From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Hinduism in Australia
none
none
| Field | Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| group | Australian Hindus | ||
| flag | File:Aum_Om_red.svg | flag_size = 50px | |
| image | File:Perth sivan koyil.jpg | ||
| image_caption | Perth Shiva Temple | ||
| pop | 684,002 (2021) | ||
| 2.7% of the Australian population | |||
| regions | |||
| langs | English, Hindi, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Punjabi, Gujarati, Bengali, Fiji Hindi, Nepali, Mauritian Creole, Indian languages |
| related-c =
|1911 | 414 |1933 | 212 |1986 | 21,500 |1991 | 43,580 |1996 | 67,270 |2001 | 95,473 |2006 | 148,123 |2011 | 275,534 |2016 | 440,300 |2021 | 684,002
Hinduism is the third-largest religion in Australia, with more than 684,002 adherents, accounting for 2.7% of the population as of the 2021 Census. Hinduism is the fastest growing religion in Australia mostly through immigration. Hinduism is also one of the most youthful religions in Australia, with 34% and 66% of Hindus being under the age of 14 and 34, respectively.
In the nineteenth century, the British authorities first brought Hindus from India to Australia to work on cotton and sugar plantations. Many remained as small businessmen, working as camel drivers, merchants and hawkers, selling goods between small rural communities. Today, many Hindus are well educated professionals in fields such as medicine, engineering, commerce and information technology, constituting a model minority. The Hindus in Australia are mostly of Indian origin; other origins include those from Sri Lanka, Fiji, Malaysia, Bali, Cham, Singapore, Mauritius, and Nepal.
History
The following dates briefly outline the arrival of Hinduism.
- As early as 300AD – Indonesian Hindu merchants make contact with Australian Aborigines.
- 1844 – P. Friell who had previously lived in India, brought 25 domestic workers from India to Sydney and these included a few women and children.
- 1850s – A Hindu Sindhi merchant, Shri Pammull, built a family opal trade in Melbourne that has prosperously continued with his third-to fourth-generation descendants.
- 1836 – The census showed a mere 277 Hindus in Victoria. The gold rush years attracted many Indians to Australia and across the borders to the gold mines in Victoria.
- 1890 – The census showed that 521 Hindus were living in New South Wales.
- 1907 – About 800 Indians lived in Australia; most lived in northern New South Wales and Queensland.
- 1911 – The census counted 3,698 Hindus in the entire country.
- 1921 – Less than 2200 Indians lived in Australia.
- 1971 – Swami Prabhupada arrives in Australia and founded first Hare Krishna centre in Sydney.
- 1977 – The first Hindu temple in Australia, the Sri Mandir Temple, was built. Established by three devotees; Dr Prem Shankar (from Ujhani, UP), Dr Padmanabn Shrindhar Prabhu and Dr Anand, who bought an old house in Auburn NSW and paid $12000.00 to convert it into a temple.
- 1981 – The census recorded 12,466 Hindus in Victoria and 12,256 in NSW from a total of 41,730 in the entire country.
- 1985 – A Hindu society, the Saiva Manram, was formed to build a temple for Lord Murukan. Since its inception, Lord Murukan has been called 'Sydney Murukan'. The Saiva Manram has worked hard for nearly ten years to build a temple for Lord Murukan.
- 1986 – According to the 1986 census, the number of Hindus in Australia surpasses 21,000.
- 1991 – According to the 1991 census, the number of Hindus in Australia surpasses 43,000.
- 1995 - Completion of the Brisbane Selva Vinayakar Kovil the consecration ceremony was held on 5 February 1995.
- 1996 – Hindus with their birthplace in India made up 31 per cent of all Hindus in Australia. But the census also showed there were 67,270 Hindus living in Australia.
- 2001 – According to the 2001 census, the number of Hindus in Australia surpasses 95,000.
