Different beliefs, shared humanity: why so many Australians celebrate diverse religious festivals
Maureen Doonan tries to participate in as many faith and cultural celebrations as she can. âItâs better that we understand,â the 87-year-old says. Doonan is a fierce refugee advocate and Order of Australia recipient who belongs to the Uniting Church in her home town of Ballarat in regional Victoria. Also a member of the Ballarat Interfaith Network, she says itâs important âto sort out how much is the sameâ across faith and religious practices.
âI usually make an effort to go to the mosque when itâs open to the public and to Sikh celebrations as well as Aboriginal dawn services [on 26 January],â she says.
âThe way we worship is different, but I believe itâs the same God. I donât care what you call Him. Itâs just the way we understand Him.â
Doonan is part of a growing trend of individuals participating in activities and celebrations outside their own faith or culture. More than one million people visited the Ramadan night markets in Sydneyâs Lakemba this year, with its explicit invitation to those outside the Muslim community.
Michelle Philips is the president of the Chinese Australian Cultural Society Ballarat. Her family has been involved in the local Chinese community since the 1990s.
âMy husband became good friends with a Ballarat Chinese restaurant owner, Jimmy Louey, more than 55 years ago,â Philips says. âWhen we married I also became good friends with the family and our children naturally followed.â
For years, the Philips family has participated in Chinese celebrations including lunar new year, mid-autumn festival, and the Dragon Boat festival. Their children also became members of the lion dancing team, participating in shop blessings, parades and tourism events.
âThe major focus of these events is around the bond of family, a time to come together,â Philips says. âThis is a key value within our lives and resonates strongly with our family.
âI am a passionate advocate for understanding and education as the greatest key to enable people from all backgrounds to come together and work collectively for the greater good. A little time taken to step out of your comfort zone, try new things, learn why people think and act in the manner they do by becoming a student of their history, culture, language and religious beliefs, is rewarded many times over.â
Chinese Australian Cultural Society Ballarat vice-president Charles Zhang says the celebrations promote family values and community cohesion. âThese are principles we share as humanity and we all cherish. We want to maintain it as strong as possible,â he says.
Josh and Bec Gatens have been participating in the BahĂĄâĂ communityâs moral educational activities with their two daughters for about two years.
Bec says itâs important for their girls âto be free to choose their faithâ.
âI believe it should be a personal belief not something that they are told to do because their parents follow something,â she says.
âThe messages that are being taught to the kids are valuable, [they are] about caring, kindness, love and inclusiveness.â
Ballaratâs Paige Duggan has had a similar experience. The local musician appreciates the âtrue connectionâ felt through the communityâs activities, even though she isnât a BahĂĄâĂ.
âA lot of the participants are BahĂĄâĂâs and there are other people who are also not, but we all see the benefit to the activities on offer,â she says.
Australian BahĂĄâĂ community spokesperson Awa Momtazian says there are more than 20,000 BahĂĄâĂs registered in Australia, but many thousands more participating in holy observances and various neighbourhood or community initiatives.
âNeighbourlinessâ over ideology
David MacPhail grew up in a staunch Catholic community, but as he grew older he âmoved from Catholicism to Christianity to spiritualityâ.
âNow, Iâm quite sure God does not exist,â the 78-year-old says.
MacPhail says his belief in a specific religion has gone, but his âfaith has strengthenedâ. Having spent many years in India among people of different cultures and faiths, he now works closely with Ballaratâs Afghan community, and attends various interfaith events when he can.
âI have found that kindness and goodness is inextricably intertwined with all sorts of religions,â he says.
âTo love even our enemies is the most inspiring, frightening phrase that holds the answer to humanityâs progress and, possibly, survival.â
MacPhail belongs to the largest cohort of people in Ballarat, according to the 2021 census: those with secular beliefs, other spiritual beliefs and no religious affiliation.
But Faith Communities Council of Victoria multi faith officer Sandy Kouroupidis says there is a growing tendency for people who do not formally identify with a religion to attend religious festivals and community observances.
âIn Victoria, we are seeing increasing curiosity about cultural and spiritual traditions, particularly during major festivals such as Ramadan iftars, Diwali celebrations and Passover meals,â he says.
âMany of these events are now intentionally welcoming to the broader public. Faith communities themselves are inviting neighbours, colleagues and local leaders to participate as a gesture of hospitality and relationship-building.â
Kouroupidis says cross-participation can strengthen social cohesion, particularly in regional and rural communities where relationships are more personal and visible.
âIn many regional settings, interfaith participation is less about ideology and more about neighbourliness. That kind of lived solidarity can be deeply powerful,â he says.
âOf course, itâs important that participation is invited and respectful, not appropriative or tokenistic. But when approached with humility, it contributes to vibrant, confident and inclusive communities.â
Doonan says through her advocacy work, and whether sheâs visiting the mosque, synagogue or rallying in the local streets, there is one message she strives to promote.
âWe all belong to the human race.â
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