BookPDF Available

New Buddhist Extremism and the Challengers to Ethno Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka

Authors:

Abstract

This study attempts to understand the emergence of politically motivated Buddhist organizations, their modes of activism, the way in which their role is being perceived and responded to by the other forces of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism, and lastly, how the activities of these organizations affect the precarious political equilibrium in the post-Eelam war Sri Lanka which is dominated by antagonistic relationships among a number of ethno-religious nationalisms. It argues that these organizations are very much part of the hegemonic Buddhist organizational network in Sri Lanka and logical offspring of a recent evolution of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri
This study attempts to understand the emergence of politically motivated
Buddhist organizations, their modes of activism, the way in which their role
is being perceived and responded to by the other forces of Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalism, and lastly, how the activities of these organizations affect the
precarious political equilibrium in the post-Eelam war Sri Lanka which is
dominated by antagonistic relationships among a number of ethno-religious
nationalisms. It argues that these organizations are very much part of the
hegemonic Buddhist organizational network in Sri Lanka and logical
offspring of a recent evolution of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of History,
University of Colombo.
ISBN 978-955-580-191-1
Printed by Horizon Printing (Pvt) Ltd.
9789789 555802
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to
Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to
Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges
to Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri
International Centre for Ethnic Studies
October 2016
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to Ethno-Religious Coexistence in
Sri Lanka
© 2016 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 work was carried out under the ‘Building Resilient Communities’ initiative
implemented by ICES with support from USAID.
Copyright to this publication belongs to the International Centre for Ethnic Studies
(ICES). Any part of this book may be reproduced with due acknowledgement to the
author and publisher. The interpretations and conclusions expressed in the study
are those of the author and do not necessarily reect the views and policies of the
ICES or the donor.
Printed By: Horizon Printing (Pvt.) Ltd.
1616/6, Hatharaman Handiya,
Malabe Road, Kottawa,
Pannipitiya
Cover Artwork by DH Art
Select 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
Hania. 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.
16. Fracturing Community: Intra-group relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka
(November, 2015) by Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam.
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges
to Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri*
* Nirmal Dewasiri studied history at the University of Colombo for his BA and received his MPhil from
the same university in 2000, where he serves as a Senior Lecturer. He has an Advanced Masters (2002) and
a PhD (2007) from Leiden University, The Netherlands. He is the author of “Adaptable Peasant: Agrarian
Society in Western Sri Lanka under Dutch Rule, 1740-1800” (Brill, 2008). His research interests include
social transformations in colonial societies, historiography and ethno-nationalist ideologies in Sri Lanka,
Post-colonial state formation in Sri Lanka and radical political movements.
Coexistence in Sri Lanka
Contents
Introduction ........................................................................................................ 1
Part I
The Context ......................................................................................................... 3
Sinhala Ethno-Nationalist Politics after July 1983 ........................................... 7
Part II
Rise of New Buddhist Organizations .................................................................. 12
Confronting Evangelical Christians .................................................................... 15
Who are the True Buddhists? Attacks on “Other” Buddhists ............................. 17
“Soma Hamuduruwo” as a Turning Point .......................................................... 18
Rise of the JHU and Post-JHU Bhikku Politics ................................................. 20
Radicalization of Young Buddhist Monks ........................................................... 25
Part III
New Buddhist Radicalism and Sinhala-Buddhist Nationalism ......................... 28
New Radical Buddhism, Minorities and Ethno-Religious Coexistence ............ 35
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to Ethno-Religious
1
Introduction
Politics in Sri Lanka has always been closely related with certain articulations of
Buddhism. In the last few years, this relationship is again in the limelight with
the proliferation of new forms of activism by a cluster of Buddhist organizations
that aggressively intervenes in the public life. The most well-known among these
organizations is Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), while Sihala Ravaya (SR) and Ravana
Balaya (RB) are also well known. There are several other organizations which are
less known but engaged in similar activities. A new organization, which is popularly
known as ‘Sinha-Le’, is also added to the list recently.
