San Francisco, Denver and Golden Orange County, Colorado and Texas
.
Having accomplished the first phase of refugee work and
resettlement, the Vietnamese Buddhists are now looking to the future.
How, they are asking, can they insure the continuity of their
tradition in their new country, and how can they pass on their
tradition to children who have grown up or increasingly been born in
America?"
The last survey in Vietnam prior to 1975,
indicated that some eighty percent of the population identified
themselves as adherents of Buddhism in some form.
Of the
Vietnamese Buddhists who have settled in Australia the popular form
of Mahayana Buddhism briefly outlined above is their traditional
religious background and the development of new Centres of Vietnamese
Buddhism in Australia will reflect this unique blend of Zen and Pure
- Land sects.
From the manner and effectiveness displayed by
the rapid establishment of Vietnamese Buddhist associations in the
West, the foundations have been laid for the future growth of strong
schools of the Vietnamese form of Buddhist practice.
This
great tradition can be introduced and shared through mutual co-
operation between the Vietnamese people and the societies in which
they have recently settled.
The next year (1986) the
Collingwood Town Hall became a makeshift temple as more than 1000
Vietnamese celebrated the 2530th birthday of Buddha.
The
Ethnic Affairs Minister, Mr Spyker, dressed in a blue suit, and other
state and Federal MP's joined colorfully-robed Monks and Nuns in
offering incense to Buddha and praying for world peace.
They
later released pigeons into the wilds of Collingwood to symbolise the
deliverance and rebirth of followers of Buddhism.
A Buddhist
monk of 50 years, Thich Phuoc Hue, led the chanting before an altar
laden with gifts of fruit, flowers and a three-tiered birthday cake.
Thich Phuoc Hue, president of the Vietnamese Buddhist
Association of Victoria, said peace was the central theme of Buddha's
teachings. He asked the gathering to pray for their countrymen and
women still in Vietnam.
On 10 May 1987, the Sunday prior to
Versak, the Vietnamese Buddhist Association of Victoria (Hoi Phat
Giao Viet Nam Tai Victoria) celebrated this occasion in the
Collingwood Town Hall, Melbourne, Victoria, with chanting and prayers
by the Vietnamese Monks.
After the prayer and chanting, speeches
were made by various visiting dignitaries including :
Mr Peter
Spyker, Victorian Government Minister for Ethnic Affairs,
Mr
Roger Pescott, Victorian Opposition Shadow Minister for Ethnic
Affairs, Reverend Thich Tam Phuong, Director of Quang Minh Temple,
Sunshine, Victoria and on behalf of the Most Ven. Thich Phuoc Hue,
President of Indo-Chinese Refugees, Venerable Thich Huyen Ton, Vice-
President of the Vietnamese Buddhist Federation of Australia and New
Zealand and Mr John Hughes, President of the Buddhist Discussion
Centre (Upwey) Ltd.
Following the delivery of speeches, many
pigeons were released from cages by Monks and lay people to symbolise
liberation of the mind. Lunch was then offered by the Vietnamese
Community to all who were present at the Town Hall.
Each year
the Vietnamese Buddhist Association of Victoria arrange public
celebrations at Versak and Vulan ( a ceremony for ancestors). Some
examples are given to illustrate the maturing nature of the
Vietnamese organisations within the Society.
On Sunday, the
2nd of June, 1991, The Vietnamese Buddhist Association of Victoria
and The Vietnamese Buddhist Association of South East Melbourne,
celebrated Vesak at the Collingwood Town Hall, Collingwood, Victoria.
The Ceremony was opened by The Most Venerable Thich Phuoc
Hue, Chairman of the Vietnamese United Buddhist Congregation of
Australia and New Zealand, and President of the Vietnamese Buddhist
Association of Victoria.
Distinguished Guests who attended the
Ceremony included Federal Parliamentary Member Dr. A. Theophanous,
who represented The Federal Minister for the Department of
Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs, the Hon. Mr. Gerry
Hand. Also in attendance were Mr. D. Dollis, State Member for
Richmond and the Mayor of the City of Collingwood, His Worship Cr.
Bill Hampson.
Representatives of Melbourne Buddhist
organisations included the President of The Buddhist Discussion
Centre (Upwey) Ltd. Mr. Frank Carter B.Ec. and Elizabeth Bell from
the Buddhist Society of Victoria.