- 2003 – Sri Karphaga Vinayakar Temple was formed to build a temple for Lord Ganesha/Ganapathi/Vinayakar. Since its inception, Lord Ganesh has been called 'Sydney Ganesh Temple'. "www.vinayakar.org.au"
- 2006 – According to the 2006 census, the number of Hindus in Australia surpasses 145,000.
- 2011 – According to the 2011 census, the number of Hindus in Australia surpasses 275,000.
- 2015 – Daniel Mookhey becomes the first Australian MP to be sworn into office by swearing his/her oath on the Bhagavad Gita.
- 2016 – 2016 Census data states that Hindus comprise almost 2% of the Australian population.
- 2018 – Kaushaliya Vaghela becomes the first Indian-born Hindu Member of Parliament in any Australian Parliament.
Demographics
Hindu population by year
| **Year** | **Percent** | **Increase** |
|---|---|---|
| **1986** | **0.14%** | **-** |
| **1991** | **0.25%** | **+0.11%** |
| **1996** | **0.38%** | **+0.13%** |
| **2001** | **0.51%** | **+0.13%** |
| **2006** | **0.75%** | **+0.24%** |
| **2011** | **1.28%** | **+0.53%** |
| **2016** | **1.90%** | **+0.62%** |
| **2021** | **2.7%** | **+0.80%** |
Hindus by state or territory

As per 2021 census, Hindus form 2.7% of Australia's total population. From 2011 to 2021, in 10 years Hindus have increased from 275,521 to 684,002, a growth of 408,462 or 148.2%, making Hinduism fastest growing religion of Australia.
| State or territory | 2021 census | % 2021 census | 2016 census | % 2016 census | 2011 census | % 2011 census | 2011–21 growth | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales | 273,780 | 3.4% | 181,402 | 2.4% | 119,843 | 1.7% | +153,937 128.4% | |
| Victoria | 214,058 | 3.3% | 134,939 | 2.3% | 83,102 | 1.6% | +130,956 157.6% | |
| Queensland | 69,520 | 1.3% | 45,961 | 1.0% | 28,609 | 0.7% | +40,911 143.0% | |
| Western Australia | 52,055 | 2.0% | 38,739 | 1.6% | 21,048 | 0.9% | +31,007 147.3% | |
| South Australia | 38,105 | 2.1% | 22,922 | 1.4% | 13,616 | 0.9% | +24,489 179.8% | |
| Capital Territory | 20,505 | 4.5% | 10,211 | 2.6% | 6,053 | 1.7% | +14,452 238.7% | |
| Northern Territory | 6,236 | 2.7% | 3,562 | 1.6% | 1,642 | 0.8% | +4,594 280.0% | |
| Tasmania | 9,724 | 1.7% | 2,554 | 0.5% | 1,608 | 0.3% | +8,116 504.7% |
The majority of Australian Hindus live along the Eastern Coast of Australia, mainly in the cities of Melbourne and Sydney. About 39% of Hindus lived in Greater Sydney, 29% in Greater Melbourne, and 8% each in Greater Brisbane and Greater Perth. The states and territories with the highest proportion of Hindus are the Australian Capital Territory (2.57%) and New South Wales (2.43%), whereas those with the lowest are Queensland (0.98%) and Tasmania (0.50%).
According to the 2006 Census, 44.16% of all Australians who were born in India were Hindu, so were 47.20% of those born in Fiji, 1.84% born in Indonesia, 3.42% from Malaysia, and 18.61% from Sri Lanka.
In Tasmania, Hinduism is practised mainly by the Lhotshampa community from Bhutan.
Hindu converts
Hinduism is also more popular among the Anglo-Australians. Many Caucasians in Australia also visit the Hindu temple at Carrum Downs (Shri Shiva Vishnu Temple) and learn Vedic Hindu scriptures in Tamil. The ISKCON Hindu community in Australia has 60,000 members - 70% of whom are Hindus from overseas, with the other 30% being Anglo Australians. The 2016 Census noted 415 Hindus belonging to the indigenous community of Australia (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people).