These organizations are led by young Buddhist monks who have been active gures
in the recent politicization of Buddhism. Moreover, these organizations have
succeeded in attracting a large number of young Buddhist monks to their fold.
This essay attempts to understand the emergence of these organizations, their
mode of activism, the way in which their role is being perceived and responded to
by the other forces of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism and, lastly, how the activities
of these organizations aect the precarious political equilibrium in the post-
Eelam war Sri Lanka which is dominated by antagonistic relationships among a
number of ethno-religious nationalisms. It argues that these organizations are
very much part of the hegemonic Buddhist organizational network in Sri Lanka,
and logical ospring of a recent evolution of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. I
build this argument, particularly in opposition to certain discursive eorts from
some quarters of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism to dissociate themselves from the
aggressive behaviour of these organizations.
The problem researched by this study could be formulated as follows: “While
there is a wider belief that these extremist Buddhist organizations are a temporary
phenomenon, facilitated by the direct or indirect support of major players in the
government, why do they continue to make a decisive contribution to the public-
political life even when they do not enjoy such support?”
2
In addressing the problem, it is necessary to closely scrutinize the discourse of
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism in order to understand its inner dynamics. This has
not been done in most of the recent studies on Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. This
study attempts to take a closer look at the multiple voices of the Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalist discourse in relation to the recently emerged extremist Buddhist
organizations. This particular group of organizations is here called Extremist
Buddhist Organizations because of the nature of their behaviour in the public space.
This essay aims at providing a fair assessment of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist
approach towards non-Sinhala Buddhist ethno-religious minorities. A problem
in most critical studies on the Sinhala-Buddhist approach to minorities is the
lack of understanding of the subtle nuances of this relationship. Because of this,
Sinhala-Buddhist intellectuals ippantly dismiss these critical studies as a part
of a malicious propaganda campaign against Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. In
this context, this essay attempts to scrutinize the internal nuances of the Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist discourse on its attitudes towards ethno religious minorities.
The essay is structured in three parts:
Part I will focus on the immediate context of extremist Buddhist activism, with
special focus on the post-Eelam war period, and a detailed discussion of the
dynamics and the background of Buddhist monks in politics since 1983, in the
context of the resurgence of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism in the same period.
Part II provides an account of the rise of new Buddhist extremist organizations,
their behaviour, and issues that they make use of as justication for their activism.
Part III discusses the complicated responses of the other major players in Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalism to the new extremist Buddhist organizations. In conclusion, it
also discusses the impact of the continued activities of these extremist organizations
on the fragile relationship between ethno-religious communities in Sri Lanka.
3
Part I
The Context
The discourse of this essay is located within the politico-ideological context of
the Sinhala-Buddhist South, which is ideologically and politically dominated by
hegemonic Sinhala- Buddhist ethno-nationalism.1 The political and ideological
power of Sinhala-Buddhist ethno-nationalism has been strongly felt in the political
landscape in Sri Lanka, especially in the last decade, which was dominated by the
regime led by the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), under the presidency
of Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Politicized Buddhism, articulated within an ethno-nationalist paradigm by various
groups and individual intellectuals, formed an essential ingredient of Sinhala-
Buddhist ethno-nationalism. In other words, the political consciousness of the
Sinhala-Buddhists is closely related to their identity of being Buddhists.2 A caption
that appears at many public as well as private spaces in the Sinhala-Buddhist social
space clearly captures this relationship. The caption is “me gauthama buddha
rajyayayi” (fï f.!;u nqoaO rdcHhhs). There are several other identical captions
such as “me budunge deshayayi” (fï nqÿkaf.a foaYhhs). But the former is the most
signicant. It is probably not easy to translate this caption into English. Although
“Rajyaya” has now come to literally mean “the state”, it is more correct to translate
it as: “This is the realm of the Gauthama Buddha”.
