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Fracturing Community: Intra-group Relations Among the Muslims of Sri Lanka

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Abstract

Ethno-religious violence has a long history in Sri Lanka dating far back as 1883. The Muslims of Sri Lanka have been victims of sporadic attacks by the Sinhalese and Tamil majorities since the early 1900s with the most recent attack being in 2014. While the recent turn towards violence against the Muslim community in Sri Lanka can be attributed to the “ethno-nationalist rivalries” (McGilvray 2011) of the Sinhala Buddhist (political) majority of Sri Lanka, this paper hypothesises that anti-Muslim sentiments are also a result of the internal conflicts regarding the practice of Islam within the Muslim community. These conflicts, manifested in the form of visible, symbolic Islamisation, cause suspicion and fear among members of other communities.
Fracturing Community:
Intra-group relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
Ethno-religious violence has a long history in Sri Lanka dating far back as 1883.
The Muslims of Sri Lanka have been victims of sporadic attacks by the
Sinhalese and Tamil majorities since the early 1900s with the most recent
attack being in 2014. While the recent turn towards violence against the Muslim
community in Sri Lanka can be attributed to the “ethno-nationalist rivalries”
(McGilvray 2011) of the Sinhala Buddhist (political) majority of Sri Lanka, this
paper hypothesises that anti-Muslim sentiments are also a result of the
internal conflicts regarding the practice of Islam within the Muslim community.
These conflicts, manifested in the form of visible, symbolic Islamisation, cause
suspicion and fear among members of other communities.
This study examines intra-religious relations within the Muslim community of
Sri Lanka by identifying the different Islamic groups, their composition,
motivations and interactions through the lens of social movement theory.
Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam are Programme Officers at the
International Centre for Ethnic Studies
8016907895559
ISBN 978-955-580-169-0
MOHAMED FASLAN & NADINE VANNIASINKAM
Fracturing Community
Intra-group Relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam
International Centre for Ethnic Studies
November 2015
© 2015 International Centre for Ethnic Studies
2, Kynsey Terrace, Colombo 08
Sri Lanka
E-mail: admin@ices.lk
URL: www.ices.lk
ISBN 978-955-580-169-0
This research paper was commissioned as part of the Building Resilient
Communities initiative implemented by ICES with support from USAID.
Cover Artwork by Mohamed Kedhr
ICES Research Papers:
1. The Transition to Civilian Life of Teenage Girls and Young Women Ex-Combatants: A Case Study
from Batticaloa (June, 2012) by Sonny Inbaraj Krishnan. Research Paper No: 1.
2. Producing the Present: History as Heritage in Post-War Patriotic Sri Lanka (July, 2012) by Nira
Wickramasinghe. Research Paper No: 2.
3. Reconciling What? History, Realism and the Problem of an Inclusive Sri Lankan Identity (August,
2012) by Harshana Rabukwella. Research Paper No: 3.
4. The Promise of the LLRC: Women’s Testimony and Justice in post- war Sri Lanka (February,
2013) by Neloufer de Mel. Research Paper No: 4.
5. A Provisional Evaluation of the Contribution of the Supreme Court to Political Reconciliation in
Post- War Sri Lanka (May 2009- August 2012) (March, 2013) by Dinesha Samararatne. Research
Paper No: 5.
6. Victorious Victims: An Analysis of Sri Lanka’s Post- War Reconciliation Discourse (March, 2013)
by Andi Schubert. Research Paper No: 6.
7. The Political Economy of Post War Sri Lanka (May, 2013) by Sunil Bastian. Research Paper No:
7.
8. ‘Post-War Sri Lanka: Is Peace a Hostage of the Military Victory? Dilemmas of Reconciliation,
Ethnic Cohesion and Peace- Building (June, 2013) by Gamini Keerawella, Research Paper No: 8.
9. ‘History’ After the War: Historical Consciousness in the Collective Sinhala Buddhist Psyche in
Post-War Sri Lanka (July, 2013) by Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri. Research Paper No: 9.
10. ‘What Lessons Are We Talking About? Reconciliation and Memory in Post- Civil War Sri Lankan
Cinema (August, 2013) by Dinidu Karunanayake and Thiyagaraja Waradas. Research Paper No:
10.
11. ‘A History of Tamil Diaspora Politics In Canada: Organisational Dynamics and Negotiated Order,
1978- 2013 (November, 2013) by Amaranath Amarasingam. Research Paper No: 11.
12. ‘Contextualizing Post-War Reconciliation in Sri Lanka: The Political Economy of Territorial
Control in Historical Perspective (June, 2014) by Charan Rainford. Research Paper No: 11.
13. ‘Competing For Victimhood Status: Northern Muslims And The Ironies Of Post- War
Reconciliation, Justice And Development (July, 2014) by Farzana Haniffa. Research Paper No:
13.
14. Ethical Reconstruction? Primitive Accumulation in the Apparel Sector of Eastern Sri Lanka
(October, 2014) by Annelies Goger and Kanchana N. Ruwanpura Research Paper No: 14.
15. Self, religion, identity and politics: Buddhist and Muslim encounters in contemporary Sri Lanka
(November, 2015) by Dhammika Herath and Harshana Rambukwella.
Fracturing Community
Intra-group Relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam*
*Mohamed Faslan is a programme officer for the project Building Resilient Communities at
the International Centre for Ethnic Studies. He has also been a visiting lecturer in Political
Science at the University of Colombo since 2009. He has a MA and BA (Hons) in Political
Science from the University of Colombo. He has almost eight years’ experience working in
the field of peace and conflict resolution, human rights and media.
Nadine Vanniasinkam is a programme officer at the International Centre for Ethnic Studies
and works on an initiative that promotes inter-religious coexistence in Sri Lanka. She is also a
visiting lecturer at the Post Graduate Institute of English at the Open University of Sri Lanka.
Nadine has a BA (Hons) in English Literature from the University of Colombo, a LLB and a
MA in Applied Linguistics from the University of Melbourne.
Acknowledgments
We are deeply grateful to all the interviewees from Batticaloa, Ampara, Puttlam and
Colombo for graciously welcoming us into their homes/workplaces and devoting several
hours for discussion. Our special thanks are also due to friends in Batticaloa for coordinating
interviews and ensuring that we met representatives of all the different Muslim groups in
these locations.
We also express our thanks to our colleagues at ICES for their feedback and constant support
and to Samsath Begum who helped us with transcribing the lengthy interviews.
Acronyms and Abbreviations
ACJU All Ceylon Jammiyathul Ulama
ACTJ All Ceylon Thawheed Jamath
BBS Bodu Bala Sena
CIS Centre for Islamic Studies
IIRO International Islamic Relief Organisation
IRO Islamic Research Organisation
JASM Jamathul Ansari Sunnathul Muslimeen
MC Muslim Council
MFCD Muslim Foundation for Culture and Development
NSC National Shoora Council
NTJ National Thawheed Jamath
SLMC Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
SLTJ Sri Lanka Thawheed Jamath
SMT Social Movement Theory
TNTJ Tamil Nadu Thawheed Jamath
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Scope and Methodology
4. The Muslim Identity in Sri Lanka A Historical Perspective
5. The Splintering of the Muslim Community of Sri Lanka
6. Religion as Political Opportunity to Mobilise
7. Islamic Reformist Movements in Sri Lanka
8. The Politics of Factionalism
9. The Economics of Factionalism
10. Implications of Intra-Group Fragmentation
11. Conclusion
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1
Fracturing Community: Intra-group Relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
Religion is a socio-political construct which is characterised by dissent and diversity on the
basis of theological interpretation, religious practice and administration. These differences
may sometimes peacefully coexist, but most often can cause intra-religious tensions leading
to conflict. Islam is no exception as it is characterised by pluralism where interpretation,
practice and governance vary across regions, nations and communities. In Sri Lanka, the
minority Muslim community is largely considered (by the majority communities) as a
religiously homogeneous group when, in fact, they are splintered into various denominations
which espouse different interpretations of Islam, values and practices. This ignorance of the
plurality within the Muslim community and its internal politics could be a contributing factor
to much of the prejudices held by individuals against the community.
In recent times, difference has been a source of conflict among certain Muslim groups in Sri
Lanka, resulting in public clashes and sometimes even leading to death. Furthermore, the
‘performance’ of difference among Muslim groups, visible in the form of jubbas, hijabs,
niqabs, beards and the increasing number of mosques, has created an illusion of an increase
in the Muslim population, adding to the fear and suspicion of the majority towards the
motives of the Muslim community and its ‘repressive’ culture. These individual prejudices
have in turn been manipulated by extremist nationalist groups like the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS)
to incite hatred towards and violence against the Muslim community.
Historically, the Muslims have faced violence from both the Sinhala and Tamil communities.
Anti-Muslim violence dates back to the 1900s, the earliest recorded being the riots in 1915
which was spurred by Buddhist ethno-nationalist fears of Muslims’ business prowess
(International Crisis Group 2007; Nuhuman 2002). In 1976, clashes between Sinhalese and
Muslims over jobs and land resulted in the shooting of several Muslims in Puttalam. Muslims
were brutally evacuated from the North and North-East by the LTTE in 1990. In 1999,
Muslim shops in Nochchiyagama were attacked (among other small incidents), in 2001
Muslims in Mawanella were attacked by a Sinhalese mob resulting in the death of two
Muslims and damage to vehicles and property and in 2006 Muslim shops were burnt in
Aluthgama. In a brutal reenactment of the 1915 riot 100 years ago, Muslims of Aluthgama
were again targeted by Buddhist extremists in 2014 resulting in death and damage to
2
property. Many sporadic small-scale clashes have also taken place between these periods, but
this information needs to be recorded in a single document and made accessible.
Despite the obvious political backing and the “ethno-nationalist rivalries” (McGilvray 2011)
of extremist Buddhist nationalists being behind most of the major incidents of violence
against Muslims, it remains a fact that a majority of Sinhalese and Tamil communities
harbour prejudices and misconceptions about the Muslim community, and this contributes to
the ease with which hate speech, false accusations and ‘myths’ about Muslims are spread and
accepted as ‘truth’. In fact, even the 1915 riot is attributed to the myths or rumours about
Muslims that were planted, embellished and disseminated throughout the country and easily
believed by the masses (Kannangara 1984).
