A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, April 28, 2012
Global Talmi Forum
GTF stands in solidarity with the Muslims in Sri Lanka
Global Tamil Forum stands in solidarity with the Muslims
in Sri Lanka
Global Tamil Forum (GTF) strongly condemns the Sri Lankan
Government’s complicity in the orders for the removal of the Muslim mosque in
Dambulla, central Sri Lanka. GTF is profoundly disturbed by the attacks on the
mosque by a minority, yet in their thousands as reported, of extremist Sri
Lankan Buddhists led by monks on 20 April 2012, calling for its destruction
claiming it was constructed illegally.
The inaction of law enforcement authorities to stop the attacks
and the Prime Minister’s decision to order its removal and relocation highlights
the State authorities’ continued infringement on religious freedom and
intolerance of non-Buddhist faiths on the island. It is of greater concern that
the Prime Minister’s office declared that the decision was taken in consultation
with Muslim political leaders when this claim has been vehemently denied, as
widely reported in the media. It is characteristic of successive Sri Lankan
governments to succumb to pressure from the majority whenever there are ethnic
tensions.
The Muslim Council of Sri Lanka has said that the mosque was
legally registered and has been in existence for over 50 years, long before the
area was declared a sacred Buddhist area. Sri Lankan Muslims have a history in
the island dating as far back as the 8th century.
The incident at the Dambulla mosque is not an isolated attack on
a Muslim place of worship in recent months. In September 2011, a Muslim shrine
in Anuradhapura was demolished by a group of Buddhist monks. These incidents can
only take place under a Government which is willing to turn a blind eye, and
even encourage, the maltreatment of non-Buddhists.
Some Buddhist leaders have said that they intend to demolish 72
structures in the Dambulla area, including the mosque and a Tamil Hindu temple.
These deplorable acts are indicative of the treatment suffered by other
religions in Sri Lanka.
In the Tamil majority areas, of the North and East of the
country, Hindu temples and Christian churches have been desecrated and destroyed
whilst a number of Buddhist structures have been built in their place or within
close proximity. Tamil National Alliance has highlighted, in their situation
report to Parliament in October 2011, the rapidly changing demography of the
North of Sri Lanka where the numbers of Buddhist statues, viharas and stupas on
the A9 highway have noticeably increased. It was also highlighted that armed
forces are preventing people from rebuilding original Christian and Hindu places
of worship that have been damaged or destroyed during the war.
The politicisation of Buddhism as the state religion and the
intervening influence it has in politics and social affairs continues to
threaten religious minorities and hinder peaceful coexistence of all communities
on the island.
Burning of Muslim Flag by Buddhist
Monks in Sri Lanka - April 2012

