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, January 31, 2016
Governance On The “Advice Of The Mahasangha”: On President Sirisena’s Pledge
By H.L. Seneviratne –January 30, 2016
We frequently hear politicians declaring that they will follow the steps of the ancient kings who always ruled according to the advice of the Mahasangha. This is a vague generalization that has no historical or scientific validity.
When we look at our history we do not find a continuing centralized
system either in the political domain or in the religious. In the
political domain what we see is a constant power struggle, as seen in
the frequency of violent succession, often by killing family members or
close kin.
And, the political system was an oscillating one between a temporary
centralization and its inevitable end in the break up of the system into
warring groups. The story that we had a unitary (ekeeya) state in
ancient times is a myth. We never had a unitary state until British rule
unified the country. Indeed there was none anywhere in the world until
the rise of the modern nation state starting about two centuries ago.
The religious domain was similar, and if any, even less centralized than
the political domain, because, monks had no coercive power, and were
totally dependent on the king for any centralization they had. Factions
of monks competed to get the favour of the king, and our history is full
of stories of kings purging the Sangha (called purification, sasana
visodhana), at the instigation of the faction that got the favour of the
king.
There was nothing called a unitary and monolithic “Mahasangha”. A
non-existent thing cannot give advice. “Mahasangha” here simply means a
faction of the monks. And any “advice” they gave was not a one way
thing, like from a person who can advice to a person who needs advice.
It was no more than participation in intrigue against the enemy
factions.
Another meaning of “advising” is, goading the king to do the bidding of
the monk faction for their benefit. This is a general feature of the
feudal political order of pre-modern times when elites, both lay and
monastic, formed factions and operated for their benefit, and supported
whoever the king was who was willing to reciprocate.
What this means is that the picture in our “glorious ancient times” is
the same as what we see today. There are groups of monks who get round
groups of politicians and they try to get politicians to do what they
want. These are two fold, (1) to get as much material benefits as they
can get from the politicians, especially those in power, and (2) to
established the hegemony of the Sinhala Buddhist majority, and
discriminate against the minorities, the purpose of which is also
gaining more and more wealth and status, and bolstering their egos with
long titles.
One other relevant point is that when these people talk about the advice
of the Mahasangha, what advice are they talking about? To advice, one
must have knowledge in the first place. They must have knowledge, at
least basic knowledge, about what a modern democracy is, what a modern
economy is, what the modern international system is like, and so forth.
In sum, they must have the basic knowledge that can qualify them to be
modern cosmopolitan citizens. I do not believe there is one single monk,
certainly none among the monks with whom our politicians interact, who
would have the basic qualifications to give any meaningful advice.