Today, much of society’s prejudices stem from the Muslim community’s increased use of the
religious identity markers mentioned above. Linked to this is the increasing number of new
mosques and the attendant fear that Muslims, by increasing their numbers, are conspiring to
overthrow the Sinhala Buddhist majority. While this illusion of the increase of Muslims in Sri
Lanka can be attributed to the global narrative of Islamaphobia, it can also be the result of
what McGilvray (2011) observes as the “sharp internal conflicts” regarding the practice of
Islam among the Muslims of Sri Lanka which are visually characterised by symbolic
‘Islamisation’ or ‘self-othering’ among certain Muslim groups, primarily in the form of
Arabic dress, erection of new mosques and clashing publicly over internal theological
disputes. It is this that has made Muslims more ‘visible’ (McGilvray 2011) whereby their
‘new’ ‘presence’ is viewed with fear and suspicion.
This study also upholds the view that much of these misconceptions are due to the largely private
nature of Muslim communities whereby others are ignorant of the practices and beliefs which
dictate their lifestyles. Therefore, the aim of this study is to explain this ‘visibility (mentioned
above) and to explore what exactly is happening within the Muslim community. The assumption
is that the ‘new’ presence of and factionalism among Muslims in Sri Lanka is due to a (long-
standing) Islamic revival characterised by disputes regarding the practice of Islam.
Few studies have been conducted on the intra-religious dynamics of Muslim groups in Sri
Lanka and almost all of them have situated the Muslim minority within the context of Sri
Lanka’s 30-year ethnic conflict and in relation to their Tamil and Sinhalese majorities
3
(Spencer et al. 2015). The Muslim identity in Sri Lanka has also been a subject of several
studies primarily from a historical and anthropological perspective. Muslim scholars such as
Nuhuman (2004) and Shukri (1986) and Indian and local scholars such as Mohan (1987) and
Samaraweera (1986) have conducted macro analyses tracing the history of Muslims in Sri
Lanka and commenting on the identity of this community in relation to its larger socio-
political others. Over the past two decades, anthropologists Dennis McGilvray and Bart Klem
have engaged in micro analyses of individual Muslim communities, particularly in the East,
and their relationship with their immediate other the Tamils and how the ethnic conflict
impacted the Muslim identity. Haniffa (2013) has also examined the practices of a reformist
Muslim women’s group in Colombo. While this body of literature provides a rich and
nuanced understanding of the history and identity of Muslims in Sri Lanka, little (except for
Spencer et al., Bart Klem’s and Dennis McGilvray’s anthropological studies in the East) has
been written about relations within the Muslim community.
While acknowledging the symbiotic nature of the relationship between the Muslim identity
and the Tamil and Sinhalese majority identities, this paper posits the argument that, in post-
conflict Sri Lanka, the Tamils of the North and East and the Sinhalese majority are no longer
the sole ‘others’ of the Muslim community. The increase in different groups and sub-groups
within the Muslim community since the 1950s has resulted in the splintering of the Muslim
community, whereby Muslims have become their own ‘other’. This has hitherto been
overshadowed by issues of the ethnic conflict.
This paper, therefore, aims to look inward to provide a nuanced framework of the dynamics of
intra-group relations within the Muslim community and the problems attendant to such divisions.
The study maps the different groups present among the Muslim community, the basis on which
they emerge, the dynamics between them and factors that instigate conflict and/or promote
solidarity among them. Furthermore, while this paper is primarily addressed to non-Muslims for a
better understanding of the Muslim community, it is also hoped that the paper will function as a
document to generate intra- as well as inter-community dialogue and inform policy within
Muslim governing institutions. It must also be noted that due to constraints of time and resources,
the paper limits itself to the analysis of Muslims in a micro sense. In Sri Lanka, the word Muslim
is an overarching term used by non-Muslims to refer collectively to Muslims, Malays, Borahs and
Memons. This paper limits its focus to the Muslim community of Sri Lanka in its micro sense and
intends to dissect and examine its many parts.
4
The researchers also wish to emphasise the fact that intra-religious conflict is not new to Sri
Lanka or the world. The Christian community in Sri Lanka is fragmented into several
denominations which have their own politics and internal disagreements. Similarly, the
Buddhist and Hindu communities, though not divided, vary regionally in terms of worship
and cult worship (Obeyesekera 1990). Our interest in intra-Muslim relations, therefore,
should not be misconstrued as singling out the Muslim community as the only group fraught
with internal tensions. It is the manipulation of these tensions for political interests by
extremist groups, further fuelled by the international prevalence of Islamaphobia, which has
prompted interest in this area.
Theoretical Framework
In examining the intra-group relations among the Muslim community, this paper approaches
the various Islamic groups in Sri Lanka through the lens of Social Movement Theory (SMT)
whereby each group is considered a movement aimed at effecting (social/individual) change.
A Social Movement is defined as being driven by “rational motives” (Bayat 2005) and
structurally composed of “leadership, administrative structure, incentives for participation
and a means for acquiring resources and support” (Davis et al. 2005). A distinction is often
made between movements that mobilise religion to create social/political change and
religious groups that intend to effect change within a particular religious community and
increase its adherents; the former is known as a Social Movement and the latter, a Religious
Movement (Williams 2003). Most Islamic groups in Sri Lanka constitute religious
movements, though some can be Religio-social Movements as will be discussed in the body
of the study. Nevertheless, social and religious movements in general “need to organise
[themselves], to allow coordinated activity and continuation over time; [they] need to
generate a movement culture, including persuasive ideological claims; and […] need to
negotiate successfully the social environment, including taking advantage of the opportunities
available” (Williams 2003, p. 316). In other words, when studying the emergence,
development and practice of social movements it is necessary to examine the
mobilising
structures
,
political opportunities
and
framing processes
that influence group mobilisation
(McAdam, McCarthy and Zald, 1996 cited in McAdam and Scott, 2005). According to
McAdam, McCarthy and Zald (1996):
5
Mobilising structures are “the forms of organization (informal as well as formal),
available …” and include “meso-level groups, organizations, and informal networks
that comprise the collective building blocks of social networks.” Political
opportunities highlight the “nexus between the structure of political opportunities and
constraints confronting the movement from institutionalized politics, and social
movements that arise to challenge and reform existing systems”. Framing processes
is the “collective processes of interpretation, attribution and social construction that
mediate between opportunity and action. It focuses on how symbolic elements
mediate between structural parameters and the social actors who collectively interpret
their situation and devise remedies and proposed lines of action.” (p.16)
The above also suggests that a social movement is a process that needs to be studied as a
historical phenomenon in a span of time (Bayat 2005, p. 897), whereby it is necessary to
locate social movements within their historical/political context. An analysis of Islamic
movements in Sri Lanka, therefore, cannot be achieved without consideration of the historical
trajectory of the Muslim identity in Sri Lanka. As the second minority community in Sri
Lanka, Muslims have been preoccupied with their identity which has varied historically in
relation to socio-political incentives. Identity, in this sense is fluid and relational, whereby it
is pivoted on various factors such as ethnic consciousness, religious ideology, language,
caste, class, economics, politics and region. For the Muslim identity, these factors have
mattered in different degrees at different points of time in history. It is important to note,
however, that, at a macro institutional level as well as micro sub-group level the Muslim
identity is constructed and “transformed by particular elites [the process of which] invariably
involves competition and conflict for political power, economic benefits, and social status
between competing elite, class and leadership groups both within and among ethnic
categories” (Brass, 1991 cited in Nuhuman 2007, p. 4). It is these aspects that the paper
intends to unveil in its examination of Muslim sub-groups and institutions i.e. the micro-
identity dynamics which are constructed by the intersection of shared experiences at local
level (de Munck 1998). However, in order to understand the subtleties, it is necessary to
briefly examine the macro identity of Muslims in Sri Lanka which is shaped by elite leaders
and organisations (de Munck 1998, p. 111).
Thus, remembering that the macro and micro inform each other, the paper will commence
with a brief critical overview of the larger historical process of the Muslim identity and group
formation in Sri Lanka before proceeding to examine the following research questions:
6
1. What are the different Islamic groups in Sri Lanka? What is their composition and
how do they interact? (mobilising structures)
2. Why/have Muslims begun to further differentiate themselves from the rest of the
communities in Sri Lanka? (political opportunities)
a. Is factionalism among the Muslim community a sign of growth in
religiosity? What has triggered this growth?
b. What are the political or economic reasons for factionalism among the
Muslim community?
c. Do any external/international forces contribute to factionalism?
d. What factors affect intra-group conflict?
3. How do different Muslim groups define/rationalise the need for/legitimacy of their
group? What subject positions do they adopt? (framing processes)
Scope and Methodology
The Muslims of Sri Lanka consist of five ethnic groups Sri Lankan Moors, Coastal/Indian
Moors, Malays, Borahs and Memons (Nuhuman 2007, p.17). However, in this study, the
focus is not on these traditional ethnic groups which comprise the Muslim community, but
the new religious groups that emerged post-independence.
In keeping with the aim of understanding the dynamics of interaction between different
Islamic groups and institutions in Sri Lanka, the research draws from three context mapping
workshops conducted in Ampara, Galle and Colombo with representatives of the Muslim
community in 2014, five group discussions and 14 semi-structured interviews (guided by the
three research questions) with administrative and religious leaders of different Islamic groups
in Ampara, Batticaloa, Puttalam and Colombo. This choice of locations is due to the fact that
the largest concentration of Muslims is found in the East, particularly in Kathankudy
(Batticaloa) and Akkaraipattu (Ampara) and that the governing institutions of all groups are
located in Colombo. Furthermore, the researchers wanted to investigate the accusation, both
from within and outside the Muslim community, in the past year that a Jihadist movement is
being formed in the East. Interviews in the East directed us to Puttalam where there is a
unique group in Ethalai. The researchers were unable to interview another emerging
Ahamadiya group in Negombo due to limitations of time and resources. The areas covered by
this study are Eravur, Ottamavadi and Kathankudy in Batticaloa, Attalachenai and
7
Sainthamaruthu in Amapra, Etthalai and Noraicholai in Puttalam and Colombo city. While
these locations may not be exhaustive, they represent the ideologies present in areas densely
populated by Muslims. Respondents were identified through discussions with Muslim
academics, and community leaders in Colombo and Ampara.
