Migrant Buddhists and Korean"multiculturalism"-a brief survey of the issues surrounding support for south Korea’s immigrant Buddhist communities

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Abstract

The three largest Korean religious organizations have worked to provide material, educational, medical, and social support to the various growing migrant communities. Among them, the Catholic community has been the most organized, sustained, and effective in its support of migrants by systematically providing for the legal, material, educational, and medical needs of various immigrant communities while advocating for their rights. Although lacking the centralized authority and organization of the Catholics, since the 1990s, Korea’s Protestants have also been active in supporting their country’s growing immigrant communities, which Evangelical churches also view as fertile grounds for proselytizing. The Korean Buddhist community, in comparison, has been slower to engage with Korea’s immigrants and has provided considerably fewer support services. In 2008, the Jogye Order organized the Maha Association for Supporting Immigrants to coordinate individual and localized Buddhist migrant support services at a national level. This article examines the Buddhist reactions to the increase in South Korean immigration over recent decades, with a focus on immigrant-support efforts supported by the Jogye Order for migrant Buddhist communities.

Original languageEnglish
Article number628
Pages (from-to)1-11
Number of pages11
JournalReligions
Volume11
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2020

Keywords

  • Immigrant Buddhist communities
  • Korea’s protestants
  • Multiculturalism
  • The Catholic community
  • The Jogye Order
  • The Maha Association

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