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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Ampitiye Sumane’s Slap Fell On The Civility Of The Sinhala Buddhists!
Ampitiye Sumana, the well- known saffron clad thug from
the East – rhymes aptly with Aggona Chandare and rightly so, in terms
of their behavioural strength – rowdism and thuggery. These days, he is
on the social media for having behaved like a street thug chasing out
like a ruffian, a Christian pastor and his evangelical group, in scant
regard to the rule of law. He was seen to slap another Christian
preacher asking an innocent question from him while the law enforcement
are looking helpless. Still, he is a cinema hero among many among his
like-minded followers who will whistle at his antics, and compliment him
for his rude and violent vitriolic behaviour towards other communities
including spitting out raw filth, contrary to the dignity of his robe.
The Police personnel are just spectators to his vile and criminal
behaviour. Who has given him the authority to take the law into his
hands and pass judgement? Where are the Mayanayakes of the Main Chapters
speaking out against this unruly behaviour on the part of this Saffron
thug, unbecoming of a Buddhist clergy, in contravention of the Vinaya
Pitaka? When will the Sinhala Buddhists of Sri Lanka take the likes of
most respected Ven Maduluwawe Sobitha Thero and Ven Galkande Dhammananda
Thero as their role models of Buddhist way of living? Aboo-dhassa
Kaaley- as it is said in Sinhala of these changing times to the worst!
Watch the video below:
If the pastor or any other person is commits a socially unacceptable act
or even a crime, it should be left to the law enforcement and the arm
of law to inquire into and act on the case. This trend of un-official
policing by this rogue monk, is nothing new as there are many videos in
the social media where he abuses Tamil speaking government officers and
even Police in raw filth, in the presence of even ladies. This type of
same behaviour happened some time ago in Trincomalee as well, when
another monk abused a Tamil lady too and the Police did not take any
action. As a community, it is incumbent upon all of us as Sinhala
Buddhists to put a stop to this type of rogue monk behaviour as it
undermines our faith and culture which reigned supreme for over 2500
years. Rather than basking on past glory, it is important that Sinhala
Buddhists make the peaceful message of Buddhism relevant to the current
times
These types of rogue sangha heroes have come out in numbers, after Gotabaya Rajapaksa (GR) swept to power in December, riding on the explosively emotive racist campaign, based on Sinhala Buddhist supremacism.
This fever wasn’t new as it initially took wings during the tenure of
office of his brother Mahinda with many hate groups cashing on the
triumphalism after the end of the war against the Tigers of the North.
At that time, temples decorated their walls with pictures of the
Rajapaksa brothers. Money flowed for radical Buddhist groups. BBS and
its sister groups started off a well-orchestrated hate campaign against
the Muslims who were living in harmony for over 1000 years with the
Sinhalese. It subsided during the initial period of Yahapalana rule,
only to rise from the phoenix to drive fear once again into the hearts
of the Muslims during that period too. The tempo of anti-Muslim hate
increased exponentially after the disastrous Easter Sunday. This hate
wave of course worked to the advantage of GR and Pohottuwa, as the
Saffron Brigade exploited it to stir a Sinhala Buddhist majoritarian
consciousness among the Sinhala peasants to bring a ‘Sinhala Buddhist
king’ to power, towards establishing a Sinhala Buddhist State, along the
same lines Modi chose to create a Hindutva India.
Today, with (almost) a fully Sinhalized cabinet and a civil
administration team, the whole State machinery is much active in this
direction. Moves are afoot that National Anthem will only be sung in
Sinhala. If true, this is a sad development as it will once again
further polarize the nation. As Colvin R De Silva said : one language- two nations and two languages- one nation.
For some unknown reason , perhaps strategically until the Parliamentary
elections, there is a lull in all Muslim hate activities and program
of action such as canards about sterilization through Wanda Pethi,
brassieres, underwear and stories ‘Shafi’
tactics with regard to making Sinhala Pregnant women infertile, have
all been put on hold. Even Tamil extremist activities in the North such
as commemoration of death of Tiger cadres and desecration of statues of
Sinhala kings and Queens are not been given publicity. Hiru and Adha
Derana are very selective of the news they carry! Any possible Sinhala
Buddhist politician deemed as a threat to GR’s political destiny is
being mercilessly subdued even leading to intra-conflicts within the
Sangha community; Patali was one such victim.
Other saffron clad experts and thugs have also once again hit the
streets of Sri Lanka. Ven Medatissa for example held a press conference
recently about a booklet about sex education written by subject experts,
alongside a monk who had charges of child abuse involving a samanera.
These monks did not object to degeneration of morals by the TV stations
through telecasting semi nude clad women dancing and Indian Teledramas.
Saffron thugs like (Ven) Gnanasaras, Ittekandes and Dayaratnes, Ampitiye
Sumanas and the likes (calling them as Venerable is an insult to
Buddhism) are in an upbeat mood, assuming their past un-official
policing roles, and in their own ways undertaking raids and pointing
fingers. Some are announcing the dismantling their hate outfits, in the
light of the accomplishment of their mission of forming a ‘Sinhala
State’. These Devadhaththas are insulting and destroying the essence of
the peaceful message of the Gauthama Buddha, which we hold in highest
regard.
In Sri Lanka, it is shame that Sinhala people, who are the inheritors of
the values of Theravada Buddhism, incited by some rogue radical monks,
have entered an era of militant tribalism. Thereby they, and
particularly their leaders, are betraying the Buddhist value of
non-violence, let alone kindness and compassion. Many analysts cite
changing socio-political trends for the radicalization of the Buddhist
monks in Sri Lanka. While many monks uphold values of inclusivism, peace
and non-violence, more radical groups became increasingly influential
with the electoral victory of a Sinhala nationalist government in the
1950s. It attained a new high during Rajapaksa’s regime in Post-war Sri
Lanka and ecstatic peak after the victory of GR. To find the underlying
causes of this violence, one need only look at the changing position of
the Buddhist clergy in Sri Lankan society. Over the last several
decades, Sri Lanka’s traditional Buddhist leadership, composed of nearly
30,000 monks has become more fractured and more political. The
dismantling of the Buddhist hierarchy coupled with a shortage of
material resources encouraged many monks to embrace radicalism. There is
no control of the young monks too by those in authority. Vinaya Pitaka
is a non-starter. Monks tend to embrace a more radical message. The
effect of this has been a general increase in both the radicalism and
political activism advocated by monks. Controversies over the role of
Buddhist monks in society have circled around their involvement in
political parties.
Many hate groups such as BBS, Sinhala ravaya, Ravana Balaya and even
Pohottuwa-linked, Abharayarama temple-based rogue Sangha groups and even
communal parties such as JHU and Pivithuru Hela Urumaya are internally
divided and composed of monks seeking individual notoriety by appealing
to the ethnic insecurities of their base. Their fodder today is anti-Muslim hate.
These organizations are evidence of the extent to which the Buddhist
religious economy has become a free market dominated by entrepreneurs
whose fortunes are limited only by their radicalism and rhetorical
skills. Faced with a resource deficit and the autonomy to preach as they
please, Sri Lanka’s Buddhist clergy have both the means and the motive
to promote radical anti-minority rhetoric. The island’s political
environment will continue to reward such rhetoric as long as competition
among Buddhist monks is encouraged by a “free market” approach to
religious leadership. Alternatively, should political actors move to
undo the fragmentation of the sangha, the competitive incentives so
important for encouraging anti-minority violence could be curtailed.