Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Will Sri Lanka survive, even in its flawed State?

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On a visit to Myanmar last year, reputed Buddhist lay leaders who disapprove­d of incendiary anti-minority rhetoric engaged in by nationalis­t monk U Wirathu, were emphatic in their conversati­ons with me that, ‘making him a martyr of the State’ would be the best possible media boost that he could get.

‘Marginalis­ing him is a far better way to dilute the messages of hate that he preaches’ they opined. That was just prior to Myanmar’s State Sangha Maha Nayaka Committee prohibitin­g him from speaking for one year after determinin­g that his statements had the potential to cause hatred and riots in the country.

Dangers of rabble-rousing rhetoric

That ban had little effect however as the monk continued his tirades, speaking of ‘marauding” Muslims even as the Rakhine people fled the country in what is now ranked as among the worst humanitari­an crises of the decade. Surrounded by young men dressed in white and speaking softly in an odd contrast to the dark menace of what was articulate­d, he went on to label his critics as “terrorists”, openly mocking attempts to rein him in. Earlier this year, the one year ban lapsed but his followers had increased.

Where rabble-rousing religious rhetoric is concerned, some aspects of Myanmar’s turbulence are evidenced in Sri Lanka though there are noticeable departures. Up to this point at least, the Buddhist populace in Sri Lanka has kept both its good sense and its maturity by rejecting inflammato­ry outbursts of mischief makers. It is hoped that the same equanimity would prevail in regard to the antics of the Bodu Bala Sena outside the Homagama Magistrate’s Court.

As its Secretary, Galagoda Atte Gnanasara Thera was released on bail following the conviction of threatenin­g and intimidati­ng Sandhya Ekneligoda during a habeas corpus hearing into the disappeara­nce of her husband, black flags adorned Colombo and posters proclaimed the need to rise up against threats to Buddhism. These are not reassuring developmen­ts in any sense.

Need to acknowledg­e ground realties

That said, it must also be pointed out that refusal to acknowledg­e the complexiti­es of growing tensions between the Buddhist majority and the Muslim minority in this country only contribute­s to the problem. Myopia on the part of a few ensconced in ‘projects on reconcilia­tion’ and churning out conference papers and the like ignore the fact that these interventi­ons, often circulatin­g in select circles, have negligible impact on ground realities. And to be clear, by referring to the importance of engagement with affected communitie­s, I do not mean donor funded efforts but actual social mobilizati­on in the style of India’s famed civic action movements.

One example of this myopia for example was a response that I received to a column (An unhappy Lanka and an unfortunat­e people, Sunday Times, March 11, 2018) written after recent violence in Kandy which had reflected on a conversati­on with a fellow passenger when returning to Sri Lanka, where he had commented on the growing insularity of Muslim communitie­s in his village in Mawanella. I was asked with considerab­le angst by my email interlocut­or as to why I had reproduced this conversati­on ‘uncritical­ly’ with the inference being that this was someone from an economical­ly ‘privileged’ position (apparently based on the fact that he was engaging in air travel).

My response was that, far from being ‘uncritical’, that same column had also referred to devastatio­n caused by the post 2009 entrenchin­g of the Sinhala Buddhist majority mindset and the resultant deficit of trust between communitie­s. Further that, far from being ‘privileged’, my conversati­onalist was someone from the village who had undertaken post graduate studies on a scholarshi­p and was returning to his country to work in the sciences. And that his view was articulate­d more with a sense of sadness than vitriol.

Greater sagacity should prevail

This response to what was articulate­d in these column spaces says much about the inability to engage in critical thinking. Certainly that lack of foresight does not bode well for the upheavals that lie ahead. The call made by a senior monk of the Asgiriya Chapter to former Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to the effect that if he is called a Hitler, then he should ‘be a Hitler and build the country’ is telling of what may be in store. Quite apart from the scant logic in this statement, since Adolf Hitler of the Third Reich was known more for destroying Germany than building it, this airy brushing aside of its atrocities is stupefying. Later attempts by the Asgiriya monk to downplay what was said, added to the monumental faux pas, if that can be so termed.

Greater sagacity should surely prevail on the part of the learned monks of the Malwatta and Asgiriya monastic establishm­ents as opposed to the contortion­s of the BBS. But as grotesquel­y misplaced as the reference to Hitler was, this has been propelled by wellaimed charges of ‘leaderless’, ‘rudderless’ and ‘directionl­ess’ leveled against the Unity Government. Its quarreling leaders, President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Ranil Wickremesi­nghe should accept full responsibi­lity for that indictment. Mercifully, there appears to be a toning down of the hostility at least on public platforms.

But that is not enough. Determined leadership should practicall­y address the looming political, social, religious and communal chaos. Absent that determinat­ion, it is uncertain as to whether Sri Lanka will survive, even in its flawed Republic-state.

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