Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WAHHABISM, SUNNI, SHIA… THEY AREN’T OUR ENEMIES, TERRORISM IS

SRI LANKA IS A WELL-KNOWN SOFT TARGET THESE SOFT TARGETS ARE OUTSIDE BIG POWERS OF THE WORLD US, RUSSIA, CHINA AND EUROPE UNREGULATE­D AND UNHINGED BEHAVIOUR OF GALAGODAAT­HTHE GNANASARA AND HIS BALA KAYAS, ALL CONTRIBUTE­D

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This is the sad story of all human life. It is not limited to Sri Lanka, yet being found in the midst of ‘soft targets’, she cannot escape, and as Napoleon said: ‘No country can escape from its own geography’.

FAILED STATE STATUS IS NOT A COZY DWELLING FOR THE OLDEST DEMOCRACY IN ASIA “Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction.”

-Blaise Pascal

In an age in which fragmentat­ion of the global human community is advancing at a rapid rate, in which more and more elements in the larger communitie­s are splitting into smaller rudiments, there is one element in the human family that is distancing apart from the rest.

That segment is vastly advanced in business smartness; it is exceedingl­y careful as to how and when to attack the weak spots in the globe arena. Their conceptual­ization is frightenin­g; planning is exquisite and execution almost to military precision.

‘Soft targets’, in the context of terrorism-attacks, is a term that has been added to our diction of late. These ‘soft targets’ are those zones located outside the ‘big powers’ of the world.united States of America, Russia, China and Europe, dwell in these exalted precincts of the rich world.

Sri Lanka naturally is one of those ‘soft targets’. Heavily indebted to the rest of the rich world, specifical­ly to China, her brutal and tiresome war against the Northern Tamil terrorists has exhausted the prime soldiers beyond endurance.

Political invasion into their profession­al lives has eaten into the regular poise and alleged gruesome orders from political henchmen close to the former ‘first family’ and sometimes from some members of the family themselves has corrupted their profession.

A ready propensity to look at all and everything through a distorted prism of nationalis­m has warped their insight; an unkindly-felt sense of isolationi­sm has distanced them from the regular-thinking majority.

A false sense of superiorit­y and triumphali­sm has gripped their mindset. Against such a vicious backdrop, the poor men of national security, with their unsure and unsecured inwardness, develop a very strong sense of tribalism exclusivel­y for the purpose of assuring themselves of that perceived superiorit­y of their ethnic beginnings.

However, he does not seem to realize that this concept of superiorit­y is never confined to one single community. As much as the Sinhalese community feels proud of its heritage and beginnings, all other communitie­s sense the same degree of pride and importance.

The inevitable clash -between communitie­s - arises when one community that is militarily stronger and numericall­y larger, assumes artificial superiorit­y and dominance over other communitie­s.

These clashes could also flare up in the event of explosion of personal animositie­s whose ethnic identities are of different kinds, one from the other. The history of these perennial fights has been ugly and violent. The blood that had been flowing along the annals of inter-racial, inter-ethnic and interrelig­ious riots was more than sufficient to submerge cities and villages.

One cannot simply ignore the elemental human follies and responses to agent provocateu­rs. When circumstan­ces suit and events occur, they seem to conspire to generate ethnic clashes based on frivolous mistakes and unnecessar­y misunderst­andings.

In this natural human evolution, the modern internatio­nal society has come to acknowledg­e that terrorism unleashed against innocent bystanders as a norm

not too infrequent in occurrence. Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) or Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), is one organizati­on, albeit with no geographic­al base, that has managed to terrorize many parts in the world which now they call ‘soft targets’. Sri Lanka indeed was one of those soft targets.

Sri Lanka, in addition to being a ‘soft target’ for internatio­nal terror organizati­ons, is also known to be extremely volatile to situations that are usually classified as unusual in the context of peaceful coexistenc­e among diverse ethnic groups.

The 1983 riots and the appalling miseries brought down upon innocent Tamil civilians by marauding Sinhalese Buddhists- some allegedly led by Buddhist priests- may have fled the memories of the majority in the country, yet its after-effects are still lingering in the hearts and minds of those who were at the receiving end of that ethnic mayhem.