The Most Venerable Thich
Phuoc Hue in his opening address said Buddhists should celebrate
Vesak in order to "strengthen their own confidence in Buddha.
The Buddha taught us that with Compassion, Wisdom and courage we can
eliminate hate, greed and ignorance."
The speech read by
Dr. A. Theophanous on behalf of the Honourable Gerry Hand noted that
Buddhism is the fasted growing and currently the third largest
religion in Australia. Whilst much of the Buddhist Community in
Australia was of ethnic origin, Mr. Hand believed the value of
Buddhist Teachings to the Australian Community was reflected by a
large growth in Australian born Buddhists.
This day also
celebrated the l0th Anniversary of The Vietnamese Buddhist
Association of Australia. The Most Venerable Thich Phuoc Hue said the
Vietnamese Buddhist Community was a force for harmony and
understanding in the Australian Community.
The Ceremony
concluded with eleven Vietnamese Buddhist Monks and Nuns chanting
"The Great Compassion Dharane" (TRI NIEM CHU DAI BI),
Recollection, Praise, and Devotion to Buddha at Vesak (BAI KINH KHANH
DAN), the Four Great Bodhisattva Vows (PHAT NGUYEN), the Triple Gem
Refuge (TU QUY VA DANH LE) and the Dedication of Merits (HOI HUONG).
A large number of pigeons were released from the courtyard next to
the hall.
On 21 September 1991, the Vietnamese Buddhist
Congregation of Victoria, 177 Morris Street, Sunshine, Victoria,
3020, Telephone: (03) 312 5729, held the laying of the foundation
stone ceremony for their new Buddhist Community Centre at Burke
Street, Braybrook, Victoria.
The aims and objectives of the
Buddhist Community Centre would be a concrete translation of the
following points: co-existence - religious, cultural, social - in a
multicultural society; a vehicle in the practice of self improvement
by Compassion, Wisdom and Courage; a shelter for people in need (the
elderly, the young and the disadvantaged); a theme of inter-racial
and cultural harmony; a place to promote and work for world peace; a
place to foster and develop Buddha's Noble Teachings.
The
Centre aims at: providing the community with a wide range of
cultural, social and religious services and activities; being a
suitable site for Buddhist ceremonies, blessings and festivals; being
a residence for Buddhist Monks and Nuns; being a place of retreat and
practice of Meditation; being a meeting place for friendship and
harmony; attracting the tourists and visitors to Sunshine and Western
Suburbs of Victoria.
The opening speech was made by the
President of The Vietnamese United Buddhist Congregation of Australia
and New Zealand, The Buddhist Federation of Australia, The Most
Venerable Thich Phuoc Hue.
Distinguished Guests present at
the ceremony included: The Honourable Ralph Willis, M.P., Minister
for Finance, representing the Prime Minister, Mr. Bob Hawke; The
Honourable Senator Jim Short, Shadow Minister for Finance
representing the Federal Opposition Leader, Dr. J. Hewson; The
Honourable Ian Baker, M.P., Minister for Agriculture, representing
the Victoria Premier, Ms Joan Kirner; The Honourable Robert Clark,
M.P., representing the Victoria Opposition Leader, Mr. Jeff Kennett;
The Honourable Members of Parliament; The Mayor of Sunshine, Cr
Philip Nelson; The President of the Vietnamese Community of Victoria.
The President and Members of Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd.
attended the ceremony.
On Sunday 19th October 1997 the Grand
Opening Ceremony of Quang Duc Buddhist Monastery and Quang Duc
Welfare Centre was held. The Centre is located in an old school
building at 85-105 Linch Rd, Fawkner, Victoria.
About 50
members of the Sangha attended this auspicious occasion, including
some who had travelled from interstate and overseas.
The day
began with the welcoming of the Sangha and guests, followed by a
Dhamma talk by the Most Venerable Thich Ho Giac, the Patriarch of the
Theravada Buddhist Church of Vietnam.
The Most Venerable
Patriarch was led into the main Altar room in a procession which
included Members of the Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd. Julie
O'Donnell and Paula Burling who carried evergreen trees, a symbol of
long life and prosperity.