Languages
According to the 2021 Census, 13.0% of Australian Hindus speak English at home. English (88,832 or 13.0%) is the third most common language spoken by Australian Hindus, behind Hindi (155,242 or 22.7%) and Nepali (111,353 or 16.3%). The number of Australian Hindus speaking various languages in their home according to the 2006 census:
- Indian migrants speak Hindi, Tamil, Gujarati, Telugu, Punjabi, Malayalam, Marathi, Kannada etc.
- Tamil by immigrants from India, Sri lanka, Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritius
- Nepali by immigrants from Nepal, Bhutan and India.
- Bengali by immigrants from India and Bangladesh.
- Fijian Hindi and Fijian by migrants from Fiji
- Mauritian Creole by migrants from Mauritius
- Balinese and Indonesian by Indonesian migrants
- Other languages such as French, Malay, Sinhalese, Italian, Vietnamese, etc.
| TT | Y11 | Y16 | Y21 | Hindus as % of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| language speakers | |||||
| **Total** | **275,534** | **440,300** | **684,002** | **2.70%** | |
| Hindi | 81,892 | 119,284 | 155,242 | 78.8% | |
| Nepali | 21,766 | 50,629 | 111,353 | 83.7% | |
| English | 39,800 | 58,855 | 88,832 | 0.5% | |
| Gujarati | 29,250 | 45,884 | 71,976 | 88.5% | |
| Tamil | 36,940 | 53,766 | 69,807 | 73.2% | |
| Telugu | 16,717 | 30,723 | 52,583 | 90.2% | |
| Punjabi | 9,442 | 16,546 | 36,367 | 15.2% | |
| Marathi | 8,774 | 11,589 | 19,780 | 88.8% | |
| Malayalam | 5,938 | 11,687 | 17,772 | 22.6% | |
| Kannada | 5,383 | 8,783 | 13,419 | 91.2% | |
| Bengali | 5,685 | 8,481 | 11,810 | 16.8% | |
| Fijian Hindi | 572 | 1,257 | 2,407 | 50.5% | |
| Indonesian | 1,171 | 1,755 | 2,215 | 3.0% | |
| French | 1,180 | 1,401 | 1,425 | 2.0% | |
| Konkani | 609 | 845 | 1,370 | 37.6% | |
| Odia | 282 | 694 | 1,338 | 95.5% | |
| Sindhi | 277 | 521 | 892 | 33.9% | |
| Tulu | 348 | 543 | 845 | 93.2% | |
| Mauritian Creole | 514 | 883 | 813 | 22.5% | |
| South Asian nfd | 3,531 | 3,770 | 548 | 7.8% | |
| Malay | 435 | 591 | 487 | 2.3% | |
| Assamese | 165 | 302 | 479 | 82.3% | |
| Italian | 158 | 158 | 322 | 0.1% | |
| Fijian | 129 | 213 | 198 | 1.9% | |
| Balinese | 129 | 156 | 193 | 80.8% | |
| Vietnamese | 109 | 225 | 192 | 0.0% | |
| Sinhalese | 232 | 163 | 167 | 0.2% | |
| Indo-Aryan nfd | 1,988 | 633 | NA | NA |
Hindu temples in Australia
There are more than forty Hindu temples in Australia.
