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, March 3, 2013
Bigotry Of Sinhalabuddhism
By Sharmini
Serasinghe -March 2, 2013
It appears that the Bodu
Bala Sena (BBS) and its acolytes have taken a page from the book of
the Anagarika
Dharmapala (Homeless Protector of the Dhamma) in espousing the same
flavour of bigotry as he did in pre independent Ceylon. Intolerance of the
religion of the other was the ‘Dhamma’ protected, practiced and propagated by
this ‘National Hero’ the Anagarika Dharmapala!
Given
the sociological climate of pre independent Ceylon one could appreciate the fact
that the Anagarika was rebelling against the British colonial invader who were
subjugating the masses in the most deplorable way. But when one takes a closer
look at the obvious, he was not fighting the colonial invaders on behalf of all
Lankans as a whole but only on behalf of the Sinhalese Buddhists in the country.
In such a context can he be regarded as a National Hero?
What
is also obvious is that the Anagarika’s reasons for rejecting British
imperialism were not so much about the overall political and economic betterment
of the country but more about establishing a Sinhala nation as the perceived
historical custodian of Buddhism.
Though
he died fifteen years prior to British occupied Ceylon gained independence he
had aspired for Lanka to eventually emerge as a nation where Buddhism and the
‘pristine glory’ of his Sinhalese people could flourish again. Followers of
other religious faith were therefore not included in his equation of a nation.
This posture clearly divided the Sinhalese Buddhists of Lanka and the other
ethno-religious citizenry of the country.
Therefore
the Anagarika cannot be regarded as a pristine model of Buddhism which he aptly
demonstrated through his chauvinistic rhetorical fire aimed not only at the
colonial invaders but at his own countrymen as well. For him Lanka was only
for Sinhala
Buddhists and none other!
The
Anagarika appears to have suffered from an acute persecution complex with regard
to the survival of Buddhism, perhaps born out of a malaise of what he suffered
under the British invader. He seems to have entertained a morbid fear of
Buddhism becoming extinct.
Therefore
he donned the mantle of a ‘Bodhisattva’ and projected himself as the saviour of
Buddhism despite the Buddha not having entrusted him with the task of doing so.
Nevertheless he did a bad job of it. Instead of spreading the message of the
Dhamma and living by example as the Buddha had preached it, the Anagarika added
his own flavour to the faith in the form of intolerance of other religions and
ethnic groups- the exact opposite of the Dhamma.
The
Anagarika’s intolerance of the other was clearly evinced through his customary
vitriolic rhetorical fire-
He
said “This bright, beautiful island was made into a Paradise by the Aryan
Sinhalese before its destruction was brought about by the barbaric vandals. Its
people did not know irreligion … Christianity and polytheism [i.e. Hinduism] are
responsible for the vulgar practices of killing animals, stealing, prostitution,
licentiousness, lying and drunkenness … The ancient, historic, refined people,
under the diabolism of vicious paganism, introduced by the British
administrators, are now declining slowly away.”
He
also said “The Muhammedans, an alien people … by shylockian methods become
prosperous like Jews. The Sinhala sons of the soil, whose ancestors for 2358
years had shed rivers of blood to keep the country free of alien invaders … are
in the eyes of the British only vagabonds. The Alien South Indian Muhammedan
come to Ceylon, sees the neglected villager, without any experience in trade …
and the result is that the Muhammedan thrives and the sons of the sol go to the
wall.”
This
posture of the Anagarika contributed to religious tension between Buddhists and
Muslims of pre independent Ceylon culminating in what history records as the
‘1915
Riots.’ It is said that the numbers of Lankans killed in these riots
were in the thousands. For this the Anagarika too has blood on his hands while
giving a foothold for ‘ethnocratic’ politics in post independent Lanka to take
root as espoused by SWRD
Bandaranaike.
In
the end what the Anagarika propagated amongst the masses was a chauvinistic
ideology under the banner of Buddhism devoid of the philosophy, intellectuality
and a path to self discovery of the truth as the Buddha meant it to be. The
Anagarika ‘Buddhism’ also comprised of unearthing Buddhist relics of the past
and setting up symbols encouraging his followers to worship and revere Buddhism-
the exact opposite of what the Buddha preached. Therefore the Anagarika’s
‘Buddhism’ was from the ‘outside’ and not the ‘inside’.
By
doing so he contributed more to Buddhist archeology than to the Dhamma. By doing
so he diverted the philosophy to a religion of worship catering to the gullible.
By doing so he turned the philosophy into hypocrisy. By doing so he sapped the
essence of the Dhamma!
In
today’s context it appears the BBS, JHU and the rest of its ilk have chosen the
path of ‘Buddhism’ as propagated by the Anagarika Dharmapala. It is precisely
what he strived to establish in Lanka all those years ago- a Sinhalabuddhist
nation with a subservient other. Therefore what is being observed today by the
extremists under the banner of Buddhism is in effect the Anagarika’s ‘Sinhalabuddhism’
and not Buddhism.
Hence,
would it not be better for those statues of the Buddha to be replaced by statues
of the Anagarika Dharmapala?
Let
those of us who wish to observe and follow the teachings of the Buddha as per
the Dhamma be permitted to do so since Buddhists do not require statues to
worship anyway and let the rest- the Sinhalabuddhist extremists follow their own
path to self-destruction. After all this is a democracy!
Given
all the above could the Anagarika be regarded as a National Hero or a
Sinhalabuddhist Hero? I believe the latter would be more
appropriate.