The opening ceremony began with a
procession of all members of the Sangha into the main hall, led by
Samaneras and lay persons. Members of the Buddhist Discussion Centre
(Upwey) Ltd. Paula Burling, Jocelyn Hughes, Julie O'Donnell and Anita
Svensson carried flowers in the procession to offer to Buddha on the
altar, and wore traditional grey robes kindly given to them by the
Quang Duc Temple.
The ceremony in the hall included many speeches
and blessings and concluded with offerings and chanting by the
Sangha.
Those giving speeches included: Venerable Thich Tam
Phuong, Abbot, Quang Duc Buddhist Temple ;
Most Venerable Thich
Phuoc-Hue, President of the United Vietnamese Buddhist Congregation
of Australia and New Zealand, Abbot of Phuoc Hue Temple, NSW.
Most
Venerable Thich Ho Giac, Chair UBCV Ecclesiastical Council in Exile,
Patriarch of the Theravada Buddhist Church of Vietnam, Patriarch of
the UBCV of the USA.
John D. Hughes, Founder Buddhist
Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd. gave the following speech :
Most
Venerable Patriarch, Venerable Monks and Nuns, Hounourable Guests,
Distinguished guests, elders, ladies and gentleman, boys and girls, I
address you in my capacity as a Member of a Regional Centre of the
World Fellowship of Buddhists.
I wish you to be well and happy
in this and future lives.
A Temples opening is a
superior cause for future well being.
In Buddhas day, a
religious Temple was referred to by an Indian word which sounds like
Vihar.
As an Australian who established a Vihar and allowed my
Vietnamese brothers and sisters use of it before they had anything,
it has been wonderful to see your congregation and others build many
Vihars.
About 500 Buddhist Vihar, catering for many
nationalities have opened in this country over the last two
decades.
Not surprisingly, they included paid Social Workers
who placed emphasis on using Vihars to deliver many activities having
welfare aspects for a migrant population.
This script is cost
effective because unbundling elements of a migrant government
policies through translation services in the Vihar, near the end
users of the goods and services on offer makes sense.
As
persons became self-sufficient and their descendants are born as
native Australians, they are coming to realise that servicing the
social needs of the laity are not really strong roles for the Monk or
Nun.
As I understand it, the strong role or thesis of the new
Vihar is that it will leave the bulk of valuable prime social model
work to the care of its great numbers of sister Vihar.
With
referrals to networks of sister Vihar delivering increased help to
persons who need social support: the new Vihar can show young and not
so young persons the special radiance found within a triple dedicated
Vihar.
Since ancient times, Vihar were dedicated to the Triple
Gem - The Buddha, The Dhamma and The Sangha.
On the occasion
of the dedication of the Venuvan Vihar by the King Bimbisara, Buddha
said :
Viharadanassa pananisainsam ko nama vattum puriso
samattho annatra Buddha pica lokanatha yutto mukkhanam nahutena
capi.
This translates as : None is able to
describe the merit of donating a Vihar except the Buddha, the Lord of
the universe, if some thousands of learneds describe that there will
be no end.
With this type of merit, the signs indicate
that in this Vihar Monks and Nuns time will be freed from
social work chores.
The Venerables and Lay person need to find
the dignified noiseless time vital for the practice of the Teachings
of Lord Buddha.
For strong Dhamma practice, much quiet time is
needed (one might say at industrial strength).
May this new
Vihar become a place where quiet time is found.
Thank you very
much.
May Monks and Nuns find the noiseless time they are
looking for to practice their freedom from hate, greed and
ignorance.
This paper has not the space to celebrate the
contribution to Buddha Dhamma in Australia by the many Venerable
Monks and Nuns from China, Thailand, Korea, Sri Lanka, Cambodia,
Taiwan, Myanmar (Burma) and Tibet.
The reportage of the Dalia
Lamas 4th visit to Australia was covered at various levels.
He did not meet senior politicians including the Honourable
Mr John Howard, Prime Minister of Australia and the Honorable Simon
Crean, the Leader of the Opposition or State Government officials. Mr
Howard visited China during part of the Dalia Lamas visit.
One
of the most notable and historical events in Buddha Dhamma Australian
history, was the 20th World Fellowship of Buddhists General
Conference held at Nan Tien Temple, Woollongong, NSW, Australia.