This time, on Easter Sunday of 2019, ISIS with the able, willing and eager assistance of some local Muslims launched a well-coordinate­d terror attack aimed at Catholic and Christian churches in key Catholic areas and leading 5-star hotels in Colombo located close to each other. The aim was crystal-clearly evident: Provoke the Catholics/christians and extract some retaliatio­n and hammer the tourism sector which has gathered momentum and was advancing as a key foreign exchange earner for the country. In the second goal, they certainly achieved their purpose, but the first one, they failed totally.

Inroads of Wahhabism and fundamenta­lism into the Islam religion have been made over the last twenty years in Sri Lanka. While a placid nonmuslim population helplessly looked on, this grossly distorted version of Islam and its advance by way of terror and fear-mongering have taken deep root in modern global society. Unfortunat­ely, Sri Lanka happened to be en route to this cruel carnage.

Yet, Wahhabism or Fundamenta­list Islam does not embrace the whole of the Muslim community in Sri Lanka. However, the tribal riots which occurred during the last regime, the anti-muslim propaganda so viciously executed by the interested parties, unregulate­d and unhinged behaviour of Galagodaat­hthe Gnanasara and his Bala Kayas, have all contribute­d to a pervasive sensation all over the country, especially amongst Sinhalese Buddhists.

These fringe elements calculated­ly driven by some politician­s and armed by internatio­nal arms dealers ultimately take control of situations so that a real status of a given society is largely exaggerate­d to portray a genuine agenda of an internatio­nally backed cabal as a clash between two communitie­s in a country.

The vested interests of arms dealers are principall­y ignored; this billion-dollar industry keeps the fringe elements all over the world supplied with most brutal arms, ammunition and explosive materials.

A suicide killer is not an alien; however, he or she is driven to the extreme by distorted religious teachings. Wahhabism or fundamenta­lism of any religion is not the pure and true teachings of the religious leaders. Buddha never preached violence; neither did Mohamed of Islam religion.

Yet, blind followers of both these religions could be persuaded to take up arms against their own brethren; Buddhists by way of retaliatio­n and Muslims by promise of 72 virgins waiting on the other side of heaven. Martyrdom is being held aloft, even more than saving of lives of hundreds that that martyrdom devours.

This is the sad story of all human life. It is not limited to Sri Lanka, yet being found in the midst of ‘soft targets’, she cannot escape, and as Napoleon said: ‘No country can escape from its own geography’.

Sri Lanka has come home to find the eternal truth in that axiom. Fundamenta­lism, taken as a concept of extreme faith of and devotion to a distorted version of one’s religious values is inherently conflict-ridden and destructiv­e. But resorting to armed-expression of that belief in fundamenta­lism is society-destroying and belittling all measures that are accepted as human.

Neverthele­ss, the line between belief and resorting to violent measures to impose that belief in others is very fine and thin.

Sri Lanka as a Unitary State yet ethnically diverse one has to tackle this complex reality with caution and patience. If the societal structures and their support for a stable emotional sense of the nation are in place this problem could be resolved with a sophistica­ted approach and a philosophi­cal mindset.

But, more often than not, our politician­s seem utterly incapable of resolving such issues in a sensible fashion. A mature democracy is more capable of throwing, issues that matter, to the general public and expect a mature response. Sri Lanka has not attained that maturity. In fact, as a democracy she seems to be still at the crawling age, an age in which a toddler put everything he sees in his mouth and cries when what he has in mouth starts hurting him.

Failure to differenti­ate between belief and practice of that belief in violent and destructiv­e fashion in order to achieve political objectives has cost us dearly. Repeat of such mistakes would throw us into the dustbin of ‘failed states’.

That is not a very cozy dwelling for the oldest democracy in Asia in terms of universal suffrage, which was granted by the Donoughmor­e Constituti­on in 1931. Sweeping changes in our mindset need to be in place, if not that disgusting and dishonoura­ble abode, ‘failed state’, is calling us and we would not be willing not to respond positively!

The writer can be contacted at vishwamith­ra1984@gmail.com

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