Buddhism in Austria

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

People's Republic of China and Vietnam
), while a considerable number of them are foreign nationals.

As in most European countries, different branches and schools of Buddhism are represented by groups of varying sizes.

Vienna Central Cemetery
.

Buddhism was officially recognized under Austrian law in 1983.[1] Russia is the only other European country to recognize Buddhism formally as "native" to its own soil, giving it official status, along with Orthodox Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.

History

Early years

By the late 19th century, due to the influence of Arthur Schopenhauer and Richard Wagner, artists and intellectuals in Vienna had started to take an interest in Buddhism. Karl Eugen Neumann (1865–1915), who had met the composer Wagner in his father's house, took great interest in what he had heard about Buddhism. In 1884 he decided to become a Buddhist and to study the original languages to be able "to see for himself". He translated large parts of the Pali Canon into German before dying in Vienna at the age of 50.[2]

In 1913 in

Java, Arthur Fitz, a man from Graz, became the first recorded Austrian to be ordained as a Buddhist monk
, taking the name Bhikkhu Sono.

1923 saw the foundation of a "Buddhist Society" in Vienna; and Austrians were among the participants at the 2nd International Buddhist Congress in Paris in 1937. The political situation in Austria — an alliance between the Fascist regime and the Catholic Church from 1933 to 1938 followed by Hitler's conquest of Austria and the Second World War — was highly unfavourable to the development of Austrian Buddhism.

Since World War II

The Peace Pagoda, a stupa in Vienna, Austria.

In 1949 the "Buddhist Society of Vienna" was founded, and interest in Buddhism started to flourish again. Due to personalities like Fritz Hungerleider,

dharma
students.

In 1979, Genro Koudela, who was ordained as a Zen priest in California by Joshu Sasaki, returned to Vienna, his city of origin, and established the "Bodhidharma Zendo" there. The new Buddhist Centre at Fleischmarkt, in the very centre of Vienna, became the home for Zen, Kagyu and Theravada groups.

Since 1981 there is a branch of the

Lama Anagarika Govinda.[4]

Buddhism recognized

Zentralfriedhof

Official recognition by the government in early 1983 ushered in a new era of Austrian Buddhism. A widely visible "Peace Stupa" was opened on the banks of the river

Benedictine monk, founded a retreat centre high up in the Salzburg alpine region. The first centre in the south of the country, a retreat centre in the Burmese Theravada
tradition, was established in the early 1990s.

In 1993, Austria hosted an annual general meeting of the European Buddhist Union, which drew participants from a dozen European countries. A series of visits to the city of Graz by the Dalai Lama in 1995, 1998 (for the consecration of a large stupa), and in 2002 (to speak on "Kalachakra for World Peace") were a strong encouragement for Buddhists in Austria.

Buddhist religious instruction at Austrian schools

Official recognition also opened the doors for Buddhist religious education at

Buddhadharma
on a regular basis as part of their syllabus. Twelve years after the project was started in the cities of Vienna, Graz and Salzburg, Buddhist religious education is being made available to school children of all age groups (6 to 19) at different types of schools in all of nine federal provinces of the Republic. A Teachers’ Training Academy was founded in 2001 to offer in-service teacher training for the teachers concerned.

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Buddhism in Austria in Austria-Forum (in German) (at AEIOU)
  2. )
  3. Starveling
    .
  4. ^ "Arya Maitreya Mandala in Austria". Archived from the original on 2022-12-14. Retrieved 2023-01-14.

External links

Most links are in German only.

Vienna

Lower Austria

Upper Austria

Salzburg

Tirol

Vorarlberg

Carinthia

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Wien