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Tuesday, May 26th, 2009 10:53 am
I keep having ideas for posts, deciding to wait until I expand them a bit, then forgetting. So I'm going to try just saying whatever pops into my head when I'm inspired. So:

While googling for something totally unrelated I came across Teachings of Some Christian Churches Drive Some Converts to Buddhism, which says that Australia has the largest Buddhist population of any western nation (interesting) and implies that ALL Australian Buddhists are white ex-christians (um?). This didn't sound right to me, so I looked up Buddhism in Australia on wikipedia, and it implies that ALL Australian Buddhists are asian immigrants or their descendants.

I assume the reality is somewhere in between(*) (white ex-christian Buddhists do definitely exist :)), but further towards the latter. Because afaict anglo-australian attitudes to religion tend to be fairly average for a western country, certainly places like Sweden or France seem even less Christian than we are but haven't turned as much to Buddhism.

Anyway, I found it interesting for the assumptions it brings to light: Lots of Australians are Buddhist. Australians are by default white and from a Christian background. Therefore, all Australian Buddhists must be white ex-Christians!

Also, I just want to say that I think the little "contemplative" rabbit mood-icon, with it's teeny carrot thoughts, is adorable. It brings me joy every time I make a thinky post :)

(*)And includes Australians from mixed cultural backgrounds, converts from non-Christian religions etc.
Friday, May 29th, 2009 01:07 am (UTC)
I'm pretty sure the majority of active Australian Buddhists are of Asian background, based on who I see hanging around the local temples, and who was participating in the Buddhist open house/festival thing we went to a few years ago (at South Bank, so very much "middle of Brisbane" sort of stuff). On the other hand, I don't know who writes "Buddhist" on their census forms.

I consider myself a fringe/philosophical Buddhist, because it's the closest existing thing to what I want religiously/philosophically, particularly including its ability to adapt and change (which is why I'm not that reluctant to call myself a Buddhist.)