Before commencing on the analysis of the data, the researchers feel it necessary to declare
their subject positions and process of minimising researcher bias to ensure objectivity in
analysing the data. First, it must be stated that the research tool was designed with the
understanding that “people create, negotiate and change social meanings through the process
of interaction” (Sandstrom et al. 2006 cited in Leavy 2014, p. 86). Since the paper does not
focus on ‘how’ the interviewees constructed their identities, questions were rephrased and
repeated to ensure uniformity and reliability of responses. Furthermore, the limitation that an
individual cannot ‘truly’ represent a group is also acknowledged. The researchers were also
aware that meaning is co-constructed by both the researchers and the interviewee and is also
shaped by the researchers’ preexisting biases regarding Islam and Muslims as well as the
interviewees’ perception of the researchers. To avoid such bias, trust was established with the
interviewee, by engaging in small talk, channeling interviewees through contacts they are
comfortable with and dispelling suspicion that this research topic might harm the Muslim
community. It is also fortunate that the researchers themselves compose of an insider
(Muslim) and an outsider (Tamil/Catholic) ensuring both an emic and an etic perspective.
The data was also analysed with the understanding that within the time span of data
collection and analysis (May 2014 March 2015) several contextual changes, most
significantly the Aluthgama riot in June 2014 and the change in political regime in January
2015, might have impacted the stance of the Muslim interviewees and how they represented
themselves.
The researchers also wish to mention that their attitudes changed during the process of data
collection and the new understandings about different Islamic groups in Sri Lanka led them to
question some of the language initially/still used in this paper. It was realised that certain
terms that are used can be biased against the Muslim community and thus require elucidation.
In the current context of Islamaphobia which is a western construct, adjectives such as
‘extremist’ and ‘radical’ used in relation to Muslims connote leanings towards terrorism. In
Sri Lanka, the word ‘extremist’, used by the Muslim community (
thiviravatham
in Tamil) in
8
reference to different religious groups, does not connote terrorism, but the tendency to be
non-conformist or the strict/rigid adherence/promotion of religious practices. Similarly, the
use of the word ‘radical’ in this paper is meant to imply a strong fervour to reform, tempered
by emotion which can sometimes lead to violence. The word ‘factionalism’ also immediately
connotes group formation on the basis of conflict, but in the context of our usage is also
intended to refer to amicable divisions with potential for conflict. Furthermore, the
researchers chose to avoid the Christian (Euro-centric) word ‘denomination’ and chose the
word ‘group’ instead, which refers to a collection of individuals who believe and propagate a
particular interpretation of Islam. An institution on the other hand, refers to either an
overarching Islamic governing body in Sri Lanka or an Islamic organisation engaged in work
other than the promotion of religion. Though the word ‘group’ is initially used in the paper to
refer to all religious groups in general, a distinction is later made between Islamic movements
and Islamic groups. This will be explained in another section of the paper.
The Muslim Identity in Sri Lanka- A Historical Perspective
The Muslim identity in Sri Lanka is multifaceted and has been (re)constructed in interaction
with social, political and historical context over time. In Sri Lanka, Muslims are an ethno
religious community and the researchers’ observation is that they have chosen to declare their
religious identity over their ethnic identity and vice versa at different points in time according
to certain material, social and political benefits they required. In other words, their
subjectivity has undergone many ‘framing processes’ whereby the Muslims of Sri Lanka
have interpreted their identity and attributed it to the socio-economic and political climate of
the time.
The Sri Lankan Muslims, like the coastal Muslims of south India, are mixed-race descendants
of Arab and Persian sea-faring merchants who have long traversed the Indian Ocean between
the Middle East and South-East Asia (McGilvray 2011). The spread of Islam in Sri Lanka
was a product of Arab trade whereby Muslim traders, who by reason of their long stay,
intermarried with the local families and settled in the country (Shukri 1986). Therefore, it is
clear that the Sri Lankan Muslims are not alien to this country as they have blood
relationships with other communities. The Arabic language and Islam are what distinguished
them and characterised their identity in Sri Lanka during the 9th and 10th centuries (Shukri
1986). In the 13th century, Muslims became more influential in trade and carried out their
9
trade through various ports in the island which also shaped their settlement in coastal areas.
Later, Muslims also played very influential roles as advisers on foreign trade to the Sinhalese
Kings.
In the 13th and 15th centuries, the Arab world established a strong relationship with traders of
South Indian coastlines such as the Malabar. This expansion of maritime activities with India
not only increased South Indian Muslims’ trade, but also led to new settlements in Sri Lanka
as the South Indian Muslims favoured Sri Lanka’s strategic location for engaging in business
with the world. These settlements of South Indian traders and the concomitant expansion of
trade relations with India also impacted the culture and identity of Sri Lankan Muslims who
relied heavily on trade with South Indian Muslims (Shukri 1986). This interaction added a
new dimension to the identity of the Muslims of Sri Lanka transforming them from Arab into
Indo-Arab. This was also reflected in the linguistic identity of Muslims in Sri Lanka by the
emergence of Arabic Tamil among Muslims (Shukri 1986).
Another transformation of the identity of Muslims occurred during the colonial rule of the
Portuguese and Dutch where Muslims faced much discrimination and lost their business
monopoly due to forced migration from coastal areas to eastern parts of the country. As a
result Muslims lost their connection with Arabs entirely and had to depend on South India for
cultural and religious affiliations. This brought forth a new form of religion and language
and contributed immensely to the spread of Indian Sufi ideology/Sufism in Sri Lanka
(Samaraweera 1986; Shukri 1986).
The British rule, on the other hand, was favourable to the Sri Lankan Muslims whereby they
were granted freedom to engage in their trade and religious practices as Muslim trade
activities helped the British colonial trade as well. Thus, Muslims benefited more than the
Sinhalese in the field of business, which was also due to the divide and rule policy of the
British. This led to anti-Muslim riots in 1915 where the British, who opposed Sinhala
Buddhist nationalism, took the side of the victimised Muslims and controlled the riots by
brutally killing perpetrators as well as innocent civilians (Smaraweera 1986).
By the time of British rule, the settlement pattern of the Muslims in Sri Lanka had become
well established (Samaraweera 1986). However, the Muslim community did not have a
religious or political leader like the Buddhists or Hindus This triggered a revivalist
10
movement among Muslims in Sri Lanka. . In the absence of a leader, charismatic Arabi Pasha
from Egypt filled this gap and was appointed leader of Muslims by virtue of being an Arab.
He became a leading activist among Muslims in Sri Lanka during his period (1883 1901) in
the island (Samraweera 1986). During this time the revivalist movement’s primary focus was
education of Muslims in Sri Lanka as Muslims were not educated like members of other
communities. Education had hitherto been unattractive to Muslims as opposed to other ethnic
groups due to some suspicious religious belief that the Christian missionary education system
was ‘alien’1 to Islam. Sidde Lebbe was the first Muslim Proctor in Sri Lanka and he joined
Arabi Pasha’s revivalist movement. This Muslim education movement initiated English
language education in Arabic Schools (Madrasas) and established Muslim girls’ schools.
Apart from education, this movement had also begun newspapers for Muslims such as
Ceylon Mohammedan (English) and Muslim Naisan (Tamil).
Education and journalism increased awareness among Muslims about politics and identity.
This was evident when Sidde Lebbe with his companion I.L.M Abdul Azeez formed the first
Islamic organisation in Sri Lanka which was called
Jammiyathul Islamiya
(Nuhman 2007).
The primary objective of this organisation was to promote Islamic awareness among Muslims
on maintaining a distinct Muslim political and social identity (Ameen as cited in Nuhman
2007). However, it was only after Ponnamabalam Ramanathan’s statement that Sri Lankan
Muslims could be traced to South India and were in fact Dravidians who had been converted
to Islam that Muslims engaged in an active political struggle to establish their unique identity
(Mohan 1987, Smaraweera 1987). I.L.M Abdul Azeez criticised Ponnambalam’s statement
and explained the Muslim identity’s connection to Islam and the Arab world. He emphasised
that even though Muslims speak Tamil as a language and adopt some Tamil cultural
practices, they are different on the basis of religion. This identification on religious lines is
typical of minority communities which uphold religion to safeguard its distinct identity
(Mohan 1987, p. 5). It was also inspired by the global narrative of pan Arabism among
Muslims at the time and emerged not only in Sri Lanka, but also in other parts of the world.
Thus, Islam has become the fundamental base for the local as well as global positioning of
the Sri Lankan Muslim existence whereby without Islam there is no Muslim (Nuhman 2004).
Pan-Arabism also marked a shift in Sri Lankan Muslims’ relationship with Islam which was
1 The word ‘alien’ was frequently used by the interviewees to refer to anything or anyone that/who is non-
Muslim. Though the Tamil equivalent anniyan also is used, the English word is used more often. The different
connotations and contexts of use of this word should be studied further.
11
primarily influenced by South India which represented the Tamil Dravidian identity, whereby
Sri Lankan Muslims looked to the Middle East to reshape Islamic practices in Sri Lanka. This
could also be considered the beginning of the Sufi - Wahabi conflict which is present even
today.
Muslims’ modification and purification of their identity on the lines of Islam, led to the need
to institutionalise their identity whereby they instituted Muslim personal law and established
Quazi Courts to deal with issues of Muslim marriage and divorce. A Government institution
to administer mosques and charitable organisations was also established. Furthermore, being
a second minority, Muslims also realised the importance of sustaining their religious identity.
Separate educational institutes for Muslims such as schools and teacher training colleges
which followed a separate calendar to accommodate the Ramazan vacation were thus
established (Nuhman 2004).
In addition, Muslims also wanted to have separate political representation as opposed to
being merely represented in Tamil political parties. Therefore, Muslim politicians tried to
distinguish Muslim politics from Tamil politics and worked alongside Sinhala political
parties. They rejected Tamil politics even to the extent of supporting anti-Tamil bills like the
1956 Sinhala only language policies. Another contributing factor for Muslims siding with the
Sinhalese is that two thirds of Muslims live in predominantly Sinhala areas (McGilvray
2011). Therefore, historically, to safeguard their interests and identity in politics, Muslim
politics has always been very close to the Sinhalese majority rather than the Tamils.
Linguistically too, Sinhala became the preferred language of some Muslim youth as well as
the medium of instruction in Muslim Arabic colleges (McGilvray 2011).
To conclude, historically, at a macro level, Muslims have framed their political, ethnic,
cultural and linguistic identities separately at different points of time, while their emphasis on
religious identity has predominantly been constant. However, at a micro level, over time,
Muslims were not culturally or linguistically uniform. In the early 1900s the Muslim
community was fragmented by class, lifestyle and regional/local (and perhaps even ethnic)
differences” (Shukri 1986, p. 367). Furthermore, despite their common denominator being
religion, Shukri (1986) notes that religion did not function as a unifying force as Muslims
assimilated to the practices of their neighbouring communities. It could be argued that as a
minority community engaged in trade, acceptance within the community they lived alongside
12
(socially, economically and politically) was incentive for them to assimilate. Thus, from a
historical point of view, Muslims were fragmented primarily on regional/geographic
differences and based on which majority community (Sinhalese/Tamil) they lived alongside.
