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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, May 2, 2013
This
is happening in two countries separated by well over 1,000 miles of Indian Ocean
– Burma and Sri
Lanka. It is puzzling because neither country is facing an Islamist
militant threat. Muslims in both places are a generally peaceable and small
minority.
In
Sri Lanka, the issue of halal slaughter has been a flashpoint. Led by monks,
members of the Bodu
Bala Sena – the Buddhist Brigade – hold rallies, call for direct
action and the boycotting of Muslim businesses, and rail against the size of
Muslim families.
While
no Muslims have been killed in Sri Lanka, the Burmese situation is far more
serious. Here the antagonism is spearheaded by the 969 group, led by a monk,
Ashin Wirathu, who was jailed in 2003 for inciting religious hatred. Released in
2012, he has referred to himself bizarrely as “the Burmese Bin Laden”.
March
saw an outbreak of mob violence directed against Muslims in the town of
Meiktila, in central Burma, which left at least 40 dead.
Tellingly,
the violence began in a gold shop. The movements in both countries exploit a
sense of economic grievance – a religious minority is used as the scapegoat for
the frustrated aspirations of the majority.
On
Tuesday, Buddhist mobs attacked mosques and burned more than 70 homes in Oakkan,
north of Rangoon, after a Muslim girl on a bicycle collided with a monk. One
person died and nine were injured.
But
aren’t Buddhist monks meant to be the good guys of religion?
Aggressive
thoughts are inimical to all Buddhist teachings. Buddhism even comes equipped
with a practical way to eliminate them. Through meditation the distinction
between your feelings and those of others should begin to dissolve, while your
compassion for all living things grows.
Of
course, there is a strong strain of pacifism in Christian teachings too: “Love
your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,” were the words of Jesus in
the Sermon on the Mount.
But
however any religion starts out, sooner or later it enters into a Faustian pact
with state power. Buddhist monks looked to kings, the ultimate wielders of
violence, for the support, patronage and order that only they could provide.
Kings looked to monks to provide the popular legitimacy that only such a high
moral vision can confer.
The
result can seem ironic. If you have a strong sense of the overriding moral
superiority of your worldview, then the need to protect and advance it can seem
the most important duty of all.
Christian
crusaders, Islamist militants, or the leaders of “freedom-loving nations”, all
justify what they see as necessary violence in the name of a higher good.
Buddhist rulers and monks have been no exception.
So,
historically, Buddhism has been no more a religion of peace than
Christianity.
One
of the most famous kings in Sri Lankan history is Dutugamanu, whose unification
of the island in the 2nd Century BC is related in an important chronicle, the
Mahavamsa.
It
says that he placed a Buddhist relic in his spear and took 500 monks with him
along to war against a non-Buddhist king.
He
destroyed his opponents. After the bloodshed, some enlightened ones consoled
him: “The slain were like animals; you will make the Buddha’s faith
shine.”
Burmese
rulers, known as “kings of righteousness”, justified wars in the name of what
they called true Buddhist doctrine.
In
Japan, many samurai were devotees of Zen Buddhism and various arguments
sustained them – killing a man about to commit a dreadful crime was an act of
compassion, for example. Such reasoning surfaced again when Japan mobilised for
World War II.
Buddhism
took a leading role in the nationalist movements that emerged as Burma and Sri
Lanka sought to throw off the yoke of the British Empire. Occasionally this
spilled out into violence. In 1930s Rangoon, amid resorts to direct action,
monks knifed four Europeans.
More
importantly, many came to feel Buddhism was integral to their national identity
– and the position of minorities in these newly independent nations was an
uncomfortable one.
In
1983, Sri Lanka’s ethnic tensions broke out into civil war. Following anti-Tamil
pogroms, separatist Tamil groups in the north and east of the island sought to
break away from the Sinhalese majority government.
During
the war, the worst violence against Sri Lankan Muslims came at the hands of the
Tamil rebels. But after the fighting came to a bloody end with the defeat of the
rebels in 2009, it seems that majority communal passions have found a new target
in the Muslim minority.
In
Burma, monks wielded their moral authority to challenge the military junta and
argue for democracy in the Saffron Revolution of 2007. Peaceful protest was the
main weapon of choice this time, and monks paid with their lives.
Now
some monks are using their moral authority to serve a quite different end. They
may be a minority, but the 500,000-strong monkhood, which includes many
deposited in monasteries as children to escape poverty or as orphans, certainly
has its fair share of angry young men.
The
exact nature of the relationship between the Buddhist extremists and the ruling
parties in both countries is unclear.
Sri
Lanka’s powerful Defence Secretary Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa was guest of honour at the opening of a Buddhist Brigade
training school, and referred to the monks as those who “protect our country,
religion and race”.
But
the anti-Muslim
message seems to have struck a chord with parts of the
population.
Even
though they form a majority in both countries, many Buddhists share a sense that
their nations must be unified and that their religion is under threat.
The
global climate is crucial. People believe radical Islam to be at the centre of
the many of the most violent conflicts around the world. They feel they are at
the receiving end of conversion drives by the much more evangelical monotheistic
faiths. And they feel that if other religions are going to get tough, they had
better follow suit.
* Dr. Alan Strathern works on early modern global history (1500-1800) with
a special interest in those parts of the world that came into contact with
Portuguese imperialism and the theme of religious encounters. His published work
initially focused on sixteenth-century Sri Lanka but has increasingly taken a
comparative, inter-disciplinary and global approach. He teaches both European
and world history. He is a Fellow and Tutor at Brasenose College, and a Lecturer
at St. John’s College. After studying Ancient and Modern History at Oxford, Alan
Strathern studied for a Masters in History and Anthropology at University
College London, and then returned to Oxford for DPhil work in History
(1998-2002). He subsequently took up research and teaching positions at
Cambridge before returning to Oxford in 2011. He is currently on research leave
2011-13, after having been awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize for History in
2010. His work on Sri Lanka led to a book Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth Century Sri Lanka:
Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist Land (CUP, 2007), and a number of articles on such themes
as origin myths, source criticism, and the development of ethnic consciousness.
In the past five or six years, he has been working on more explicitly
comparative and global questions. One project will result in a book, Sacred
Kingship and Religious Change in the Early Modern World, which will look at why
the rulers of some societies converted to monotheism and others did not. He is
happy to consider DPhil supervisions across a wide range of areas in the early
modern world. This article appeared first in BBC.