The
20th World Fellowship of Buddhists General Conference and
The
11th World Fellowship of Buddhists Youth General Conference was held
at NAN TIEN TEMPLE, Berkeley NSW 2506, AUSTRALIA , 29 OCTOBER - 2
NOVEMBER 1998 (2542 B.E.)
On the eve of the new millennium,
Buddhists of the World are faced with ever increasing technological,
social and economic challenges.
It was apt that the theme of
the 20th World Fellowship of Buddhists and 11th World Fellowship of
Buddhists Youth General Conference was Buddhism and Challenges
in the 21st Century.
Expressions of heartfelt thanks
were made to the Most Venerable Master Hsing Yun & Reverand Men
Chien, Abbess of the Temple, for hosting this Conference in the
beautiful Nan Tien Temple.
Much appreciation and gratitude
was expressed to the Buddha Light International Association in
Sydney, The Vietnamese Buddhist Congregation of Australia and New
Zealand, The Buddhist Council of NSW, Inc. and the Australian
Buddhist Federation for their assistance in supporting the
conference.
This Conference marked a second historic occasion
when the Draft Charter of the World Buddhist University was adopted
unanimously. As part of the Charter, the International Academy of
Buddhism of the Hsi Lai University, Los Angeles County, California,
U.S.A. was approved as an academic research and training centre and
The Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey) Limited was approved as a
spiritual training centre.
Sincere congratulations were given
to H.E. Phan Wannamethee, the new President of the World Fellowship
of Buddhists, and Mr Sommai Kornsakoo, the new President of the World
Fellowship of Buddhist Youth.
The author extended his warm
congratulations to all newly elected Vice-presidents and expressed
his gratitude in being elected as one of the first Australian
Vice-presidents of the World Fellowship of Buddhists for Australia,
New Zealand and Oceania.
The complete transplant and survival
of the pure Buddha Dhamma practices of the Vietnamese within
Australia could well be seen as one of the great success stories of
the 20 Th. century in Australia.
They have inspired others to
build up the mind power of this country. Their blessings to this
country are so great they cannot be measured by ordinary
numbers.
The author wishes to thank all Monks and Nuns for
their patience in allowing him to photograph and record their
practices.
The content of the database formed will gradually
be placed on our web sites to provide core research material for
future historians.
May the Buddha Dhamma continue to flourish
on this Australian continent.
May you be well and
happy.
Thank you very much.
References
Confirm
Systems Pty. Ltd. Essential Services Training Workshop, Course
Notes,
The resources of the Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey)
Ltd. Library archives contain many private documents of great
historical importance. These papers and photographs are contained in
the John D. Hughes Collection
The John D. Hughes Collection
provides a heritage multilingual reference library for Buddha Dhamma
Scholars and Practitioners. The library is listed on the Australian
Libraries Gateway at www.nla.gov.au/libraries
The collection
includes :
Rare and valuable texts including the complete Buddhist
Canon
a catalogue that contains over 4000 entries on texts in our
library
Commentaries by renowned Teachers.
Books on
Guidance in English and various foreign languages
Journals
and newsletters.
Audio tape & video tape recordings of
Teachings
Buddhist artifacts, ritual objects, from all traditions
and original works of Calligraphy
Video recordings of Monks and
Nuns
Dhamma data warehouse including electronically formatted
texts and materials
Audio CD versions of over 200 of our Buddhist
Hour radio broadcasts
Chan academy multimedia learning
CD-ROM's
Photographs taken locally and internationally
Address:
Buddhist Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd. A.C.N. 005 701 806
A.B.N.
42 611 496 488., 33 Brooking Street, Upwey, Victoria 3158,
Australia.
Telephone : (+61) (03) 9754 3334
Facsimile : (+61)
(03) 9754 3334
Email : wbu@bdcu.org.au
Websites :
www.bdcu.org.au
www.bdcublessings.net.au
www.bddronline.net.au
www.bsbonline.com.au
www.skybusiness.com/j.d.hughes
www.companyontheweb.com/buddhamap
www.companyontheweb.com/buddhatext
www.buyresolved.com.au
20
May 2002
This script was written and edited by John D. Hughes
Dip. App. Chem T.T.T.C. GDAIE, Anita Hughes R.N.
Div1.
References
Sze, Mai-mai. (Editor) The Mustard
Seed Garden Manual of Painting. Princeton University Press. United
Kingdom 1978.
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