While this still continues to be the case, post-independence, Muslims began to assert their
singular ethnic identity on the basis of religion and reconnected with Islam under the global
Ummah, unifying in common as Muslims rather than as Moors and Malays (Ameerdeen
2006; Mohan 1987; Nuhuman 2004).
At the macro level, therefore, the Muslim religious identity was initially ascribed (inherited
without critical reflection), chosen (resulting from introspection) during early settlement
periods and declared which entails not only introspection and learning about ‘correct’
practices, but also strengthening and asserting one’s religious identity (Peek 2005) in recent
crisis moments when the indivisibility of the Muslim ethno-religious identity was questioned.
A declaration of one’s identity entails various external (in addition to internal)
manifestations. Furthermore, deep introspection on and learning of one’s religion leads to the
rise of various questions regarding the ‘correct’ interpretation and ‘proper’ practice of Islam.
This manifests through various visible or symbolic identity markers such as the niqab and the
emergence of new/dissenting groups, promoting a particular interpretation of Islam. This also
leads to the rise and confrontation of different Muslim groups (factionalism); the dynamics of
their interaction will be explicated in the following section.
The Splintering of the Muslim Community of Sri Lanka
Having discussed the macro history of the Muslims of Sri Lanka, it is important to examine
the impact of these larger political moments on individual communities at local level and how
this contributed to the splintering of the Muslim community (factionalism). Bart Klem
(2011), in his study of Muslims in Akkaraipattu, notes that despite being victimised by both
the Tamil militants and Sinhalese ethno-nationalists and despite their common goal to
distinguish themselves from the Tamils, Muslims surprisingly continue to be a heterogeneous
and divergent group. He argues that this divergence which characterises the Muslim identity
can be clearly explained only by acknowledging the strong interrelationship between the
religious, ethnic, economic and political. Boucek (2009) also notes that factionalism is a
“dynamic process of subgroup partitioning […] that can transform itself over time in
response to incentives” (456). In the language of Social Movement Theory, the formation of
13
new Muslim groups is triggered by political opportunities at a given point of time. History
shows us that these incentives/opportunities for Muslims have been spiritual, cultural,
economic and political.
Religion as Political Opportunity to Mobilise
Factionalism among Muslims on religious grounds in Sri Lanka is both horizontal and
vertical. On one hand, it is a result of some Muslims choosing, critically evaluating and
declaring their religious identity (e.g. Thawheed2) in response to moments of crisis, while
others hold on to their ascribed religious identities (e.g. Sufis), and on the other, it is a
vertical splintering of religious groups into subgroups on minor theological disputes. The
research identified several divisions among the Muslim community, some which are
regionally specific, but most with networks throughout the island (see Table 1.1 for list of
sects and groups). However, these groups could be categorised into nine core groups
(horizontal) which have several sub denominations (as illustrated in Table 1).
Table 1: Islamic Groups in Sri Lanka
2 As spelled in the Sri Lanka Thawheed website
Traditional
Isolated Outliers
NGOs
Sufis
o Thariqas
(Qadiriyya,
Shadhliyya,
Rifaiyya,
Chisthiyya,
Naqshaban
diya)
o Thakkiyas
Thablighi Jamaat
Jamaate Islami
Jamathus Salama
Thawheed
o JASM (Jamathul
Ansari Sunnathul
Muslimeen),
o NTJ (National
Thawheed Jamath)
o SLTJ (Sri Lanka
Thawheed Jamath)
o Dharus Salaf
o Dharul Adhar
o ACTJ (All Ceylon
Thawheed Jamath)
Jamathul
Muslimeen
(Baiyath)
Abrur Rauf
group
Payluwan
Shia
SHABAB
IIRO (International
Islamic Relief
Organisation)
IRO (Islamic
Research
Organisation)
CIS (Centre for
Islamic Studies)
MFCD (Muslim
Foundation for
Culture and
Development)
14
At this juncture, before examining how religion drives group mobilisation, it is necessary to
make a distinction between the use of the word ‘movement’ and ‘group’ henceforth in this
paper. As stated in the theoretical framework, it is debatable whether the Islamic groups in
Sri Lanka constitute Social Movements or Religious Movements. The following sections go
into detail describing the motivations and functions of the different Islamic groups in Sri
Lanka and the words ‘movement’ and ‘group’ are used differently. An examination of the
motivation of different Islamic groups (discussed below) reveals that some constitute
Religio-
social Movements
(referred to as movements) while others are mere
groups
with no
reformative agenda as a driving force. The use of the term Religio-social Movement is due to
the fact that while some Islamic groups are geared towards spiritual change within a
community, they can also influence politics (most often at micro level) through political
patronage. Islamic groups, on the other hand are those that once may have been movements,
but now have achieved their desired change and are comfortable being exclusive private
communities. However, it must be noted that these groups can also have the influence of
political patronage.
There are two main schools of thought in Muslim ideology in Sri Lanka Sufism and
Wahabism. Sufi theology predominated during the colonial period with Thareekas and
Thakkiyas being the major religious institutions which promoted the practice of Sufi theology
(Sukri 1986; Mohan 1987). As mentioned above, when Muslims began to distinguish their
identity based on Islam, they tried to link themselves with the global Ummah (the Arab
world) in order to establish a ‘true’ Muslim identity. This brought them in conflict with the
Sufism practiced locally and the orthodox Wahabism practiced in Arab countries and created
tensions within the Muslim community in Sri Lanka on religious lines. The interviews
conducted with group leaders from Ampara, Batticaloa and Puttalam revealed that
factionalism on the basis of religion took form in the 1950s with influences from India and
Pakistan, and the Arab world in the late 1970s with the opening of the Economy which
enabled Muslim scholars to travel to India, Pakistan and Arab nations. Having lived thus far
as an isolated community with no overarching leadership, interacting with global Muslims
enabled Sri Lankan Muslims to realise that their Islamic practices and beliefs had embraced
Tamil/Sinhalese cultural practices and had a strong Indian Sufi influence as well. This
triggered an Islamic revival which involved the purification of Islam and was spearheaded
primarily by the Jamatee Islami and the Thablighi Jamaat. Other ‘purist’ groups, such as the
Baiyath group in Puttalam, have imported theologies from countries like India and Pakistan
15
and formed closed insular communities. Thus, as McGivlray (2011) observes, “During the
past decade a sharp internal conflict has arisen within the Sri Lankan community between
locally popular Sufi sheiks and the followers of hostile Islamic reformist movements
energized by the ideas and resources from the global Ummah, or world community of
Muslims” (p. 46). Here, McGilvray’s strong use of the word ‘hostile’ is owing to the violent
evacuation of members of a small Sufi sect (Abdur Rauf Group) in Batticaloa by an orthodox
Muslim group. This, however, does not imply that all reformist movements in Sri Lanka are
hostile (as will be exemplified in the following sections).
Islamic Reformist Movements in Sri Lanka
The Islamic reformist movements in Sri Lanka are from either South Asia (India and
Pakistan) or the Middle East. The Jamaate Islami and Thablighi Jamaat, which are based in
Pakistan and India respectively and arrived in Sri Lanka during the 1950s (Nuhman 2004),
are the main reformist movements in the country. These reformist groups commenced their
work in India and Pakistan with the aim of purifying Islam from different Hindu religious and
cultural influences, establishing sharia law and forming an Islamic state in India. In fact, the
Jamaate Islami played a political role in the separation of Pakistan as an Islamic state
(Hansen 2000). The Thablighi Jamaat was founded by the Indian Scholar Muhammad Ilyas
Kandhalawi in 1927 and its central office is situated in New Delhi. It has branches all over
the world which are dedicated to calling on Muslims to bring their everyday life in line with
Islamic principles (Gaborieau 2006; Klem 2011).
In Sri Lanka, however, the Thablighi Jamaat and Jamaate Islami movements have been
underplaying their political ideology of an Islamic state and instead have adapted to the local
context by focusing only on purifying Islamic practices. In this endeavor, these two
movements have faced several conflicts with traditional Sufi groups. They have also played a
significant role in the development of religious awareness, ethnic consciousness and cultural
homogeneity among Muslims during the last few decades even though there are serious
ideological differences between them (Nuhman 2004).
However, the emergence of Saudi-based movements in Sri Lanka such as the Thawheed
Jamaat has transformed the conflict into Wahabism (Thawheed) versus Sufism. Thawheed
Jamaat is an Islamic movement based in Saudi Arabia which follows Abdul Wahab’s
16
theology of Islam. This group is more radical than the Thablighi Jamaat and Jamaate Islami
and has provoked violence and conflict among Muslims in Sri Lanka. Thawheed Jamaat
mostly attracts young Muslims who have worked in the Middle East (McGilvray 2011) and
has splintered into several sub movements in Sri Lanka, the reasons for which will be
discussed in detail in the sections to follow.
The Thablighi Jamaat is one of the leading revivalist movements in Sri Lanka which has
networks islandwide. This non-violent religious group does not have a political agenda
(Crisis Group Report, 2007) and its primary motive is to draw Muslims to the mosque for the
five prayers. This is done by going door to door to Muslim houses. Their non-violent
approach was corroborated through an interview with a Thablighi Jamaat leader in Saddham
Hussein village3, Eravur who emphasised that “even if the BBS attacks us, we will not go for
a fight but call every Muslim to come to the mosque to pray for Allah to protect them from
enemies” (Interviewee 12, personal communication, September 20, 2014). In keeping with
their religiosity, the Tablighi Jamaat is very traditional in terms of dress as well. The men
wear white Jubbas, white thoppis or sometimes white turbans and they also grow beards. The
women are required to cover their faces and wear black shapeless gowns.
The Thablighi Jamaat’s work is based in the mosque and their headquarters is called
Markas
among its members. The Thablighi Jamaat does not have a separate mosque like other
revivalist movements in Sri Lanka and engages in its religious activities in any mosque that
welcomes them. According to a representative of the Thablighi Jamaat, they restrict
themselves from mosques (particularly Thawheed Jamaat mosques) which prohibit them to
enter. Thablighis (as they are commonly known) also engage in three-day, forty-day and
four-month missions preaching in mosques away from their villages with the aim of bringing
Muslims to mosques. They also have a women’s wing and conduct separate religious
programs for Muslim women.