- Sri Karphaga Vinayakar Temple, Sydney
- Sydney Murugan Temple, Westmead
- Sai Mandir, Regents Park, Sydney
- Minto Shiva Temple, Sydney
- Sri Venkateswara Temple, Helensburgh, New South Wales
- Raghavendra Swamy Mutt, Toongabbie, New South Wales
- Sydney Durga Temple, Sydney
- Perth Shiva Temple, Perth
- Bala Murugan Temple, Perth
- Shree Swaminarayan Temple, Perth
- BAPS Temple, Melbourne
- Sri Venkata Krishna Brundavana, Melbourne
- Sri Venkata Krishna Vrundavana, Sydney
- Shiva Vishnu Temple, Melbourne
- Durga Temple, Melbourne
- Shirdi Sai Sansthan, Melbourne
- Sankatamochan Hanuman Mandir, Melbourne
- Melbourne Murugan Temple, Melbourne
- Sri Vakrathunda Vinayagar Temple, Melbourne
- Perth Ram Temple, Perth (biggest temple in the country)
Contemporary society
According to a national survey reported in 2019, Hindu Australians continues to experience the highest rates of discrimination even after being the model minority. The survey showed that a three quarters of respondents (75%) had experienced discrimination on public transport or on the street. The total fertility rate (TFR) among Hindus is also the second least (least being Buddhists) in Australia with 1.81, which is lower than Christians (2.11) and Muslims (3.03).
Overseas territories
Hinduism is practised by the small number of Malaysian Indians in Christmas Island. According to the 2021 census, Hinduism constitute 0.6% of its population.
Attacks on Hindu Community
-
2023 Jan: Three Hindu temples were vandalized across Australia namely the BAPS Swaminarayan Temple of Melbourne, Shiva Vishnu Temple of Carrum Downs, Victoria and ISKCON Temple of Melbourne with anti-Hindu graffiti by Khalistani extremists. High Commission of India to Australia condemned the repeated hate-crimes and the Australian High Commission to India assured support and solidarity with the Hindu community of Australia. Several top Australian lawmakers condemned the attacks on Hindu community's places of worship and stressed importance of respect in a multicultural society.
-
2023 Feb: Khalistani extremists made threatening phone calls to a prominent Hindu temple in Brisbane. The perpetrators demanded the temple raise Khalistan slogans if they wished to celebrate Mahashivratri peacefully. The calls came after three Hindu temples in Australia were defaced with anti-India graffiti, allegedly by Khalistani extremists.
-
2023 Mar: The Shree Laxmi Narayan Temple in Brisbane was vandalized by Khalistani extremists with anti-Hindu graffiti on the walls of temple. Sarah L Gates, the Director of Hindu Human Rights suspects that the hate crime is an attempt to terrorize Hindu community by members of Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) headed by Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, an individual designated as terrorist by the government of India. However the Australian Police claims they have no suspects or leads behind the vandalism.
-
2023 May: The BAPS Swaminarayan Temple of Sydney was vandalized with anti-Hindu graffiti allegedly by Khalistano extremists. Andrew Charlton, Member of Parliament from Parramatta expressed regret and visited the temple for helping the temple volunteers in cleaning the graffiti. Michelle Rowland, Minister of Communications condemned the vandalism. The Hindu Council of Australia called it not only an attack on sanctity of temple but also an insult to Australian Hindus and demanded investigation and justice.
Image gallery
File:Sri Venkateswara Temple Helensburgh.jpg|Sri Venkateswara Temple (SVT), Helensburgh, New South Wales File:Venkateswara Temple Helensburgh.jpg|Main Gopuram of the Sri Venkateswara Temple (SVT), Helensburgh, New South Wales File:Sydney Durga Temple Gopuram.jpg|Sydney Durga Temple, Regent's Park, Sydney File:Perth sivan koyil.jpg|Perth Shiva Temple, Perth File:Shiva vishnu koyil.jpg|Shiva Vishnu Temple, Melbourne File:Sydney murugan koyil.jpg|Lord Murugan Temple, Sydney File:Svkb melbourne.jpg|Sri Venkata Krishna Brundavana, Melbourne
References
Sources
- Byrnes, J 2007,' Hinduism', Religion and Ethics, abc.net.au
- "Indian Magazine Australia Indian Newspaper Australia Indian Events Australia". web.archive.org. 12 August 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
References
- (18 January 2018). "Census reveals Australia's religious diversity on World Religion Day". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
- (28 June 2022). "2021 Census shows changes in Australia's religious diversity | Australian Bureau of Statistics".