A few years ago, just after the end of the civil war, I noticed this caption was printed
on large stickers pasted on the rear window of state-owned SLTB buses plying from
Colombo to Jana. This, I suggest, is as if to remind the people of Jana, the ideal
political order, in the context where a serious attempt at transgressing that order
had just been defeated militarily.3
1 I have explained what I mean by “Sinhala-Buddhist South” elsewhere. See Dewasiri (2013).
2 The relationship between politics and Buddhism in Sri Lanka is well known, and virtually needs no
introduction. There are a number of distinguished scholars who have studied this relationship. The
most important works, especially in connection with the post-1983 period, are Seneviratne (1999) and
Tambiah (1992). It is also important to see Bartholomeusz (2002). For a useful review of the literature
on modern political Buddhism in Sri Lanka see De Silva (2007).
3 Note that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was militarily defeated under the Rajapaksa regime
in May 2009. The LTTE fought a war to establish a separate state within the territory of the state of Sri Lanka.
4
The political message that is carried by the sticker, I further suggest, forms the
core of the Sinhala-Buddhist political imagination. In this imagination, Sri Lanka
is a land that belongs to Sinhala-Buddhists; the other non-Sinhala-Buddhists are
allowed to live here without any problem as long as they recognize this exclusive
right of Sinhala-Buddhists.4
This imagination nds its various manifestations in times of political transformation
and crises. The election campaign of 1956 was one such important occasion. The
famous cartoon, entitled “Mara Yuddhaya” (the resisting of all temptation by the
Buddha, prior to enlightenment) appeared in the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna
(MEP) election campaign of 1956, published by the Eksath Bhikshu Peramuna,
a leading organization that campaigned for the MEP, represents this notion very
clearly.5 A more articulated form is found in the discourse of the Jathika Hela
Urumaya (JHU), in their election campaign of 2004, where its goal is presented as
the establishment of a “Dharma Rajjaya” (a realm of Dharma).
The LTTE ideologically legitimized the war by using the territorially based political aspirations of Tamil ethno-
nationalism.
4 This forms the core of the political ideology of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. The most eloquent exponent of this
position is Prof. Nalin de Silva. His writings on this theme are contained in a number of volumes. I recommend
the following works for a basic understanding of De Silva’s approach: Prabhakaran, Ohuge Seeyala, Bappala saha,
Massinala (De Silva, 1995); Demala Jathivadayata Erehiwa (De Silva, 2009) and Ape Pravada 3 (De Silva, 2010).
5 For a detailed account of the 1956 election campaign, see Weerawardana (1960).
5
Illustration I: Courtesy:
http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2015/08/03/political-cartoons-that-
made-a-dierence-and-shook-the-nation-in-the-1950s/
The relationship between the political realm and Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism
reached a decisive point in the last one-and-a-half decades, and climaxed with the
consolidation of the UPFA regime. The military defeat of the LTTE was particularly
a decisive victory for the Sinhala-Buddhist political imagination. At the same
time the defeat of the LTTE posed a major existential threat to Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalism, because the former was the pivotal antagonistic other of the latter.
When the “otherness” of the LTTE disappeared as a tangible threat to the Sinhala-
Buddhist population, it was not easy to justify the immediate political signicance
of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. Indeed there were, and still are, attempts to show
that the LTTE threat is still looming large, especially in the form of its alleged proxy,
the TNA, and various organizations of the Tamil diaspora. It was also argued that
there was an international conspiracy against Sri Lanka, which could be averted
only through the collective strength of Sinhala-Buddhists who would rally around
a strong nationalist force.6
6 The most sophisticated exponent of this school of thought is Dr. Nalin de Silva, former professor of mathematics.
On a TV talk show in 2011, in which I also took part, he condently announced that the US will attack Sri Lanka
within six months. Wimal Weerawansa, a popular politician and a member of parliament, is also another strong
exponent of this line of thinking.
6
However, these claims were not as convincing as the threat of the LTTE before
May 2009, physically felt by the entire population of the country. The politics of
the TNA and the Tamil diaspora, as well as alleged international conspiracies are,
nonetheless, beyond the day-to-day experience of the people.
It was against this background that the new extremist Buddhist organizations make
their presence felt in the Sinhala-Buddhist South, by opening up a new frontier in
the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist politics, viz. the threat from Muslim and Christian
fundamentalism to the existence of Buddhism in Sri Lanka.