Ijithima
is the national level gathering of Thablighi Jamaat
which is held once a year. The interviews revealed that the Thablighi Jamaat is a harmless
reformist movement which follows a nonviolent approach. The Thablighi Jamaat also runs a
social service unit called NIDA Foundation and its primary objective is to help those who
have newly converted to Islam, but they do not have a mission to convert non-Muslims.
3 Located in Eravur, Batticaloa, this village owes its name to gratitude for funds received from Iraq to build this
village after the cyclone in 1978.
17
The Jamaate Islami is another reformist movement which mainly targets educated middle
class Muslims (McGilvray 2011). Its chief activity has been to publish an Islamic scholarly
magazine in the Tamil language called
Al Hasanath,
and is popular among educated Muslims
in Sri Lanka. It has also been publishing monthly and quarterly newspapers such as
Prabodaya
and
Engal Thesam
(Our Nation) in Sinhala and Tamil respectively. This
movement also arranges special religious classes for men and women separately and has a
social service body which carries out different social activities such as disaster relief and
Zakat (donating a portion of one’s income to charity) distribution across the island.
Thawheed ideology came to Sri Lanka during the 1950s from the Middle East, was
institutionalised as Thawheed Jamath and is now a leading Islamic revivalist movement in Sri
Lanka. According to Nuhman (2004), the Thawheed Jamaat was founded in 1947 by Abdul
Hameed Al Bakry in Paragahdeniya which is called Jammiyathu Ansari Sunnathul
Muhammadiya (JASM). JASM is one of the leading Thawheed Jamaat institutes and it is the
main wing of the Thawheed Jamaat. It also functions as an Arabic college and produces
Muslim scholars (Moulavis) who are called Salafis. However, since the mid and late 1970s, it
has splintered into numerous groups making it difficult to understand all the nuances that
divide them. Groups which propagate the Thawheed ideology are present either in the form
of social service organisations such as Jammiyathush SHABAB (Association of Muslim
Youth of Saylan) and International Islamic Relief Organisation (IIRO) or as Dhahwa
(preaching) organisations. These Dhahwa groups are institutionalised under various
names; Dharus Salaf is a Thawheed Jamaat group based in Dehiwala. There are also a few
Thawheed Jamaat movements based in Kathankudy and Baticaloa such as Dharul Adhar and
National Thawheed Jamaat (NTJ). The All Ceylon Thawheed Jamaat (ACTJ) is another
group functioning from Dematagoda, Colombo. In 2005, some of its members left this group
and formed a new group which is called Sri Lanka Thawheed Jamaat (SLTJ). Many more
formal (institutionalised) and informal sub-movements exist but are difficult to access.
The National Thawheed Jamaat (NTJ)4 based in Kathankudy is the most active of the
Thawheed Jamath movements in the area, their primary focus being to preach against the
Abdur Rauf group which is another controversial Islamic Sufi group in Sri Lanka. The NTJ
4 The comments on the NTJ are based on the opinions/perceptions of members of other Muslim groups in
Kathankudy as the researchers were unable to secure interviews with any representative of the NTJ in the area
despite approaching them on several occasions.
18
has been very confrontational in its attack of the Abdur Rauf group, criticising their practices
and teachings at public platforms, conducting public debates and distributing slanderous
DVDs. Though they had not mobilised as a movement at the time, they are considered to be
responsible for the violent evacuation of members of the Abdur Rauf group from Kathankudy
in 2000 and 2006.
The Sri Lanka Thawheed Jamaat (SLTJ) is the most vocal of the Thawheed movements and
has made several controversial public statements in recent years. Members of the SLTJ have
been taken in for police investigations; they have filed several cases and made numerous
statements against the BBS. The other Thawheed Jamaat and Islamic movements have been
criticising and blaming the SLTJ for their rash public statements and demonstrations against
the BBS and have also blamed the SLTJ for provoking tensions between the Buddhist
extremists and the Muslim community.
The SLTJ has a strong link with the Tamil Nadu Thawheed Jamaat (TNTJ) and they follow
TNTJ’s leader, P.J. Jainulabdeen, an Islamic Scholar and authority on theological matters.
The SLTJ has 63 branches all over the island and is totally opposed to any kind of Jihadi
movement. According to its secretary, Mr. Razik, We can win our goals through the
democratic process” (Interview 13, Personal Communication, February 9th 2015). The SLTJ
also publishes religious books and magazines and conducts religious classes for men and
women separately. All the movements discussed above (except the Thablighi Jamaat and the
Jamaate Islam) are Wahabist groups and engage in the purification of Islam in Sri Lanka.
While they diverge on minor theological issues (reasons for which will be discussed later)
they are in agreement with the belief that Muslims should follow only the Quran and Prophet
Mohammed’s teachings. To them, all other Sufi and Shia groups are not Muslim.
The word Shia inspires negative sentiments among the Muslim community of Sri Lanka
which does not consider Shias as Muslim. Nevertheless, because Shias consider themselves
Muslim, this paper includes them as well. There is a small population of Shias in Sri Lanka
and a very small community in Ottamavadi Batticaloa. This group keeps to itself and is
fearful of revealing its identity to other Muslims in the community due to fear of ostracism.
They have their own mosque and madrasa and engage primarily in personal theological
debate, publishing documents on their ideology. Colombo also has a small business
community of Shias which this research paper does not focus on.
19
Sufis are the traditional Muslims of Sri Lanka and the Sri Lankan Muslim identity is rooted
in Sufism and orthodox Islam (de Munk 1998). In Sri Lanka Sufism has two primary orders
Tariqa and Takkia whose followers are referred to as Tariqas and Takkias. An examination
of the different Sufi orders in Sri Lanka is a study in itself and this paper does not attempt it.
Instead it approaches the Sufis only as a source for rationalisation of the mandates of the new
Islamic revisionist groups. The irony is that during the colonial era (just as the revisionist
groups of today), Sufis saw a lack in the Muslim community and played an important role in
educating the Muslims of Sri Lanka on principles of Islam and establishing an intellectual
Muslim community (Shukri 1986). Even today, Tariqas and Takkiyas continue to preserve
Sufi traditions and culture in Sri Lanka and their influence is particularly strong in coastal
areas like Beruwala, Galle, Matara and Kalmunai (de Munk 1998).
The chief bone of contention between Sufis and the new reformist movements is shrine and
saint worship, the popular shrines in Sri Lanka being the Daftar Jailani in Balangoda, Fakir
Muhiyaddeen in Godapitiya and the Beach Mosuqe (Kadatkaraipalli) in Kalmunai
(McGilvray 2004). In addition to this is the contestation of Sufi practices such as
Kanduri
(celebrating feasts),
Kodiyetram
(hoisting of the mosque flag) and
Maulid
celebrations
(singing songs in praise of Prophet Mohamed) (McGilvray 2004; Munck 1998) which are
not part of orthodox Islam, but borrowings from Hindu culture.
Like the mushrooming of new reformist movements (but at a much slower pace and lesser
degree), Sufi groups also abound, particularly in Kathankudy which is a highly populated
homogeneous area. In fact, it is claimed that all Islamic groups and movements are
represented within its small radius and it is also said that some of the Islamic groups were
born of Kathankudy soil. The Abdur Rauf group is the perfect example. Abdur Rauf is an
Islamic scholar and charismatic orator who formed a new Islamic group in 1979 formally
called the All Ceylon Theological Forum, but commonly referred to as the Abdur Rauf group.
This group has a separate mosque in Kathankudy and all of its followers live in the area
surrounding the mosque. Abrur Rauf Moulavi is treated like a god and is called
Wappa
(Father) by his followers who display his photograph in their houses. According to a
representative, there are 30,000 followers (Interview 5, Personal Communication, September
19th 2014) but, based on our inquiries, the numbers are much less than this. The Abdur Rauf
group is considered controversial in Kathankudy and the All Ceylon Jammiyathul Ulama
(ACJU) labeled this group and their ideology as non-Muslim the same year it was
20
formed. Consequently, this group faced violence from the other Muslim groups in 2004 and
2006 when they were brutally driven out of the village. However, the Abdur Rauf group has
managed to survive because of its good political links and the assurance that all followers
will vote for whoever
Wappa
decides. The primary theological dispute between this and other
Islamic groups is their worship of shrines and tombs and their belief that Allah is present in
everything, even a rock, whereby a human can also be Allah (a God).
Jamaatul Muslimeen which is also known as
Baiyath
is another new Sufi group in Sri
Lanka. A majority of Baiyath followers live in Eththalai, Puttalam where the ideology
emerged. According to this group, a person is not born a Muslim and has to take oaths in
front of an
Imam
(appointed leader) to become Muslim. Umar Ali, a leading Thawheed
orator in the 1970s, is the leader of the Baiyath group. He formed this group in 1976 after
visiting Pakistan in search of the ‘true’ Islam. Baiyath followers have taken oaths before
Umar Ali and they believe that they are the ‘true’ Muslims and that all other Islamic groups
are non-Muslim as they have not taken oaths. Another distinguishing feature of this group is
that they follow some traditional practices such as not registering for identity cards or
passports. At one time they did not build their houses with bricks, but lived in small tents like
their Arab ancestors during the Prophet’s time. Today, however, they have reverted to normal
life but do not allow their womenfolk to study and force them to cover their faces. This group
interacts, but does not intermarry with other Muslim groups.
The above clearly reveals that in addition to the horizontal Sufi (traditional) Wahabi
(revisionist) divide among the Muslims which can be attributed entirely to the Muslim
aspiration to purify and identify with the origins of their religion, there is also a vertical
divide among revisionist movements which merits exploration. This is particularly necessary
to understand the splits between movements which espouse the Thawheed ideology. A
representative of the SLTJ stated that the current debate among the different Thawheed
groups is the issue of
Sooniyam
(charming) whether one should believe in its powers or
not. Such debates, according to him, are taking place in South Asia where public forums are
held with devout Muslims challenging charmers to do harm to them in a bid to disprove the
power of charming. Interestingly, Thawheeds who believe in the powers of charming are
labeled ‘Sooniya Thawheed’ by non-believing Thawheeds as an act of excluding and
othering, thus, causing a split within the movement and instigating the formation of a new
one (Interview 13, Personal Communication, February 9th 2015).
21
While it can be acknowledged that one aspect of the reasons for intra-movement splits and
conflicts can be due to theological disagreements, our research indicates that there are other
worldly factors such as politics and economics which contribute towards intra-sect tensions
among the Muslim community in Sri Lanka.
