Is Muslim identity a liability in Sri Lanka ? Rising attacks - TopicsExpress



          

Is Muslim identity a liability in Sri Lanka ? Rising attacks against Muslims by Buddhist supremacist groups raise questions about community ’ s safety . Never again 1983 ! Sri Lankans had so resolved after the horrors of the July 1983 - the darkest and the bloodiest month in the island nation s post - independence history, the month that plunged this country into a 26- year separatist war, the month that brought an international shame on the South Asian country. Even when Buddhism s holiest shrine in Sri Lanka - the Temple of the Tooth , the Buddhist equivalent of Muslim Mecca - was bombed by the separatist terrorists , the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam ( LTTE) in 1998, the Sinhalese, who account for 74 percent of the countrys population , restrained themselves despite widespread anger. Their patience in the face of the provocation was a shining example of what Buddhism had taught. They thwarted the terrorists plan to trigger a Sinhala - Buddhist backlash against the country s Tamils who make up 12 percent of the population , and thereby winning the worlds support in the fight against the LTTEs armed rebellion for a separate state. The Sinhala Buddhist magnanimity was also evident when they celebrated the war victory in May 2009. No Tamil was harmed by the jubilant Sinhala people. Against this backdrop , the anti - Muslim mob violence this week in three coastal towns in the country s southwest appears to be an attempt to tarnish Buddhisms image as a philosophy of non -violence . Ironically, a Buddhist extremist group called Bodu Bala Sena ( BBS) - meaning the army of the Buddhist power - led by ethno-fascist monks is in the forefront of the violence . The very name of the group runs counter to the four sublime states the Buddha wanted his followers to manifest : Love or loving-kindness ( metta in Pali) , compassion (karuna ) , sympathetic joy (mudita ) and equanimity (upekkha) . My Buddhist friends who watched the video clip containing the speech the BBSs de facto chief Galagoda - Atte Gnanasara made hours before the mob attack on Muslims in Aluthgama , Dharga town and Beruwala were livid. They said: How could he call himself a Buddhist monk? They could not understand why the police did not arrest him on a charge of spreading hate speech that drugged thousands of his followers to go on a rampage and attack Muslim houses, businesses and mosques in areas not far from the place where the first Muslim Arab traders landed in the eighth century AD. My Tamil friends were equally upset . They said they could understand the Muslim anger, fear and pain as this week s riots rekindled their memories of July 1983 . One of them said she had felt for the first time in her life the pain of fear and being alienated when mobs came hunting for Tamils . Another related his story of how his Colombo house was burnt to ashes and how he and his family ran to a nearby Hindu temple to save their lives and lived there with little or no food among thousands of other Tamils for several days.
Posted on: Sun, 22 Jun 2014 08:33:30 +0000

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