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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, May 18, 2019
What can be done to keep radicalism away from the shores of Sri Lanka?
People in Sri Lanka mistakenly associate Muslims with Islam. The fact is
that Islam is a religion and Muslims are a people, many of whom are
believers of Islam. It is easier to side with racists politicians who
blame Muslims for everything, including the Easter Sunday bombings of
Catholic Churches and posh Hotels in Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Yet there is a pattern of Easter attracts on Christians in countries
where the majority of people profess Islam. In Egypt on Palm Sunday
2017, suicide bombers murdered 45 people in two Coptic Churches. In
Pakistan in 2016, a suicide bomber killed 75 Christians celebrating
Easter at a public park. In Nigeria, on Easter Sunday 2012, a suicide
bomber killed 38 Christians outside a Church. Now in Sri Lanka,249 or
more have succumbed to the Easter Sunday bombings in 3 Churches and 2
Hotels on 21 April 2019.
Is there a pattern to these bombings?
Can we blame the religion, or do we blame the radicalism?
It is a well-recognised fact that Christians and believers of Islam
accept mankind as descendants of Adam and Eve and for the fall of man
from grace of the Almighty. Both Christian and Islam consider Moses,
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Jesus as Prophets and HolyProphet Muhammad as the
last Prophet. Both religions have much in common. Both religions
believe in an afterlife, of a Heaven and a place of damnation as
revealed by God to the Prophets through the messengers of God. Both
religions also believe there is a judgement day when mankind will be
called to account for their misdeeds and thence celebrated or punished
and banished by the Eternal, for eternity. Both religions also believe
in the Mercy of God.
If surely both religions profess the existence of life after death, of
good over evil, of ethical living in this life, why is it that there is
an innate antipathy? Can we really put the blame on religion or on those
who are misguided and become fanatics? All religions, in my opinion,
profess moral values. All religions teach punishment and mercy in their
tenets.
Is there a fault line in the interpretation rather than in the basis of
the teachings of Christianity and Islam? Religious beliefs have always
been seen, analysed and professed over time as a private matter between
individuals and civilisations. Without privacy of religious worship,
surely freedom dies. Without freedom of worship, life is just a shadow
of what it ought to be?
Why are changing mindsets causing radicalisation?
Religion and radicalisation are two ends of the spectrum of life. Whilst
forms of radicalisation been on the rise among young people in
Guantanamo and in European prisons, life in prisons can be the incubator
for religious fundamentalism? These ideologies have been explained as
Islamism but in many cases there have nothing to do with religion or
religious teaching. They have everything to do with violent and
non-violent extremism.
Radicalisation as a phenomenon cannot only be limited to a specific religion or an ideology.
We have seen the following forms of radicalisation identified over many
years. We have seen right wing extremism say the Neo Nazi and the
skinheads. Then there is the left-wing extremism in anarchism, say when
World leaders have their summits around the world annually. Recently, we
saw it in the Yellow Shirts in Paris?
The reasons for extremism?
There is always some form of manipulation of extremism. There is the
political manipulation of frustration, discrimination, humiliation,
alienation and a serious feeling of injustice, which are some reasons.
Then there are these same reasons using religion in intentionally perpetrating violence as means to a political end.
There is ambiguity between politics and using religion for political aims to try resolve contradictions in society.
Politicians borrow the common factors in every religion like
authenticity, legitimacy and credibility of religion and religious
beliefs for their own ends. Scientific arguments are lacking in this
process of radicalisation. We see very rich and well-educated elements
in different strata of society being radicalised and fall a prey to
misguided notions of salvation
or an easy solution to many of our problems?
We see weak governments fall an easy prey of these radical elements.
When there is no strong leadership radicals have a field day?
What can be done to keep radicalism away from the shores of Sri Lanka?
Not much is the short answer in the immediate present. But personal
vulnerabilities or local factors in Sri Lanka can make young people more
susceptible to extremist messages. These may include a sense of
belonging, a feeling of civic pride in the nation, being involved in
drugs and easy money with gangs. It could also be the Internet. There
could be the propagation of violence by groups who will often offer
solutions to strong feelings of religious discrimination, of injustice,
of being marginalised, of being misunderstood, not listened to or being
treated unfairly.
We need to re-educate against hate. We need to arm ourselves not with
weapons but with words, values and real teachings rather than
proselytise religion.