Another distinguishing pattern of inter-movement dynamics among the Muslim community is
the complex layering of ingroup and outgroup relationships in the districts of Colombo,
Galle, Ampara, Batticaloa and Puttalam. On a macro level, there is ingrouping and
outgrouping on the basis of fundamental Islamic principles such as
Aqeedah
(deliberate oaths
of Islam) whereby non-conformist groups like the Shias and Sufi groups such as Abdur Rauf
group, Bailuwan and Ahamadiyas are labelled as ‘non-Muslims’ or out of
Aqeedah
by a
majority of movements which consider themselves ‘real’ Muslims. These sentiments are
upheld across all strata of the Muslim community from religious leaders and academics to lay
persons including children. In Kathankudy, this ‘othering’ or ‘outgrouping’ of the non-
conformist groups is performed both on public fora where reformist group orators
vehemently ridicule and belittle the practices of these groups and in the private space of the
home where families gather around the television to watch CDs (of these public debates) and
laugh at the non-Muslim groups. Such deep-seated ingroup and outgroup consciousness
among the Muslim community has led to hostility and even violent conflict between
Reformist movements and Sufi groups. Both in 2004 and 2006, members of the Abdur Rauf
group were attacked and chased out of Kathankudy by members of the Thawheed movement
(Interview 5, Personal Communication, September 19th 2014). Furthermore, among a number
of unreported cases, violence has also been triggered over the ownership of mosques,
criticism of traditional customs like reciting
Burdha
(reciting
maulid
) and Shrine worship,
sighting the crescent for the Ramazan festival, funeral rituals and hate speech.
Another feature of ingroup and outgroup consciousness, particularly in the conflict between
Sufi and Wahabi groups, is the basis of identity framing processes where Sufi groups pivot
their identity around the spiritual and supernatural while Wahabi movements focus on the
temporal and scriptural. A distinguishing feature of non-mainstream Sufi groups like Baiyath
and the Abdur Rauf group is that their identity as a credible religious group is legitimised by
narratives of quests and dreams which are in keeping with the mysticism which governs their
practice of Islam. Both representatives of these groups stated that their leaders went abroad in
search of the ‘real’ Islam and in the case of the Baiyath group, found it by divine revelation
22
on a poster at a bus stop in Pakistan and in the case of the Abdur Rauf group confirmation
through a dream in which the prophet Mohammed addressed the leader of the group
(Interview 5, Personal Communication, September 19th 2014). While these narratives may
capture the imagination of a relatively uneducated and socially isolated group of individuals
in Etthalai (Puttalam), it is clear that the educated Abdul Rauf group leaders employ these
narratives for economic and political gain. Therefore, these groups are not considered Muslim
by other Sufi and Wahabi groups.
Thus, while on the macro level the conflict between Muslims is based on
Aqeedah
, on a
micro level, there is conflict between most sects (accepted as within
Aqeedah
) on the basis of
who the better Muslim is and who the real
Sunnat Wal Jamaat
(followers of prophet
Mohamed) are. All groups and movements consider themselves as the real Muslims and
Sunnat Wal Jamaat
,
and accuse each other of creating problems among the Muslim
community by highlighting misinterpretations of Islam, and accusing groups of having
external links with the Middle East and other countries. This has resulted in each and every
group having their own mosque and conducting separate
Jumma Bayan
(Friday preaching) in
their mosques or religious centres where they can convey their own ideology and message to
the Muslim community. In addition, it must be mentioned (though it is not a focus of this
study) that each movement and group discussed in this paper has several branches in different
parts of the Island which have global links as well. Each group and movement also engages
in social and community service alongside their purification efforts among Muslims and has
their own social service unit as well.
The main movement at which criticism is directed is the Thawheed Jamath. Many groups and
mosque federations criticise the activities of the Thawheed Jamaat for creating hostility
among Muslims by preaching in an emotional tone. Thawheed Jamaat movements
(particularly NTJ and SLTJ) want to effect an immediate change within the Muslim
community and their urgency to do so has even led them to make compromising statements
in public as well as desecrate revered Sufi shrines. This has led to instances of violent conflict
instigated by the Thawheed Jamaat but perpetrated by traditional Sufi groups (Thariqas and
Thakkiyas). The most brutal incident was the burning of the Masjidur Rahman, a Thawheed
mosque in Beruwala, in 2008 which claimed two lives. A representative of the SLTJ also
mentioned the Madampitiya mosque issue with the Jamaate Islami in 2014 which created
23
huge tension between the two groups resulting in stones being thrown at a Thawheed centre
in Madampitiya for two hours (Interview 13, Personal Communication, February 9th 2015).
The Beruwala incident is considered a defining moment in the modern history of Muslims in
Sri Lanka and referred to as a moment which “woke the community up” to the tensions
within. The spokesperson of the ACJU (Interview 14, Personal Communication, March 11th
2015) stated that one had to look at the Muslims pre-Beruwela and post-Beruwela, whereby
post-Beruwela they have begun to work on unifying the different Muslim groups and
movements in Sri Lanka while preserving diversity. However, the SLTJ which is considered
the most difficult of the radical Muslim movements expressed grievances that they were not
represented in the decision making processes of the ACJU. Both groups have grievances
against the other which, when objectively examined, are justifiable. The ACJU does not
approve of the brash and hot-blooded nature of the SLTJ, and the SLTJ condemns the poor
representation of all Muslims by the ACJU. There is a need for more dialogue and consensus
between these groups to build cohesion.
The Politics of Factionalism
The Muslim political identity and stance in Sri Lankan politics too contributes to factionalism
among Muslims on ethno-religious lines both at micro and macro levels. In the Batticaloa
district in particular, certain Sufi groups such as the Abdur Rauf group are sustained by
patronage of Muslim politicians who in turn secure a consistent voter base. This is because
Sufi sects have more links with national politics than other groups due to their long history,
large following and patronage of Muslim business elites. In Colombo, Alawi Moulana, Azath
Saly, M.L.A.M Hisbullah and A.H.M Aswer are the strong followers of Sufism currently
active in Muslim politics. Sufi elites are also more influential in the Muslim governing body
the ACJU and their decision making process as well because of these reasons. This has
caused much tension between Sufi and revisionist movements on various issues. For
example, the sighting of the new moon for Ramzan festival is a crucial and controversial
decision which is a major cause of conflict between Muslim movements and groups. The Sufi
and Thablighi-dominant ACJU has and continues to play a significant role in deciding when
the moon was sighted. Their decision, however, is being opposed by the Thawheed groups,
Malharus Salam (affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt) and Shias, who are
politically powerless and critical of the privileges enjoyed by the groups represented in the
24
ACJU. On the other hand, the Thablighi and Jamaate Islami do not criticise the ACJU and
follow a very neutral line in the Islamic matters of the ACJU and Sri Lanka.
In the political arena, the absence of an overarching political representative, which addresses
the concerns of Muslims island-wide, could be one of the reasons for regional factionalism.
The ACJU claimed that it had no political affiliations whatsoever, but engaged with Muslim
politicians in encouraging them to exemplify Muslim values. Professor Uyangoda’s
hypothesis is that (Interview 16, Personal Communication, September 20th 2014) Muslims
had lost their political leader when M.H.M Ashraff former leader and founder of the SLMC,
was assassinated. This led to Muslims forming their own groups in order to safeguard their
rights and reclaim their bargaining power. This is evident in the way that movements such
as the Thawheed Jamath, the National Thawheed Jamath and the Thablighi Jamaat function
as socio-economic and political support centres for Muslims in their districts, since political
representation of these communities is lacking and because the ACJU is also considered to
have no political bargaining power. This was corroborated by the media spokesman of the
ACJU who said that they do not want to get involved in politics (Interview 14, Personal
Communication, March 11th 2015). An example of these support centres is the new Shoora
Council formed in Ottamavdi which functions, in their own words, as a “Community-based
organisation” engaging in efforts to ensure good relations between the Muslim village and the
adjoining Tamil village as well as dealing with issues related to accessing clean drinking
water. Most of the Eastern Province Shoora councils and mosque federations also present
themselves as social workers serving to fill the gap left by politicians. The newly formed
National Shoora Council (NSC) and Muslim Council (MC) have also been trying to
safeguard the Muslim community from external threats like BBS allegations and violence and
unify the Muslim community, because Muslim politicians and political parties could not
perform well / were crippled during the second part of the Rajapaksa regime. Another reason
for the formation of the NSC and MC is because the ACJU could not stand up alone against
the BBS’s allegations and had to face much criticism from Muslim society as well. These two
bodies were more active than the ACJU and Muslim politicians during the Aluthgama riots
against Muslims in June 2014 and had several discussions with many stakeholders to control
the violence.
It must also be stated that underlying this factionalism among the Muslim community is also
the desire for power resulting in power struggles within the community. On one hand, there is
25
the dichotomy of the urban elite versus the (lower) middle class intelligentsia, and on the
other there is the factor of age, where enterprising youth find that they are not given a space
to voice dissent against their older elite leaders or engage in administration and decision
making. Thus, factionalism is also instigated by power struggles within a religious
community whereby breaking away from the ‘father’ sect (which is most often entrenched in
its ways) and forming one’s own sect is a means by which young Muslims acquire a voice
(Interview 8, Personal Communication, September 18th 2014) A clear example is the
Thawheed groups which comprise chiefly of lower middle class to middle class youth leaders
and administrators.
The Economics of Factionalism
Religion is an economic subsystem of a larger social economy. “Religious economies consist
of a market of current and potential followers (demand), a set of organisations (suppliers)
seeking to serve the market, and the religious doctrines and practices (products) offered by
various organisations” (Stark and Finke 2000, p. 35). Accordingly, the emergence of new
Islamic groups and movements has to be in response to a demand for religious doctrines and
practices. However, the interviews conducted reveal that rather than the demand for religious
doctrines and practices, it is the ample supply of funds in Sri Lanka which triggers a demand
for material gain that contributes to the increase of Islamic groups.
Philanthropy is embedded in the Quran and Hadis, and Muslim individuals and organisations
are encouraged to engage in acts of charity. Thus, rich Saudi and Middle Eastern donors who
consider Sri Lankan Muslims as poor brethren, donate money for the benefit of their
community. Muslims are also of the belief that erecting a mosque in their lifetime is an act of
merit and donate funds for this purpose. This philanthropic culture is exploited by some Sri
Lankan Muslims who build mosques under the pretext of promoting Wahabist ideology just
to please the Saudi donors who donate money for the promotion of Wahabism (Interview 8,
Personal Communication, September 18th 2014). It is therefore, the ample availability of
supply, rather than increase in demand that results in the formation of new groups and
mosques. Thus, a “group is formed by first building a mosque as this helps the group to get
donations” (ibid).
