The Muslim Community Center on New Hampshire Avenue in Silver Spring, Maryland.
In 1991, the Pluralism Project at Harvard set out to study multireligious
America, beginning right here in Boston. Our research seminar visited the
mosque in Quincy built in the shadow of the great cranes of the shipyards
by Lebanese immigrants who came early in the century, and we found that
there were some 20 other mosques and Islamic centers that are part of the
Islamic Council of New England-in Dorchester, Wayland, Cambridge. We went
to the spectacular new Sri Lakshmi temple in Ashland, a temple designed
by Hindu ritual architects with tall towers decorated with the images of
the gods and consecrated with the waters of the Ganges mingled with the
waters of the Mississippi, the Colorado, and the Merrimack rivers. We visited
half a dozen other Hindu communities in Boston, and two Sikh gurdwaras in
Millis and Milford, and a Jain temple in Norwood, housed in a former Swedish
Lutheran church. We found a dozen Buddhist meditation centers, with their
respective Tibetan, Burmese, Korean, and Japanese lineages of instruction.
And we visited the temples of the Cambodian Buddhists in Lowell and Lynn,
the Vietnamese in Roslindale and Revere, the Chinese in Quincy and Lexington.
Eventually, we published World Religions in Boston, a documentary
guide to a city whose Asian population had doubled in 10 years, now a multireligious
city.
It was clear that what was true of Boston might well be true of many other
American cities. So the Pluralism Project sent a research team of students,
multiethnic and multireligious, to study "hometown" America, fanning
out across the United States every summer for three years. We were guided
by three kinds of questions. First, who is here now in the 1990s? How many
Hindu temples are there in Chicago? How many mosques in Oklahoma City? How
many Buddhist temples in Houston? Second, how are these traditions changing
as they take root in American soil? And third, how is America changing as
Americans of many religions begin to appropriate this new multireligious
reality and come to terms once again with our foundational commitment to
religious freedom and, consequently, religious pluralism?
Stupa containing relics of the Buddha, presented as a gift from Thailand to the Jodo Shinshu Buddhist Mission of North America in 1935. The stupa is built on the roof of the Buddhist Church of San Francisco on Pine Street.
We found many remarkable developments. For example, Buddhist communities
widely separated in Asia are now neighbors in Los Angeles, Seattle, and
Chicago-Vietnamese, Cambodian, Thai, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Tibetan
Buddhists. Here in America, these Buddhist communities are just beginning
to know one another and to meet the distinctive communities of "new
Buddhists"-Americans of all races who have come to Buddhism through
its meditation practices and its ethics. The Buddhist Sangha Council of
Southern California, the Buddhist Council of the Midwest, the Texas Buddhist
Association are evidence of the beginning of a new "ecumenical"
Buddhism. There are American Buddhist newspapers and magazines, feminist
Zen sitting groups, exemplary Buddhist AIDS hospice projects. Today Buddhism
is an American religion.
We visited communities that represent the entire spectrum of Islam in America:
African American communities, Muslim immigrants from Syria and Lebanon whose
forebears came in the early 1900s, and new immigrant Muslims from Africa
and South Asia. All of them are in the process of working out what it is
to be both Muslim and American. They gather in huge annual conventions in
Dayton or in Kansas City to discuss the Muslim family in America or the
American public schools. The Islamic Medical Association tackles ethical
issues in medical practice, while the Washington-based American Muslim Council
facilitates Islamic participation in the American political process.
The Hindu Sri Lakshmi temple in Ashland, Massachusetts.
We found that most of the new religious institutions are invisible. The
first generation of American mosques could be found in places like a former
watch factory in Queens, a U-Haul dealership in Pawtucket, Rhode Island,
a gymnasium in Oklahoma City, and a former mattress showroom in Northridge,
California. There were Hindu temples in a huge warehouse in Queens, a former
YMCA in New Jersey, or a former Methodist church in Minneapolis. Most of
the Vietnamese Buddhist temples of Denver, Houston, and Orange County were
in ranch-style homes. Because of the invisibility of these first-generation
religious institutions, many Americans, understandably, have remained quite
unaware of these new communities.
The past decades, however, have also seen the beginnings of a striking
new visible landscape. There are new mosques and Islamic centers in Manhattan
and Phoenix, rising from the cornfields outside Toledo and from the suburbs
of Chicago and Houston. There are multimillion-dollar Hindu temples, like
the Sri Venkateswara temple in Pittsburgh, the Bharatiya Temple in the northern
suburbs of Detroit, the spectacular Sri Meenakshi Temple south of Houston,
the Ganesha temple in Nashville, and dozens of others. The Buddhists have
made a striking architectural imprint, with, for example, the huge Hsi Lai
temple in Hacienda Heights, California, and the Jade Temple in Houston.
In the western Chicago suburb of Bartlett, the Jains have built a large
new temple. To the north in Palatine is a striking new hexagonal gurdwara
of the Sikhs.
There are some neighborhoods where all this is visible in short compass.
For example, driving out New Hampshire Avenue, one of the great spokes of
Washington, D.C., into Silver Spring, Maryland, just beyond the Beltway
there is a stretch of road a few miles long where one passes the new Cambodian
Buddhist temple with its graceful, sloping tiled roof, the Ukrainian Orthodox
Church, the Muslim Community Center with its new copper-domed mosque. Farther
along is the new Gujarati Hindu temple called Mangal Mandir. The many churches
along the way also reveal the new dimensions of America's Christian landscape:
Hispanic Pentecostal, Vietnamese Catholic, and Korean evangelical congregations
sharing facilities with more traditional English-speaking "mainline"
churches.