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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, February 27, 2014
The Rise of Extremist Buddhism in Sri Lanka
Salem-News.com-Feb-26-2014 12:24
After 30 years of an extremely bloody and vicious civil war, the country
still does not seem to have resolved the problem of integrating its
minorities.
Sri Lankan soldiers execute captive Tamil Tiger soldiers in May of 2009, during the peak of Genocide.
|
(COLOMBO Mizo News) - These images, shown on the local television, may
date from August 2013, but the attacks on the Muslim minority in Sri
Lanka have only increased. According to Colombo Police, nearly 20
mosques were attacked last year.
Buddhist extremism? The Buddhist religion seems to have acquired quite
another facet in Sri Lanka and some other countries of South and
Southeast Asia. In Myanmar, the Rohingya Muslims have been victims of a
fairly widespread and long-lasting ethnic cleansing by the Buddhists,
criticised by Human Rights Watch and others. In southern Thailand also,
the Muslim insurgency since 2004 has led some Buddhists to take to the
arms.
In Sri Lanka, six years after the end of the civil war in which the
government forces inflicted a heavy defeat on the separatist Tamil Tiger
movement, it is now Muslims and Christians, who are the new victims of
violence and harassment. In the Muslim quarters of Colombo, fear reigns.
Mohamad, an old man who runs a textile boutique along with his daughter
on the outskirts of Colombo, was one of the victims of the attacks. “My
boutique was ravaged at the beginning of the year by monks and other
persons. They came in large numbers and I did not see them come in a
group. They pushed me behind the boutique and vandalised it entirely,”
he says, wringing his hands. He looks around warily and whispers: “I
begged them to spare me but they hit me with sticks.”
The Muslims, mainly from India or traders from the Arab nations, have
been living in Sri Lanka for nearly a millennium. They have mixed with
the local population and mainly speak Tamil and live on the eastern
board of the country. Today, they make up about eight percent of the 21
million inhabitants of Sri Lanka.
Yet, soon after the end of the civil war in the north and as economic
redevelopment began, the ills of the society – inflation, corruption and
rising cost of living – need a scapegoat to carry the blame.
Preservation of the Sinhalese Buddhist culture is the stated principal
objective of the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), an extremist Buddhist
organisation created in July 2012 by monks.
The method of BBS is radical – to demonise Muslims by propagating
rumours and falsehoods about them. “The Muslims are stealing our jobs
and monopolising the economy in order to enrich themselves and thence
dominate us and the country,” says a young member of the BBS during a
meeting organised by the group last August in a Colombo suburb. The
young monk, dressed in a saffron robe, appears to be a victim of a true
brainwashing by the organisation. He multiplies the insults against
Muslims before adding, “Christianity and Islam are indulging in mass
conversions amongst the poorest persons by enticing them with money and
food.”
Thanks to the support of influential personalities, the BBS has some
victories to its account. It obtained a prohibition of commercialisation
of certified hallal meat. Recently, the secretary general of the
organisation, Galaboda Aththe Gnanasara, declared that “Only the monks
can save the Sinhala race.” He added that the monks were ready for the
battle, if needed. “Our country is a Sinhalese country and we are the
unofficial police here to ensure that our culture and traditions are
preserved properly.”
For Amit, a Buddhist Sinhalese taxi driver, however, “these extremists
are neither Buddhists nor monks. They only wear robes in order to scare
people and very rare are the Buddhists with the courage to criticise a
monk.” Buddhist extremism in Sri Lanka appears to be more a conservative
political movement based on the preservation of the Sinhalese race.
The development of such extremism is also a boon for the government and
many of its influential members directly support the BBS. “This is a
political strategy aimed at dividing the population by spreading the
image of an Islam and a Christianity which threaten the Sinhalese
culture,” explains Joseph, a Christian Sri Lankan of Tamil origin who
fled the civil war. A number of journalists and politicians fear a
resurgence of aggression, which could indeed lead to more serious
conflicts between the communities or the worst-case scenario, another
civil war.
Nevertheless, President Rajapaksa and his party, the Sri Lanka Freedom
Party, easily managed to consolidate their political influence during
the conflict with the LTTE, allowing the president to gain a comfortable
majority in the elections that followed soon after the end of the civil
war.
Other political analysts estimate that extremist members of the ruling
party would like to see Sri Lankan society fractured once again along
racial and religious lines with the objective of capturing a
consolidated majority vote by frightening them with the ‘dark ambitions
of the minority communities’.
After 30 years of an extremely bloody and vicious civil war, the country
still does not seem to have resolved the problem of integrating its
minorities. The priority of the government is to attract investors. From
time to time, small groups of the Buddhist majority Sri Lankan
opposition get together to denounce these invocations to racial hatred.
They carry out peaceful protest marches and candle-lit vigils, reciting
the teachings of the Buddha: “Hatred can never be stopped by hate. It is
Kindness that leads to reconciliation.”