26
Secular (i.e. those who do not identify with a particular group) and traditional Muslims are
very critical of the above practices. “Mosques are being opened like a boutique an office”
(Interview 8, Personal Communication, September 18th 2014). According to a Shia
representative, “Islam is sold these days – it’s a business … we are against this” (Interview 2,
Personal Communication, September 20th 2014). The representative of the SLTJ stated, “The
bigger the mosque, the greater the profit” (Interview 13, Personal Communication, February
9th 2015). While this explains the increasing number of mosques in Sri Lanka, it also reveals
the ulterior monetary motives of instituting new/sub-movements. This is further encouraged
by the absence of strict state regulations restricting the erection of and number of mosques
according to region (Interview 14, Personal Communication, March 11th 2015). The
mushrooming of Muslim groups, from an economic perspective, is thus a capitalist enterprise
which benefits Muslim individuals economically so much so that it is questionable whether
the splintering of certain groups is actually based on theological disputes.
In the description of the different Muslim groups and in Table 1.1, one would have noticed
that almost all new Islamic groups have a sister organisation engaged in social service work.
This is also a result of the availability of funds from abroad. Again, ‘profit’ is a motive of
some groups which form foreign funded NGOs which engage in social service activities
building wells, mosques, donating cows for slaughtering and funding schools. On one hand,
this benefits the Muslim community of Sri Lanka and on the other it is a source of wealth for
those who exploit the ‘generosity’ of foreign donors. Thus, religion is also a commodity
which is purchased or appropriated as a means for charismatic individuals to found religious
enterprises for financial/personal gain.
The above discussion of the dynamics (religious, political and economic) of factionalism
shows that Islam in Sri Lanka (like any other religious institution) is a market-driven
economy which due to the absence of state regulation (as gratefully mentioned by one of the
interviewees) encourages pluralism. The increasing number of intra-religious groups can be
attributed to a need for the religious (Islamic) market to respond to a complex mix of ethno-
nationalist, capitalist, political, religious and individual demands. On one hand, this could be
considered healthy, as competition can generate higher levels of commitment among
individual Islamic groups. However, too many independent competing groups can also lead
to conflict (Finke and Stark, 2003).
27
Implications of Intra-Group Fragmentation
Having identified the reasons for factionalism, it is also important to discuss the implications
of factionalism for the Muslim community of Sri Lanka as a whole. Boucek (2009),
examining the different faces and dynamics of factionalism in political parties, states that
factionalism can take three forms Cooperative, Competitive and Degenerative. Cooperative
factionalism is the creation of a factional structure within a party to encourage intra-party
cooperation and consensus building. In contrast, competitive factionalism is the splitting of a
party into opposing factions resulting from intra-party disagreements. If these parties are not
regulated and monitored, it could lead to Degenerative factionalism where parties become
self-seeking and vie for independent patronage (p. 469-478). While this is a very neat
description of the forms of factionalism, it can contribute to explaining the complex nature of
factionalism among the Muslims of Sri Lanka.
Analysis of the interviews reveals that factionalism among the Muslim community is
paradoxically both competitive (as discussed above) and cooperative. Their cooperation is not
intentional but due to the common minority status shared by all Muslims in Sri Lanka.
Almost all the representatives of different groups emphasised this strong sense of minority
identity using words such as “helpless,” “isolated” and “apartheid” to describe their
powerlessness in Sri Lanka.
“We are a minority in this country … an isolated community. We don’t preach
because we don’t like to expose ourselves. We are a minority and this country belongs
to the Buddhists. Even if we are called for a fight, we won’t go. We should not give
fuel to the BBS” (Shia representative Interview 2, Personal Communication,
September 20th 2014)
We are in Sri Lanka a minority community. We have to co-exist and tolerate and
accept others for peace” (Federation, Eravur Interview 1, Personal Communication,
September 20th, 2014)
Muslims are a minority … having the lowest socio-economic base … In the South we
have to compete with the Sinhalese; In the North, with the Tamils. So sometimes we
come under one and sometimes two powers(Shoora Council, Colombo Interview
15, Personal Communication, March 19th 2015)
It is this framing of their identity as a group with minority status which is the fragile thread
that holds the Muslim community of Sri Lanka together whereby all the Muslim
28
representatives interviewed confirmed that they would unite against a common threat.
However, it must be noted that these minority sentiments do not imply that Buddhists and
Tamils are the Muslims’ only religious or ethnic ‘Other’. In fact, the Muslims’ ‘Other’ varies
according to where and whether they are densely concentrated. Thus, the Eravur Federation
states, “Muslims cause problems in Kathankudi and not in other places like Badulla and
Batticaloa where they are a minority (Interview 1, Personal Communication, September
20th, 2014). In other words, at a macro level, the Muslim identity is defined by the Sinhalese
and Tamil majority which fosters unity, while at a micro level it is conflicted and pitted
against its various groups (i.e. sufism / wahabism and intra-Thawheed conflicts).
This competitive factionalism is healthy on one hand, because it encourages checks and
balances within the Muslim community, not merely with regard to the learning of theology,
but also with regard to encouraging inclusiveness within governing bodies such as the ACJU.
The ACJU claims to represent all Muslim groups in Sri Lanka and ensure unity in
representation to the other religious and ethnic communities in Sri Lanka. However, they
seem to have disowned the SLTJ which chooses not to conform, and this is one of the chief
reasons for degenerative tendencies within the Muslim community. The representative of the
ACJU implied that on the basis of theology, Muslims had the right to have differences of
opinion and that as long as the fundamentals of Islam were accepted (Quran and Hadis) they
were considered Muslim. Thus, there is co-existence among Muslims to a large extent on the
basis of religion. It is the modes and methods used by dissenting Islamic movements like the
Thawheed movements (SLTJ and NTJ) which tarnish the reputation of Muslims which is not
tolerated by the ACJU. However, the ACJU needs to realise that they have to engage with
‘degenerate’ Thawheed movements and include them in democratic decision-making
processes in order to avoid conflict. This is not an easy task as the Thawheed representatives
demonstrated an unswerving hold over their beliefs.
With regard to degenerative factionalism, the researchers also investigated the accusation
made both within and outside the Muslim community that a Jihadist Movement was
emerging in the East. On interviewing several Thablighi, Thawheed and Sufi representatives,
it was found that while there is talk among discontented youth about espousing jihadi
practices, these are just idle youth responding to the global trend in Islam, but with no
motivation or the means to make this a reality. Local organisations such as mosque
federations are also keeping tabs on the community and nipping such ideas in the bud. The
29
ACJU, Shoora Council and local Mosque Federations confirmed that there are no Islamic
Jihadi groups in Sri Lanka.
Conclusion
The emergence of new Islamic movements is an ongoing and continuous process and a sign
that Islam in Sri Lanka is a healthy social movement which keeps abreast of trends within the
Global Ummah while tolerating diversity. This is also encouraged by the democratic liberties
provided in the constitution of Sri Lanka. Therefore, the increase in religiosity of Muslims of
Sri Lanka and the attendant visibility in the form of mosques and traditional dress should not
be considered as a threat to Buddhism and the national security of Sri Lanka. In fact, Sri
Lankan Muslims are highly conscious of how they are perceived by their ethnic others and
are engaging in dialogue on Islamaphobia and inter-religious harmony.
Factionalism is also a sign that Muslims are deeply introspective about their identity and
religiosity whereby the movements they form are driven not only by material gains, but also
by the need to protect their version of Islam. Factionalism among the Muslim community of
Sri Lanka is also competitively cooperative, with the All Ceylon Jamiyathul Ulama, National
Shoora Council and Muslim Council working towards amicable relations and corporation
between the different Muslim groups. There is only one delinquent outlier which poses a
threat to the Muslim community, but it must be noted that this group too has legitimate
grievances which points out many shortcomings of these traditional, elite-run governing
bodies. Their methods might be questionable, but their criticism and ideas are valid and worth
taking into consideration.
The recommendation made in this paper is for more effective dialogue between disagreeing
groups and an increase in inclusivity and democracy in internal decision making processes
within National Muslim Bodies. The researchers also hope that this paper generates
discussion within the Muslim community and invites responses to the arguments made in the
paper.
30
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Fracturing Community:
Intra-group relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
Ethno-religious violence has a long history in Sri Lanka dating far back as 1883.
The Muslims of Sri Lanka have been victims of sporadic attacks by the
Sinhalese and Tamil majorities since the early 1900s with the most recent
attack being in 2014. While the recent turn towards violence against the Muslim
community in Sri Lanka can be attributed to the “ethno-nationalist rivalries”
(McGilvray 2011) of the Sinhala Buddhist (political) majority of Sri Lanka, this
paper hypothesises that anti-Muslim sentiments are also a result of the
internal conflicts regarding the practice of Islam within the Muslim community.
These conflicts, manifested in the form of visible, symbolic Islamisation, cause
suspicion and fear among members of other communities.
This study examines intra-religious relations within the Muslim community of
Sri Lanka by identifying the different Islamic groups, their composition,
motivations and interactions through the lens of social movement theory.
Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam are Programme Officers at the
International Centre for Ethnic Studies
8016907895559
ISBN 978-955-580-169-0
MOHAMED FASLAN & NADINE VANNIASINKAM
... 5 Typical examples of such external manifestations of piety include Muslim women wearing ijab (various forms of head covering) and the burqa, and men wearing the white jubba. This increased visibility has 'created an illusion of an increase in the Muslim population, adding to the fear and suspicion of the majority towards the motives of the Muslim community' (Faslan et al., 2015). ...
... They are 'heterogenous and divergent' (Klem, 2011) and contest each other for space and financial resourcesoften from Middle Eastern sources such as Saudi Arabia (Gunasingham 2019). A number of scholars studying intra-Muslim conflict have observed that violence between Islamist groups and other Muslim groups since the early 2000s reflected the emergence of Islamism in Sri Lanka (McGilvray et al., 2007, Faslan et al., 2015. While it is argued that Muslim 'Arabic' attire can be less about piety and more about asserting Muslim identity (Haniffa, 2008), some observers note that there is substantial 'peer, mosque, and community pressure', and at times 'coercion', on Muslim women to wear conservative Arabic attire on the basis that it is stipulated in Islamic teaching. ...
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... These countries had built mosques, madrassas, and radicalized local Muslims. Indeed, increased internal conflict between the historically Sufi Muslims of Sri Lanka and the increasing Wahabi sect have created strife within the Muslim community of Sri Lanka (McGilvray 2011;Faslan and Vanniasinkam 2015). Withange referenced the historical subjugation by colonizers to contrast the modern-day threat of radical Muslims within Sri Lanka (Malji 2019c). ...
