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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 31, 2017
Is BBS an existential threat to the Dharma?
- It is of paramount significance that the Mahanayakes of the Malwatte and Asgiriya Chapters confront Gnanasara
2017-05-31
“As fire, though one takes the shape
of every object which it consumes, so the Self, though one, takes the
shape of every object in which it dwells.” ~The Upanishads: Breath of
the Eternal
The
Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) is not a representation of the Dharma as preached
by Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha. The BBS consists of some erratic
persons robed in saffron and backed by some unruly groups of laymen,
mostly of youth. They pretend to be the sole saviours and guardians of
the great Dharma that had been passed down from generation to
generation. On the contrary, they are an existential threat to the
serenity, purity and sublimity of the teachings of the Enlightened One.
Buddhism is the embodiment of some of the greatest teachings that mankind has known; teachings that, in his first sermon, the Buddha said elucidated the very essence of life in general:
Buddhism is the embodiment of some of the greatest teachings that mankind has known; teachings that, in his first sermon, the Buddha said elucidated the very essence of life in general:
“I teach one thing and one thing only: Suffering and the end of suffering, which is the ultimate goal of Buddhism.
The Buddha presented and explained this very doctrine in his major
discourses. The teachings have expanded and evolved since the Buddha’s
time, thanks to his closest disciples. Yet, the doctrine still underlies
the core Buddhist teachings. In his first sermon at the Deer Park, he
taught the Four Noble Truths: The existence of suffering, The cause of
suffering, that the cause of suffering can end, and the path to the end
of suffering.” (Source: Venerable Walpola Rahula’s article, The Buddhist
Review Magazine).
Taken against the perspective of the first sermon of the Buddha, the
self-proclaimed disciples of the Great Teacher are a long way off the
nobility of the teachings. It is not only Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara,
whose sole and exclusive motive seems to be making political capital
out of the general suspicions that exist among ethnic groups and turning
that suspicion into support of a particular political cabal, but also
the lay followers of that school of thought who are as guilty in flaming
communal fires.
There is no dispute that the conduct of a person in leadership of this
cabal is a gross contamination of the Dharma. It is even more astounding
that Mahanayakes, who are presumed to be presiding over the ‘Order of
the Monks’ have opted to remain mute over a very fundamental violation
of the great Teachings.
In such a disappointing circumstance, the average Buddhist, whose
isolated faith alone keeps him or her adhering to the Teachings is much
more noble and honourable than those who parade the streets in yellow
robes.
Taken against the perspective of the first sermon of the Buddha, the self-proclaimed disciples of the Great Teacher are a long way off the nobility of the teachings. It is not only Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara, one of those imposters, whose sole and exclusive motive seems to be making political capital out of the general suspicions that exist among ethnic groups and turning that suspicion into support of a particular political cabal, but the lay followers of that school of thought are as guilty in flaming communal fires.
Unlike other religions, Buddhism does not revolve around a rigid
hierarchical system in the order of the clergy. At the pace temples are
springing up at almost every street corner in the urban areas and every
culvert in the rural hamlets, a foreign visitor may wonder how religious
the average Sri Lankan is.
An old woman, whose children have gone away after marriage to their own
homes, who is attending to the needs of the temple and its caretaker
Monk, who is waking up each morning with the first rays of the sun and
picks out the jasmine flowers in her own humble homestead to offer to
the shrine in her one-room home, is lost in a maze of uncomfortable
choices.
Her universe has become substantially small; it has shrunk to the size
of her immediate environment; even her immediate family is outside her
little universe now. But her faith in the Dharma has grown; it has grown
with each passing day not because she is beginning to understand the
nuanced incomprehensible ‘Abhidharma’ but for her fear of losing time
with its passage on her own age.
Whether this old woman is at the threshold of attaining a blissful state
of a sublime mind or not, her blind faith in the Dharma keeps her from
doing any harm to another individual.
An iota of that faith is worth a thousand sermons preached by a corrupt
monk. It is that faith that has been desecrated by these hoodlums in
saffron.
Such crude violation of man’s faith in a religion is a mortal sin. While
I, the writer, am unwaveringly opposed to what Indian thinker, Jiddu
Krishnamurthy called ‘organised religion’.
The traditional ‘custodians’ of the Teachings of ‘Tathāgata’, the
Buddhist clergy, though not so rigidly regimented like Catholicism or
the Anglican Church, are increasingly looking antagonistic towards other
faiths and embracing the ‘fundamentalist’ character of Buddhism; such
tolerance of perverted versions of the Dharma is utterly ‘un -Buddhist’
in the least and is dangerously debasing the core teachings.
Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara is conducting himself in the most disgraceful
manner; his guile and the very persona that is reflecting that guile do
not seem to have been scrutinised and investigated in a sensible and
acceptable way by the Nayake Theras of ‘organised Buddhism’. What is
particularly harmful to the notion of sublimity of this great philosophy
is when such a hoodlum pretends to be a sacred one in a yellow robe
pontificating to gullible yet wholly faithful followers, while in his
own lifestyle alleged to be far from the sacrosanct quality of
Buddhism.
The core teachings of Buddha is not in danger; it was never in danger
for such an unassailable teaching cannot be erased from the memory of
man, nor could it be corrupted by mere mortals whose worth is not
comparable even to the dust and soil the Great Teacher trampled upon.
What is being corrupted and defiled is the popular version of the
philosophy that is catering for the millions of followers and thereby
making it incomparable to the core values and morals of Buddhism.
Karuna (Loving-kindness), Metta (Compassion), Mudita (Sympathetic Joy)
and Upekkha (Equanimity) seem to have had no influence over these monks
who have chosen to lead the lay public along a destructive path of hate
and vengeance.
When yellow-robed charlatans desecrate the minds of the lay public,
greedy and opportunistic politicians gather around these hapless men and
women like hyenas gather around a prey made immovable and helpless by a
cruel predator.
The lamentable tale of human misery continues in the most sordid manner.
Public at large do not seem to care. They are not made aware of the
dastardly behaviour of the thugs in saffron; they are not informed of
the ruthless manner in which they accumulate wealth and power by way of
greedier politicians; they simply do not know the price of the whiskey
these robed thugs consume with roast chicken as a bite during the hours
after dusk.
In effect, the public so misinformed and misrepresented are the bite for
a hungry pack of political hyenas, who roam the jungle of politics in
Sri Lanka.
Re-emergence of the BBS is not imminent. Yet, the tirades of Galagoda
Aththe Gnanasara can be heard and felt. They say terrorism is an attempt
at Government by the nation-less.
They know no borders and they know no morals. Basic human principles
have been sacrificed in the name of the most scientific and rational
teachings man has ever known, Buddhism.
When yellow-robed charlatans desecrate the minds of the lay public, greedy and opportunistic politicians gather around these hapless men and women like hyenas that gather around a prey made immovable and helpless by a ferocious predator.
While those principles, precepts and deep philosophy would remain
untouched- for they are untouchable- the mundane man is gripped by the
wicked soldiers of the Senaas and Balakaayes.
Buddhism has been corrupted by the invasion of gods and demi-gods from
popular Hinduism; the sacred sanctity of the core and profound
philosophical principles of the universe and man have been lost in a
haze of superstition.
These gods have come to occupy our temples. What is even more harmful
and atrocious is the spoiling of the mind, the ultimate temple of man.
Matters of mind have been corrupted, soiled, debased and defiled by
these foreign elements of other religions. Mindless march of Aameesa
Pooja has overtaken the still, unspoiled, incorrupt and tranquil
Prathipatthi Pooja.
The mind of man that was primarily responsible for landing a man on the
moon; that was responsible for the wonder of modern age, computer and
the social media also made the most mindless and ruthless weapons man
has known, the atom and hydrogen bombs.
The environment created these demons or the demon created the
environment is the most inscrutable question for which an answer is
still a-begging.
A very few have had the courage of conviction to challenge the onslaught of the kinds of Gnanasara and other charlatans.
It is of paramount significance that the so-called Mahanayakes of the Malwatte and Asgiriya Chapters confront Gnanasara.
It is time we, as a nation and as sensible and reasonable men and women,
allocated precious time to find timely remedies for a malignant tumour
that is Gnanasara and his disgraceful clan.
In April 2014, under another pseudonym, I wrote in an open letter to the Mahanayakes thus:
“All you may be able to do is make an appeal. I fully realise that, in terms of the Order of the Buddha Sasana, individual monks are not subject to any hierarchical disciplinary action. But what would stop Your Reverence from making an appeal in the name of humanity, in the name of the Dharma that you are purported to protect and disseminate and in the name of the continuation of the Buddha Sasana? Standing in the middle doesn’t get you anywhere. You have to take the turn in the right direction.
It still rings true.
“All you may be able to do is make an appeal. I fully realise that, in terms of the Order of the Buddha Sasana, individual monks are not subject to any hierarchical disciplinary action. But what would stop Your Reverence from making an appeal in the name of humanity, in the name of the Dharma that you are purported to protect and disseminate and in the name of the continuation of the Buddha Sasana? Standing in the middle doesn’t get you anywhere. You have to take the turn in the right direction.
It still rings true.
The writer can be contacted at: Vishvamitra1984@gmail.com