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Yen Feng
Multi-coloured Buddhists
August 24, 2009 Monday, 07:44 PM
Yen Feng says intra-faith religious harmony must be cultivated too.

FIRST, in gold; then red, and saffron, the monks sat in tight rows at the Wat Ananda Metyarama Buddhist Temple in Bukit Merah.

The colour of their robes represented each of the monks' Buddhist faiths respectively: East Asian Mahayana Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism, and South-east Asian Theravada Buddhism.

With their palms pressed together in prayer, the 30 holy men – though differently shaded – were a vision of uniform serenity.

The 300 devotees who followed them on Sunday morning to witness the temple’s inaugural National Day Celebrations were much less homogeneous.

Among the locals were Buddhists from Lao, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. A few were visitors, but most were temporary workers, or residents for whom Singapore was now home.

Throughout the day, pockets of conversation, in various tongues, were heard in the temple in the corner of Jalan Bukit Merah and Silat Road.

The incongruity of it all seemed to bother no one.

Many, like housewife Linda Chia, 46, saw little difference between herself, a Singaporean, and the other Buddhists who sat around her. In fact prior to praying at this Thai Buddhist temple, she had been a member of a Burmese Buddhist temple in Pasir Panjang.

"As Buddhists, we are all friends," she said, before adding that any suggestion to the contrary would be unthinkable. "We are all here to pray, to learn about the dharma. We are the same."

Mrs Chia's words would please Venerable Phraku Siphon Buddhikun, who put together the event, he admitted, belatedly.

Venerable Phraku, a Singaporean who is also a vice-president of the Thai Sangha Samatcha Council (Singapore), said he decided after the nation’s Aug 8 celebrations to use National Day as a way to reach out to the temple’s large South-east Asian Theravada Buddhist communities.

The majority of Singapore’s Buddhists are Mahayana Buddhists.

"We want more people of different minorities to come under one flag; for all to celebrate with us this meaningful event together."

He added: "It was a last-minute decision, that's why we are a few weeks late."

In fact the event could not be more timely.

Since May, several politicians have come out to stress the importance of inter-faith understanding among Singapore’s multiple religious groups in the current downturn.

During this month's National Day Rally, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong repeated the message, warning against the risks of intolerance and exclusiveness by religious groups amid rising religiosity.

The temple's celebrations on Sunday took the political rhetoric further.

By bringing together monks and devotees of the Singapore Buddhist Federation (SBF), the Tibetan Zurmang Kagyud Buddhist Centre and more than a dozen Theravada Thai Buddhist temples here, the event’s organizers hoped to create more dialogue and awareness among Singapore’s various Buddhist groups.

Intra-faith networking is paramount, said Venerable Guang Ping, assistant-secretary general of the SBF, as he sat with me during lunch after the event.

"Buddhism can be extremely diverse – culturally and doctrinally – depending on where you're from.

"We have different ways of thinking, different opinions, about how things should be. By spending time together, we can understand our differences better.

"With more understanding comes trust, and we will be less likely to regard others' motivations with suspicion."

Venerable Guang Ping makes a great point. Ideological and doctrinal tensions can exist within the same religion as much as between religions.

When it comes to the dangers of religiosity, it is worth reminding the nation’s religious groups, which are often drawn along racial lines, that intolerance is colour-blind.

Every Singaporean should take care to guard against it – no matter the colour of their skin, or the shade of their religious robes.



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Total comments: 6
Buddhism Facts
September 10, 2009 Thursday

In Buddhism and Friendship, Subhuti considers these questions by delving into teachings and stories from the Buddhist scriptures as well as by drawing on Western thinkers and personal experience of friendship on the Buddhist path.

comment 6810 | Offensive? Report this comment
weng
September 09, 2009 Wednesday

Regret to learnt Rev Guang Ping (a Nan Dai graduate) try to conbine the context of local polity and Buddhism, assuming that the author report as it is.

Before he ordained as a monk, I had known him a good public speaker and was not interested in polity.

Different colour monks come together is not a news .
It is an usual event in some temples in Singapore .




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Singapore Girl Next Door
August 27, 2009 Thursday

And please....they should stop rehashing the events 50 years ago several times over to craft policies that are just not compatible in today's Singapore.

They keep drawing parellels with the influx of foreigners here and further IMPLYING that locals hate them.

Again, the power of misdirection.

Locals merely question the policy of the over-the-top importation of foreigners, specifically the policy of importation over a preferred race nevermind that they don't have the right skills, and merely compete with locals over low-end jobs, depressing wages.

5% is fine.
10% is fine.

They are healthy.

But an overwhelming 25%!!!!!

There are things in work here that are just beyond economic need. And we all know too well what is that. Just to fearful to say it out loud.

......but to suppress the political debate, what we had now are distractions and false accusations about racial harmony among Singaporeans and foreigners.

No one dismisses it.....it just smokescreens the real problem.

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Singapore Girl Next Door
August 27, 2009 Thursday

Our leaders SHOULD....and I repeat SHOULD be talking about the real problem....not distractions....not misdirections.

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Singapore Girl Next Door
August 27, 2009 Thursday

Speaking of making a mountain out of a molehill.

LKY and LHL spoke in context, and drew their comments based on generalized observations in other countries - that in times of economic downturn, people start to turn to put their energies in other preoccupations like guns, race and religion.

But it just goes to show these two fail to see what's happening on the ground. While you can't make a perfectly harmonious relationships between people of different race and religion, Singapore and countries where they drew their conclusions are certainly not bedrocks of hate.

Yes yes yes - people often quote the AWARE saga. But that certainly does not speak on behalf of the ACTUAL religious' establishments in Singapore.

A narrown-minded person who claim to do things in the name of Christianity or Islam for example, does not make the Christians and Muslisms in Singapore narrow-minded.

But when the issue is stirred up in TV and in the press, oh, that's when $hit happens. The global association of Islam with terrorism is the fault of the media - when it should be educating the public, it chose to choose sensationalism.

Which is why all this latest stir about race and religion......IS JUST insulting every Singaporean's intelligence.

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