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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 1, 2013
Counter Campaign To Overcome New Threat To Peace
Even as the government
prepares to celebrate the fourth year anniversary of the end of the war next
month in May, a new threat looms on the horizon. This is the prospect of
violence arising from politically-motivated communalism which passes for
patriotism within a society that has grown increasingly polarized on ethnic and
religious lines. The sudden rise of extremist
Buddhist groups is occurring in a context in which the fears of the
Sinhalese majority are being fanned by increased international involvement in
the affairs of the country. Patriotism is also the favourite refuge of
governmental leaders in facing the challenges arising from the international
community on account of their conduct of the last phase of the war. The danger
is that the activism of religious zealots will become escalated from violent
rhetoric to violent action.
The
earlier violence of extremist religious groups was confined to marginal
communities belonging to other religions. The Christians from the new churches,
often described derogatively as fundamentalists, have long been a victimized
group even in more harmonious times where relations between the religious
communities were concerned. As they are small and viewed with disfavor by the
larger mainstream Christian churches, their sufferings have often gone
unheeded. It was also the same with the Muslim and Hindu religious sites that
came under attack. A recent study by the Centre
for Policy Alternatives listed religious sites and persons that
had come
under attack in the past few years. Since the end of the war there
have been high-profile incidents such as the attack on the Mosque in Dambulla in
April 2012, however other incidents, have received little or no public and media
attention. This has resulted in a limited understanding of the scale and nature
of these incidents.
The
CPA report documents incidents of attacks on places of worship in Sri Lanka
since the end of the war in May 2009 and discusses the broader context of such
attacks. The report
lists 65 cases of attacks on religious places of worship between May
2009 and January 2013. Direct attacks have been reported from all provinces of
Sri Lanka. Most of the reported incidents were from the Western province (16),
followed by the Eastern province (12), the Southern province (11) and the
North-Western province (9). Although the list cannot claim to be comprehensive,
it offers a starting point to document attacks against places of worship of the
four main religions practiced in the country. The lack of coverage by the media
and other civil society groups, lack of consistent documentation by religious
groups, and the caution of religious and civil society groups to engage on this
issue were key obstacles in the compiling of this list.
But
now extremist groups are taking on more mainstream targets. Big
Muslim-owned businesses located in city centres are becoming a
target. The usual method has been to first spread poisonous stories about them,
such as alleged distribution of sweets to unsuspecting customers, but which have
the effect of rendering them impotent and decreasing their chances of producing
offspring. These are clearly fabrications meant to dupe the people and to evoke
hysteria amongst them. Another has been to accuse the Muslims of more heinous
crimes that include having insulting images of sacred objects and even
seduction, rape and coerced marriage involving innocent Sinhalese girls. As a
result Muslims of all backgrounds are living in considerable fear and with
insecurity. The memories of the 1915 Sinhalese-Muslim riots are being added to
the host of more recent incidents of communal rioting are haunting the Muslim
consciousness.
PUBLIC
STAND
So
far only a handful of governmental leaders have been prepared to take a public
stand in favour of the position that Sri Lanka is a multi ethnic and multi
religious society. There is a reluctance to publicly oppose the extremist
sentiment that is creating and believing in a cocktail of lies and semi truths.
Even those groups that specialize in community-level educational programmes are
wary of getting into the explosive arena of inter-religious prejudice. The
impunity and appearance of governmental patronage of the extremist
Buddhist groups has intimidated civil society. The failure of the
police to take deterrent action and arrest those who have been responsible for
attacks has created an acute sense of vulnerability. The lack of support by the
government and its media to those who wish to counter the lies and half truths
of extremists is a further source of discouragement.
In
this context the efforts of Minister of National Languages and Social
Integration Vasudeva Nanayakkara is commendable. Last week he summoned a
meeting of religious leaders and intelligentsia to discuss the issue of
inter-religious tension with them. A Muslim intellectual pointed out that 7 of
the 13 countries that had voted in favour of Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights
Council had been Muslim countries. He said that in the Middle East
where he had worked for many years, he had found an utmost respect for Sri Lanka
on account of former Prime Minister Sirimavo
Bandaranaike’s leadership of the Non-Aligned Movement. He cautioned
those present at the meeting that the ongoing attacks on Muslims could
jeopardize this high regard for Sri Lanka, especially if the news spread
internationally that Muslims were being violated for practicing their culture,
such as wearing their traditional clothing.
In
the discussion that followed it was pointed out that although more than 90
percent of artistes and writers were opposed to racism and communalism, there
was no platform for the intelligentsia to speak out. There was an appeal to
Minister Nanayakkara to
empower this section of civil society to awaken the silent majority. A Buddhist
monk, said that unifying the country was not only a matter of reunifying its
territory but also the people’s hearts and minds. He asked the question whether
we can be satisfied with what the Tamil people have received after the end of
the war, and said that this had opened the door to foreign intervention. This
fair-minded and other-centered thinking prevalent at the highest levels of the
Buddhist Sangha needs to be more widely known by the general public. The
country’s intelligentsia has the necessary ideology to counter the growth of
extremist religious sentiment in the country. The report of the Lessons Learnt
and Reconciliation Commission, which was compiled by a multi ethnic and multi
religious group of eminent persons handpicked by President Rajapaksa,
contains both the theory and practice of what needs to be done to achieve
national reconciliation in Sri Lanka.
EDUCATE
PEOPLE
Among
the key recommendations of the LLRC are
activities specially designed to promote inter-religious cooperation, such as
the formation of inter-religious committees that could be a first point of
reference to people for problem solving and taking their problems to higher
levels for resolution. There is no doubt that the government has been doing
much on the ground that corresponds to what the LRRC recommended. These include
the resettlement of displaced persons and building of basic infrastructure
facilities that is necessary to sustain the life of the community. However,
there has been relatively little educational or relationship-building work that
caters to healing old divisions. This accounts for the abysmal ignorance of the
general public in all parts of the country, including the north and east,
regarding the LLRC report and its recommendations. The absurd fact is that this
document, which is at the centre of international debate, has still not been
made available to the general public in the Sinhala and Tamil languages.
According
to media reports Minister Nanayakkara is to present a cabinet paper in the
course of the coming week that calls for a ban on groups that espouse communal
hatred. There is no guarantee that he will succeed or be even given a fair
hearing by his colleagues in the cabinet. Prior to National Day which was
celebrated in the primarily Tamil-speaking district of Trincomalee in February,
Minister Nanayakkara made a proposal to have the national anthem sung in Tamil
also. This was in accordance with an LLRC recommendation. However, he came in
for strong criticism from within the government itself and the matter was
dropped. The national anthem was sung in Sinhala only on National day in
predominantly Tamil-speaking Trincomalee.
There
are laws in other countries that prohibit hate speech, just as much as there are
laws in many other countries, including South Africa and Canada, to permit the
national anthem to be sung in more than one language. However, legal
prohibitions alone are not the answer to the growing campaign
of misinformation and religious hatred that is being spread by
the extremist
groups. The bigger part of the solution is to educate people and win
their hearts and minds to religious harmony. There is a need to debunk the
myths that are being spread about the other through one-sided, baseless and
simplistic descriptions of their ways of life. What is urgently necessary at
this time is for political, religious and civic leaders to come out and educate
the general population about the realities of living in a multi ethnic and
multi-religious society as opposed to a mono-cultural society. This alone shows
how far we have regressed, socially, culturally and politically, after the
war.