lifestyle

Are you part-time religious?

 

 

 

 

Today I took our four children to the temple to celebrate Tamil New Year. This was one of our rare visits to a Hindu temple and as I sat praying that my three year old Tercero wouldn’t break, steal or set fire to anything, I wondered what we were doing there. In my teenage years my parents took us to temple every single Friday night. Whilst my friends were getting drunk down at El Rancho in Manuka (Canberrans, you know the place), I was sitting in a small, cold temple, stumbling through Tamil hymns that I didn’t really understand. I didn’t want to be with my friends getting drunk. I actually wanted to be at home watching Beverly Hills 90210. Mostly I just wanted a choice.

Twenty years later, I found myself at the temple again watching my children run around with their cousins, and I felt disconnected from the building and the deities that I don’t visit very often. I felt disconnected from the ethnic community that I no longer know very well. I felt like praying but was distracted by my children stealing the sweets that were meant for God. So I watched the congregation instead: marriages were negotiated and arranged; the HSC scores of young Sri Lankans were compared; rumours were started and scandals exaggerated; births were celebrated and divorces whispered about; Sri Lankan politics were debated and more marriages negotiated. People prayed, they connected with God and with each other. It was a normal day at the temple.

A friend of mine once described herself as a Christmas-Only Christian, and sitting there, I wondered if I might be the Hindu equivalent.  It occurred to me that in another twenty years time, none of us would be attending temple, especially if I couldn’t work out what we were doing there in the first place. As I sat there being dramatically disconsolate about the death of culture and community, my grandparents walked in. Tercero ran up to them and offered them a handful of sticky, sweaty sugar candy. They laughed and accepted his gift, recognising him for the little thief that he is. And suddenly I felt connected to something even if it wasn’t the building.

We pray, we believe and we live as Hindus. We just don’t attend much. The children and I are philosophically practising but increasingly culturally lapsed. I think I will continue to take them to temple a few times a year – not out of obligation, but more out of a sense of history and my connection with it rather than the temple or the rituals of worship themselves. I would like the children to learn where their religion and values started thousands of years ago and celebrate that with 100million Tamils around the world. And when they are old enough, they can choose what to do on a Friday night with those values. Dear God, please let them just be watching 90210.

Shankari Chandran is a recent returner to Australia after ten years in London. Formerly a social justice lawyer, Shankari chronicles the day-to-day of her family’s return on her blog here.

Are you a Christmas Christian, Hannukkah Jew and Eid Muslim etc? Do you worship only on special occasions or regularly?

Top Comments

teaganjai 12 years ago

i amcatholic, but couple of years ago i wished to be christan, there was this lady, she told me if i would like to come to church with her (i knew her children) and i said yes, i loved it, i loved praying, i loved everything that had to do with god, i became more friendly and talkable, my friends adored me, but they thought i was annoying because i talked about god 24/7, i talked about how god saved me and stuff, i loved talking about him because everytime i did i felt a warm glow inside of me that wanted to burst out of my chest, but know, i could only remember living like that, my mum told me that i shouldnt go to church because it scared her that the fact that they spoke in tounge, i dont blame her, but now i only live in the shadows, i dont even dare to talk about god no more, but i still have a little glow in me when i prey to god every night!!!


Anonymous 12 years ago

I don't think attending church automatically makes you religious and vice versa. I was raised a Catholic, went to a Catholic school. I believe in God, pray regularly and observe the Catholic holidays (Christmas, Easter, Lent) I however do not attend church.

I know many people who attend Church weekly, however they are in no way religious and honestly, they're terrible people. They might act religious one day a week, but don't observe compassion, care and many other qualities during the other six days. I think trying to be a "good" person throughout the week is far more important then attending church for an hour a week.

duckformation 12 years ago

Thank you anon, I could not agree more - how you behave and how you treat other people is one of the most important things i want to teach my children. For me, religion has given me some guidance on that, as have my parents, my friends and my own instincts. Thank you for reading and commenting.

Michael 12 years ago

Of course there can be part time religion. That is until its job is done through intimate prayer and seeking knowledge and a full time inner faith blooms. Then the religion is simply an externality with all of its joys and sorrows, goodness and wrongness.