... Due to internal conflicts between local Islamic sects, an increasing number of mosques were built, and Muslim clothing choices changed (Fasland and Vanniasinkam 2015; McGilvray 2011). The increasing popularity of reformist conservative movements like Thablighi Jamaat and Jamaa te Islamii led Muslims to adopt more traditional Arab dress in the form of jubbas, hijabs, niqabs, and beards whereas before they opted for traditional conservative South Asian attire (Faslan and Vanniasinkam 2015). ...
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Sri Lanka is a multi-religious, multi-ethnic, and multicultural country. The Buddhists form the ethnic majority group, while Hindus, Muslims, and Christians are minority groups. The records show that Muslims have a long history of peaceful coexistence with other ethnicgroups in Sri Lanka. However, after the civil war ended in 2009, hostilities against Muslim groups increased. Islamic organisations in Sri Lanka are accused of promoting religious extremism and threatening religious harmony. Following the Easter Sunday attacks in 2019, Muslim and Islamic organisations were suspended. In light of these recent events, this research focuses on the role of the National Shoora Council in fostering religious coexistence in Sri Lanka and tries to identify the existing challenges.This is a qualitative study that relies on primary and secondary data. Interviews were conducted with the National Shūrā Council representatives for primary data collection. Keywords: Religious Coexistence, National Shūrā Council, Islamic Organization, Sri Lanka.
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This Element explores religious nationalism in Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam and Sikhism and how it manifests in India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. At the core, nationalists contend that the continuation of their group is threatened by some other group. Much of these fears are rooted in the colonial experience and have been exacerbated in the modern era. For the Hindu and Buddhist nationalists explored in this Element, the predominant source of fear is directed toward the Muslim minority and their secular allies. For Sikhs, minorities within India, the fear is primarily of the state. For Muslims in Pakistan, the fear is more dynamic and includes secularists and minority sects, including Shias and Ahmadis. In all instances, the groups fear that their ability to practice and express their religion is under immediate threat. Additionally, Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim nationalists wish for the state to adopt or promote their religious ideology.
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During 1983–2009, Sri Lanka lived a bloody civil war that left more than 100,000 casualties. Far from being peaceful, the long-awaited post-war phase has witnessed several periodic episodes of violence between some of the different ethnoreligious groups in the island. This chapter analyses the comments made on YouTube videos on the attacks on Sri Lankan Muslims in Ampara and Kandy’s districts in 2018. Applying the Discourse-Historical approach as the main theoretical framework and, precisely the argumentation strategy of topoi (Wodak, The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean. London: Sage, 2015), I explore how linguistic structures of online extreme speech embody and shape stereotypes of the targeted Muslim minority, hinder the process of reconciliation and contribute to deepening the ethnic and religious division in the country.
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Identities are socially constructed and they are produced and reproduced in actions and speeches. Similarly, identities are shaped by political and institutional conditions and are used as a basis for group mobilization in search for access to political power, material resources, and control over representation. In Sri Lanka, construction of separate Muslim identity has progressed through various points in time (episodes) producing layers of identity ranging from ‘‘fluid non Tamil’’ identity to ‘‘solid non Tamil’’ identity. The empirical literature on Muslim identity construction in Sri Lanka, however, pays scant attention to the role and impact of political and institutional context in capturing the trajectories of separate Muslim identity formation. As a result, important socio-political contexts such as the Sinhala-Tamil conflict, the critical juncture in the transformation from ‘‘fluid non Tamil Muslim’’ identity to ‘‘solid non Tamil’’ Muslim identity, remain underexplored and unexplained. The present paper, therefore, seeks to answer two research questions; how the Muslim activism for separate ethno-religious identity was shaped under different political contexts; why the non Tamil Muslim identity became a ‘‘hard category’’ particularly in the late twentieth century given the fact that it long remained elusive.
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This article bridges Sri Lankan studies and the academic debate on the relation between contemporary Islam and politics. It constitutes a case study of the Muslim community in Akkaraipattu on Sri Lanka's war-ridden east coast. Over two decades of ethnically colored conflict have made Muslim identity of paramount importance, but the meanings attached to that identity vary substantively. Politicians, mosque leaders, Sufis and Tablighis define the ethnic, religious and political dimensions of “Muslimness” differently and this leads to intra-Muslim contradictions. The case study thus helps resolve the puzzle of Sri Lankan Muslims: they are surrounded by hostility, but they continue to be internally divided. Akkaraipattu's Muslims jockey between principled politics, pragmatic politics and anti-politics, because they have to navigate different trajectories. This article thus corroborates recent studies on Islam elsewhere that argue for contextualized and nuanced approaches to the variegated interface between Islam and politics.
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In this paper I argue that the manner in which piety is perceived and propagated among Muslims in Sri Lanka must be understood as located within the context of ethnic conflict and the polarization between ethnic groups that occurred in its wake. I explore the work of one Muslim women's da'wa (preaching) group—Al Muslimaat—that pioneered the process of making piety popular among lower-middle and middle-income Muslim women in a semi-urban Colombo neighbourhood. Looking at the group's activities and specifically through analyses of the bayan or lay sermons delivered by their most charismatic member, I look at the nature of the pious practice that is preached. I argue that in making a self-consciously pious Muslim female subject, Al Muslimaat bayans are affecting ideas of masculinity and femininity among the suburban Muslims with whom they work, and recasting Muslimness in a manner exclusive of ethnic others. I argue also that by marginalizing the kafir in propagating the new Muslim, Al Muslimaat and the greater piety movement in Sri Lanka is mirroring the particular incommensurable identities already espoused by the violently strident Sinhala and Tamil nationalisms in the country.
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Checkpoint, Temple, Church and Mosque is based on fieldwork in Sri Lanka’s most religiously diverse and politically troubled region in the closing years of the civil war. It provides a series of new and provocative arguments about the promise of a religiously based civil society, and the strengths and weaknesses of religious organisations and religious leaders in conflict mediation. It argues that for people trapped in long and violent conflicts, religion plays a contradictory role, often acting as a comforting and stabilising force but also, in certain situations, acting as a source of new conflict. Additionally, war itself can lead to profound changes in religious institutions: Catholic priests engage with Buddhist monks and new Muslim leaders, while Hindu temples and Pentecostal churches offer the promise of healing. This book will provoke new debate about the role of religious organisations and leaders in situations of extreme conflict and will be of great interest to students of anthropology, development studies, religious studies and peace/conflict studies.
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Most of the debate about secularism and the secular state in India has remained at a general level, leaving a great many gaps in our knowledge of the actual meanings and practices associated with secularism in India. This article argues that secularism in India is premised on an unstable separation of a realm of politics from a supposedly unpolitical realm of culture, where communities have been represented in rather static and undifferentiated terms. Discussing ethnographic material from Muslim neighbourhoods in Mumbai the author shows how the separation between ‘pure’ culture and ‘dirty’ politics is breaking down in the face of a new political assertiveness among ordinary, low-status Muslims. This challenges the position of religious leaders and it also questions widely held assumptions of the relative coherence of the Muslim community.
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This study explores the process of religious identity formation and examines the emergence of religion as the most salient source of personal and social identity for a group of second-generation Muslim Americans. Drawing on data gathered through participant observation, focus groups, and individual interviews with Muslim university students in New York and Colorado, three stages of religious identity development are presented: religion as ascribed identity; religion as chosen identity; and religion as declared identity. This research illustrates how religious identity emerges in social and historical context and demonstrates that its development is variable rather than static. Additionally, I discuss the impacts of September 11 and show how a crisis event can impel a particular identity - in this case, religious - to become even more central to an individual's concept of self. Through asserting the primacy of their religious identity over other forms of social identity, religion became a powerful base of personal identification and collective association for these young Muslims.
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Sri Lanka's Sunni Muslims or “Moors”, who make up eight percent of the population, are the country's third largest ethnic group, after the Buddhist Sinhalese (seventy-four per cent) and the Hindu Tamils (eighteen per cent). Although the armed LTTE (Tamil Tiger) rebel movement was defeated militarily by government forces in May 2009, the island's Muslims still face the long-standing external threats of ethno-linguistic Tamil nationalism and pro-Sinhala Buddhist government land and resettlement policies. In addition, during the past decade a sharp internal conflict has arisen within the Sri Lankan Muslim community between locally popular Sufi sheiks and the followers of hostile Islamic reformist movements energised by ideas and resources from the global ummah, or world community of Muslims. This simultaneous combination of “external” ethno-nationalist rivalries and “internal” Islamic doctrinal conflict has placed Sri Lanka's Muslims in a double bind: how to defend against Tamil and Sinhalese ethnic hegemonies while not appearing to embrace an Islamist or jihadist agenda. This article first traces the historical development of Sri Lankan Muslim identity in the context of twentieth-century Sri Lankan nationalism and the south Indian Dravidian movement, then examines the recent anti-Sufi violence that threatens to divide the Sri Lankan Muslim community today.
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There is a new, but still limited, realisation that the perspectives developed by the ‘social movement theory' can be useful to illuminate aspects of Islamist movements. This is a welcome development. Yet it is also pertinent to point to some limitations of the prevailing social movement theories (those grounded in the technologically advanced and politically open societies) to account for the complexities of sociopolitical activism in contemporary Muslim societies, which are often characterised by political control and limited means for communicative action. The article argues for a more fluid and fragmented understanding of social movements, which may better explain the differentiated and changing disposition of such movements as Islamism. In this context, I propose the concept of ‘imagined solidarities', which might help illustrate modes of solidarity building in such closed political settings as the contemporary Muslim Middle East.
Sufi and Reformist Designs: Muslim Identity in Sri Lanka
  • C De Munck
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  • T Bartholomeusz
de Munck, C, (1998), 'Sufi and Reformist Designs: Muslim Identity in Sri Lanka', In, Bartholomeusz, T.J and, de Silva, C.R, (ed), Buddhist Fundamentalism and Minority Identities in Sri Lanka, New York: State University of New York Press.
The Dynamics of Religious Institutions
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Finke, R and Stark, R, (2003), 'The Dynamics of Religious Institutions', In Dillon, M (ed), The Handbook of the Sociology of Religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Archives de sciences sociales des religions
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Gaborieau, M, (2006), Archives de sciences sociales des religions, Réveils du soufisme en Afrique et en Asie: Translocalité prosélytisme et réforme, http://www.jstor.org/stable/30122870, accessed on 20/02/2015.