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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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 17, 2013
Rushing To Ignite A Religious War
By Tisaranee
Gunasekara -February 17, 2013
“We are apt to shut our
eyes against a painful truth, and listen to the song of that siren till she
transforms us into beasts” - Patrick Henry
(Speech at the Second Virginia Convention – 1775)
Until now, those who incurred the wrath of the
Rajapaksas were unsafe only when they ventured out of their homes.
That
last refuge of the persecuted might be vanishing. Faraz Shauketaly of The
Sunday Leader was shot in his place of residence.
The
three gunmen escaped, naturally. In Sri Lanka, some criminals never get
caught.
Why
was Mr. Shauketaly shot? The answer will be revealed by the manner in which his
case is handled. If the crime is non-political, the culprits will be
apprehended. But if Mr. Shauketaly was shot because of his journalistic
investigations, the perpetrators will remain as free as the wind, as free as
those who killed Lasantha Wickremetunga four years ago.
And
the Shuketaly-shooting will mark a turning point. In future, Rajapaksa-enforcers
will not have to lurk in some street-corner for their victims.
They
will come home.
****
Sri
Lanka is one of those fortunate countries which never had to experience the
indescribable horrors of a full scale religious
war.
That
millennia-long run of luck might be coming to an end. If the criminally
irresponsible activities of the Bodu
Bala Sena (BBS) are not nipped in the bud, legally and
democratically, Sri Lankans may soon know what it is like to be killed for a
religion.
Buddhist extremist group Bodu Bala Sena starts grand
convention at maharagama | Pic by Dharisha Bastians
In
a country where four (or five, according to unofficial reports) women are raped
daily, child abuse is rampant and even Buddhist monks falling victim to violent
crime, a handful of Sinhala-Buddhist
extremists have managed to manufacture and enthrone a wholly
artificial issue as ‘The Problem’. Ordinary Sinhala-Buddhists who should be
concerned about such real-life issues as violent crimes, sky-rocketing prices
and falling living standards are being hoodwinked into worry about non-existing
problems, such as ‘Halal’ and the ‘Sharia Law’. The country and its people are
being held to ransom by a small cabal of fanatics, while the Rajapaksa
regimelooks on, as benignly as a fond father.
A
full fledged anti-Halal campaign is to begin at Maharagama, on February
17th. Other meetings are to follow. Eager to benefit from the
rekindled fires of religious mania, the JHU too has got into the act, with the
recently demoted Minister Champika
Ranawaka giving time till April to ‘resolve’ the ‘Halal problem’.
Afterwards these self-declared protectors of Sinhala-Buddhism are to take
‘action’.
A
recent report is indicative of the way things are headed: “At least 50 Muslim
shop owners in Narammala in the Kurunegala District, have received death threats
by mail. They have been warned to close their shops by March 31st of
face death….” (Colombo Gazette – 17.2.2013).
The
JHU is a spent force, politico-electorally. It is reasonable to assume that the
absolute majority of Buddhist Sinhalese are unaware the very existence of the
BBS; or that ‘Halal’ is a far more important issue than the cost-of-living. The
JHU and the BBS are succeeding in imposing their deranged agenda on the rest of
the country not because they are strong. The main reason for the phenomenal
success of the BBS and its anti-Halal mania is the benign tolerance accorded to
them by the Rajapaksas.
The
regime, possibly for reasons of its own, is allowing to BBS to break the law of
the land with impunity. It is possible that the Rajapaksas see a considerable
use value in these fanatics. They might believe that by conjuring an ‘Islamic
Terrorist threat’ they can win over Washington, London and Delhi, save the
Hambantota Commonwealth and enthrone themselves as the new saviours.
From
the JHU to the BBS: Politics of Hatred
The
JHU was a child of opportunism and intolerance. It rampaged into
politico-organisational existence in order to benefit from the outpourings of
public grief (part orchestrated by the media which competed with each other to
turn the funeral into a bathetic circus) over the untimely demise of Ven.
Gangodawila Soma Thero. At that time, the Sihala Urumaya (SU) was mired in
electoral failure and acrimonious squabbles. In his last years Soma Thero had
espoused an extremist, intolerant creed, first against Muslims and then against
Christians. The SU jumped to claim his intolerant legacy, as a way to regain
political relevance. The SU leaders donated their party to the Sangha and the
JHU was born, on an anti-Christian wave.
The
vainglorious JHU monks went to parliament promising to create a Dharma Rajya in
6 months; instead, with their ignoble conduct, they bought discredit upon the
great religion they claimed to represent. Almost a decade later, the JHU has
nothing positive to show for its existence. The party sank into dissension and
irrelevance when its anti-Christian hysteria was rendered unaffordably
irrelevant by the outbreak of the Fourth Eelam War.
Historically,
enhanced identification between religion and politics has rebounded on the
religion, discrediting and dishonouring it. The arrogation of political power to
themselves by Buddhist monks during the Koryo dynasty led to the decline of
Buddhism in Korea. Other famous examples include the anti-clericalism of the
French Revolution and of the Italian Risorgimento. When religion seeks to become
a secular force, secular powers tend to treat the religious in like manner, as
the atrocities committed on monks and nuns by the troops of very Catholic
Emperor Charles during the 1527 sacking of Rome demonstrate.
When
the line of demarcation between religious and secular is breached, it endangers
the basic rights of all citizens. The Catholic Church was able to cover up its
child abuse problem thanks partly to its capacity to dictate to political
authorities. This week, the Irish Prime Minister accepted the Irish state’s
complicity in committing 10,000 women and girls to the now infamous Magdalene
laundries run by nuns, where they were forced to work under inhuman conditions,
without pay. It is no accident that two of the most repressive countries in the
world are theocracies:Saudi Arabia and Iran. And their main victims are not
foreigners but their own people.
If
the BBS and the JHU have their way, they will not stop with suppressing
non-Buddhists. They will dictate to Buddhists as well, telling us what and what
not to eat and wear, study and think. They will seek to takeover our lives and
corrupt our minds.
Racial/religious
tolerance is not a permanent state of mind which, once achieved, will last
forever. It is something which needs to be renewed and reaffirmed every day, not
through outstanding acts of heroism but through ordinary decency, kindness and
honour. The propaganda of those who advocate intolerance in the name of
race/religion is so insidious that it can get at us in dark secret places we did
not know existed within ourselves. We are living in a society in which the
language of suspicion and fear and the teaching of contempt are thriving. Even
the most anti-racist of us would not be totally immune to the resultant
toxicants.
In
that context, constant reminders of our common humanity cease being a cliché and
become a lifeline to evade the bloody-quagmire of a religious
war.

