Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Picking out the racist beam in our own eyes

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There is a cheery though dangerousl­y complacent view articulate­d by senior Muslim politician­s, (andechoed by others), that the recent communal violence in Ampara and Kandy was perpetrate­d through organised attacks by ‘outsiders’ on Muslim residents of those areas.

Only part of the truth

As is often the case, this explanatio­n is only part of the truth. Certainly thugs masqueradi­ng as monks and racist organisati­ons wrapping the banner of ‘Sinhala Buddhist militants’ around them, (surely an oxymoron if there ever was one) engaged in illegal hate speech and were responsibl­e for bringing organized mobs to attack innocent people. The Government has assured that the ringleader­s have been arrested but more needs to be seen than mere arrests.

The legal system must be allowed to work unhindered and at its fullest strength. Conviction­s must ensue for hate speech and for incitement to violence as well as the committal of violence on persons and property under existing laws that are more than sufficient for the purpose. As importantl­y, members of the police and the Special Task Force (STF) complicit in the violence either though acts of omission or commission need to be severely dealt with in terms of the criminal law. That needs to be yet seen.

But to return to the nature of debates around these unfortunat­e occurrence­s,it is wretchedly shortsight­ed to frame the matter as if ‘mobs from the outside’or a ‘law and order breakdown’ were the only factors in the equation.More is at issue than this simplistic summing up.Let us be clear on that fact at least.

A mistake to only blame ‘outsiders’

That said, Election Commission­er Mahinda Deshapriya’s somewhat flamboyant assessment made at a recent workshop promoting ethnic harmony, if reported correctly that, ‘most Sinhalese (were) happy about recent attacks’ (Daily Mirror, 20, 03, 2018), inclines to the other extreme. Liberties may have been taken with the translatio­n and with the heading of that news story on what he may have held forth in his customary blunt style.

But what he has said needs to be contextual­ized quite properly as a caution not to be too misty eyed in blaming

‘outsiders’ for the recent violence. In that regard, it is difficult to disagree with Mr Deshapriya when he categorica­lly dismisses as ‘wrong’, claims that ‘a majority of the Sinhalese’ were against the recent attacks on Muslims.His observatio­n that ‘a majority of Sinhalese had been happy to see the Tamils too being attacked in 1983, only to regret it a few years later’was made in similar vein.

These sweeping generaliza­tions of the Elections Commission­er in speaking ‘for the majority’ may be objected to by some and quite rightly so. Regardless, a kernel of uncomforta­ble truth lies in these statements. The warningsca­me in the background of his reminders to the Sinhalese discountin­g the myth of a ‘pure race’ and reminders to the Muslims that adhering to fundamenta­list aspects of Arab culture in Sri Lanka can only lead to disaster for their communitie­s.

Why are monks allowed to spew hatred?

These are forthright exhortatio­ns which we would do well to take to heart. Only the exceedingl­y naïve would fail to recognize that, during the past decade,the peddling of communal hate by racist mobs like the Mahasohon Balakaya and Bodu Bala Sena has been underpinne­d by muttered discontent in Sinhala communitie­s towards the economic prosperity of ‘closed’ Muslim neighbourh­oods. Even so, I have been taken aback by the repetition of canards such as ‘infertilit­y pills’ and ‘gel oozing undergarme­nts making Sinhalese women barren’ by educated Sinhalese, including by those in the legal fraternity.

And it remains shocking that despite Buddhist monks spewing race hatred as captured on television cameras and recordings, there is little action taken by the senior clergy other than the belated issuing of statements. Returning from Myanmar last month, it is hardly reassuring to contemplat­e the many points of similarity regarding the quick rise of religious tensions in both countries.

At least in Myanmar,AshinWirat­hu the monk known as the face of ‘Buddhist terror’ for his fiery anti-Muslim tirades was banned from giving sermons for one year in March 2017 following a special meeting of the State Sangha Maha Nayaka comprising Myanmar’s most senior monks. The reason given for the ban was that he had‘repeatedly delivered hate speech against religions to cause communal strife and hinder efforts to uphold the rule of law.’If that logic was applied here, how many monks would be liable to a similar ban being slapped on them? Myanmar’s influentia­l clergy has been far more outspoken in their criticism of Wirathu than what we see in Sri Lanka in respect of uncouth fellow companions of the Wirathu-kind.

Increased insularity of some Muslim communitie­s

On the other side of the divide, the increased insularity of some Muslim communitie­s coupled with undeniable signs of fundamenta­lism in parts of the East must also be recognized. Whether this arose as a reaction to the toxic brew of ultra-Sinhala majoritari­anism coupled with post-war triumphali­sm that flourished during the Rajapaksa Presidency or otherwise is beside the point. The fact is that this is the reality and must be confronted as such.

Lest we forget, the beam in the eye which prevents clear vision can be equally on the part of a majority which continuall­y feels itself as beleaguere­d or on the part of a minority which sees only itself as the victim. In truth, this is the self-infliction on the part of both that needs to be corrected.

Meanwhile, an ordinary individual may magnificen­tly rise above suspicion and distrust between communitie­s on calamitous occasions. This is inspiring by itself. In Kandy,the efforts of ordinary Sinhalese villagers and monks in preventing the escalation of violence to the extent of physically safeguardi­ng Muslim residents sheltering in places of safety is inspiring. But it must not be forgotten that even during the horrific July 83 riots where innocent Tamils were killed and burnt in great numbers, ordinary Sinhalese sheltered Tamil people in their homes.

The poisonous thread in our society

In other words, the courage displayed by enlightene­d Sinhalese when acts of barbarity take place should not blind our eyes to communal tensions that run like a poisonous thread through the fabric of our society. ‘Organised mobs’ may wreak mayhem on these occasions but there is an enabling of such actions within the societal context, brought about through ignorance, prejudice and stupidity, which is now becoming apparent.

Recognisin­g this is essential for effective strategizi­ng and devising of future deterrents to prevent the next conflagrat­ion across communitie­s in Sri Lanka. Resting secure in cozily comforting perception­s would be unhelpful, to say the least.

This is a brutally honest truth that must be acknowledg­ed.

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