Buddhism bonanza: Celebrations across Australia as religion maintains its popularity

The 2016 census shows Australians are less religious than ever before, but one religion is maintaining its popularity, Buddhism. In this article, we look to activities of Buddhists in Australia along the Eastern Seaboard Coast.


 

The number of Australians who in the census reported having no religion increased from 13 per cent in 1991 to 30 per cent in 2016, while the number of Christians dropped from 74 per cent to 52 per cent. Between 1991 and 2016, Hinduism increased from 0.3 per cent to 1.9 per cent, Buddhism from 0.8 per cent to 2.4 per cent, and Islam from 0.9 per cent to 2.6 per cent.

However, some Buddhists believe their percentage could be higher because increasing numbers of Australians practise Buddhism without officially identifying with the label. Pairoj Brahma, a former Buddhist monk from Thailand, lives on a farm near Mullumbimby in northern New South Wales, where he teaches meditation to people who practise Buddhism but do not necessarily call themselves religious.

“Buddhism is growing rapidly in Australia because the core Buddhist teaching is somehow suitable to logical thinking and intellectual minds,” he said.

“It’s about cause and effect, not things coming from the air. It’s about seeing interconnectedness and how things are related to each other.”

 

 Pairoj Brahma teaches meditation based on Buddhist principles. (Photo: ABC North Coast, Samantha Turnbull)

Dharma Day brings Thais together

Buddhist monk Phramaha Weraphong Ritchumnong will host Dharma Day celebrations on Sunday in the rural community of Richmond Hill, near Lismore in northern New South Wales.

He said the Thai Buddhist community would come together to eat, chant and meditate, while marking the Buddha’s first sermon which related to the origins and aftermath of suffering.

“It’s an important day because it was the foundation of the core concept of the Buddha’s teaching, cause and effect,” he said. Phramaha said Buddhism had given him direction after his parents died when he was nine years old, but he believed westerners were attracted to the idea of peacefulness.

“Becoming a monk and having no attachment has been good luck for me because I had nothing,” he said. “When I studied deeper inside Buddhism I discovered it is very peaceful inside, and when you don’t hurt yourself you won’t hurt people around you.

 

 Phramaha Weraphong Ritchumnong is a Buddhist monk originally from Thailand. (Photo: ABC North Coast, Samantha Turnbull)

Refugees Celebrate Dalai Lama’s Birthday

In the Hunter Valley city of Newcastle, the small but growing Tibetan Buddhist community is celebrating the Dalai Lama’s 82nd birthday this weekend. Former monk Yeshi Sangpo, his wife Pema Tso, and their 17-year-old daughter Yangkyi Sangpo are Tibetan refugees who fled their homeland after Yeshi escaped from a detention centre, where he was detained by Chinese Police.

Yangkyi said this weekend’s celebrations helped to maintain Tibetans’ connection to their religion and culture. “It’s something that we’re really proud of,” she said. It’s not about individual prayers and stuff, it’s about how we treat other people, about how you control your mind.”

Yeshi and Pema work in aged care, while Yangki hopes to become a cardiologist. “You be nice to people and be compassionate to people and that’s what we strive to do every single day,” Yangki said.

“Being a Buddhist, something that we strive to do is to help any person. No matter who they are we tend to help them.”

 

 Yeshi Sangpo, Yangki Sangpo, and Pema Tso are among a small but growing Tibetan Buddhist community in the New South Wales regional city of Newcastle. (Photo: ABC Newcastle, Anthony Scully)

Celebrating the compassionate one

In the Illawarra region of New South Wales, Buddhists will hold a ceremony on Sunday to mark the enlightenment of Guanyin Bodhisattva. Reverend Maio You, director of the Nan Tien Temple at Wollongong, said Guanyin Bodhisattva was an icon said to be “the compassionate one”.

“Guan Yin is the enlightened being who hears the sounds or the cries of the people,” she said. “Without Guan Yin, Buddhists will not have their cries heard and their sufferings liberated. “It’s a significant day for Buddhists.”

 

 Reverend Maio You is the director of the Nan Tien Temple in Wollongong. (Photo: ABC Illawarra, Justin Huntsdale)

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