- (30 June 2008). "Melbourne's fastest-growing religion". Theage.com.au.
- "Australia's Religious Profile from the 2011 Census".
- "Indian overseas Population - Indians in Australia. Non-resident Indian and Person of Indian Origin".
- "Hinduism / Hinduism by country / Hinduism in australia".
- "Archived copy".
- (7 May 2011). "Early Disciples Celebrate Forty Years of ISKCON in Australia".
- "History - SRI MANDIR".
- "Oldest temple in Australia celebrates its 35th birthday | Indian Herald".
- "_/|_ Sri Selva Vinayakar Temple, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia _/|_".
- Statistics, c=AU; o=Commonwealth of Australia; ou=Australian Bureau of. (27 June 2007). "Main Features - Census shows non-Christian religions continue to grow at a faster rate".
- "Hinduism".
- "Hinduism Statistics in Australia - okTravel".
- "Hindu fastest growing religion in australia".
- Hasham, Nicole. (12 May 2015). "Labor MLC Daniel Mookhey makes Australian political history by swearing on the Bhagavad Gita".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Religion - Australia - Community profile".
- "Census TableBuilder - Dataset: 2016 Census - Cultural Diversity". Australian Bureau of Statistics – Census 2016.
- (27 June 2007). "2914.0.55.002 2006 Census Ethnic Media Package". [[Australian Bureau of Statistics]].
- "Diverse Faiths of Tasmania".
- (8 March 2017). "This Is How Hinduism Is Getting Popular In Australia - Boldsky.com".
- "The rise of Hinduism in Australia, will it continue? {{!}} SBS News". SBS News.
- "More Australians putting their faith in Hinduism – The Citizen".
- "2071.0 - Census of Population and Housing: Reflecting Australia - Stories from the Census, 2016".
- "SBS Australian Census Explorer".
- "Census 2011 Australia | ABS Population Income | SBS Census Explorer". Sbs.com.au.
- "Australian Hindu Temples and Associations - Hindu Council of Australia".
- (28 February 2017). "Hindu Australians experience highest rates of discrimination".
- "National survey finds Australians worried about relatives marrying Muslims".
- (24 July 2017). "FactCheck Q&A: The facts on birth rates for Muslim couples and non-Muslim couples in Australia".
- "Island induction | Christmas Island District High School".
- Simone Dennis. (2008). "Christmas Island: An Anthropological Study". Cambria Press.
- ((Australian Bureau of Statistics)). (2022). "2021 Census of Population and Housing – General Community Profile: Christmas Island (LGA51710)". Commonwealth of Australia.
- PTI. (2023-01-26). "India slams vandalisation of three Hindu temples in Australia and glorification of anti-India terrorists". The Hindu.
- (24 January 2023). "Third Hindu temple vandalised in Melbourne after India demands swift action".
- (23 January 2023). "Third Temple vandalised in Australia with Hindu hate graffiti by Khalistan supporters - The Australia Today".
- (2023-02-18). "Hindu temple in Australia gets threat calls; asked to raise Khalistani slogans".
- "Australia: Another Hindu temple vandalised by pro-Khalistan supporters in Brisbane".
- (4 March 2023). "Shree Laxmi Narayan Temple vandalised by Khalistan supporters in Brisbane - The Australia Today".
- "Another Hindu temple vandalised by Khalistani groups in Australia, this time in Brisbane".
- Singh, IP. (2023-09-18). "Oz police see 'Hindu hand' in temple graffiti, advise closure". The Times of India.
- (2023-05-05). "Indian temple in Australia defaced by 'anti-social elements' with 'anti-India' graffiti".
- (5 May 2023). "Sydney Hindu BAPS Swaminarayan Temple Vandalised by Khalistani Goons - The Australia Today".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Hinduism in Australia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report