This was indeed not a completely new discourse. Muslims and Christians were always
perceived as potential threats to the wellbeing of Sinhala-Buddhists. However,
these threats were viewed as lesser evils in the presence of the more serious threat
of the LTTE, which had the support of Tamil ethno-nationalism. However, it was
relatively dicult to mobilize the Sinhala-Buddhist people against Christians of
established churches. But there were more vulnerable Christians, new evangelical
groups who were passionately and enthusiastically engaged in conversion eorts,
especially among poor Sinhala-Buddhists.7 It was easier to portray them as a threat
to the Sinhala-Buddhist cause. Even the established churches were not too happy
about these evangelical groups, as they are threatening to them as well (Mathews,
2007).
Muslims were easy to demonize. The constructed image of Muslims vis-à-vis Sinhala-
Buddhist interests was such that it was easy to portray them as a fundamental
threat to the Sinhala-Buddhist cause. The initial phase of politicization of the
negative image of Muslims in Sri Lanka as a part of the larger Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalist imagination took shape during the Sinhala-Muslim riots of 1915. While
these riots were mainly fuelled by the business interests of the emerging Sinhala
entrepreneurial class, they occupy a paradigmatic importance, in the long run, in
shaping the Sinhala-Buddhist political psyche vis-à-vis the Muslims.8 It is also
important to note that Anagarika Dharmapala provided Sinhala-Buddhist political
7 See Perera (1998) for more detail about the work of Christian evangelical organizations.
8 Kumari Jayawardena has documented the formation of this entrepreneurial class in her comprehensive work
“Nobodies to Somebodies” (Jayawardena (2002). For detail about Sinhala-Muslim riots of 1915, see (Jayasekere,
1984 & 1985)
7
ideology with a basic framework in order to perceive ethno-religious minority
groups vis-à-vis the interests of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.9
Although this anti-Muslim component was always present in the Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalist ideology, it had become less signicant in the face of the larger threat of
Tamil nationalism. When the war with the LTTE was over, the anti-Muslim element
came to the fore as the determining focus of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist politics.
The anti-Muslim factor had already taken an important turn in late 1990s when
popular Buddhist monk Rev. Gangodavila Soma took a critical stand on the Muslim
issue, and took on the late M.H.M Ashro, leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress,
in a famous TV debate.10 Although the former was pushed into a defensive mode
by the latter, who was an experienced and shrewd politician more at home than his
interlocutor in the art of debate, this set the stage for the showdown a decade later.
The Muslim issue was taken to a new level, by locating it in the context of the global
discourse on radicalization of Muslim politics, by Patali Champika Ranawaka. In
his polemical text “Al Jihad Al Quida”, he not only signalled the alleged rise of
“Muslim extremism” in Sri Lanka, parallel to the global radicalization of Muslim
politics, but also linked this with the Tamil armed secessionist movement headed
by the LTTE (Ranawaka, 2003).
Sinhala Ethno-Nationalist Politics after July 1983
There is a resurgence of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism in the post-1983 period,
especially in response to the growing strength of Tamil nationalism. The resurgence
9 It is important to quote here the famous words of Dharmapala in this connection: “One day White men will leave
this country. But they will leave only after producing twenty-thirty thousands of ‘Brown-Sahibs’. They will hate
the Sinhala language and manners. They will teach your children to condemn racial and religious divisions. They
will say that Tamils, Moors, Cochchies and Hambayas are all equal. Then they will crown English. Kovils will be
constructed near Buddhist temples. You will be waiting for your savior, Prince Diyasena. Remember that these
Brown Sahibs are capable of killing Diyasenas to-be-born, before they are born.”
—ljo yß iqoafoda fï rg od, hkjd' Wka hkafka Wkaf.a orefjd jf.a l¨ iqoafoda úis;sia odyla fnda l<dg miafihs' Bg
miafia wfma rg md,kh lrkafka fï l¨ iqoafoda' Wka isxy, NdIdjg" isß;a úß;a j,g ffjr lrkjd' Wka WU,f.a
orejkag W.kajdù cd;s" wd.ï" NdId fNaohla tmd lsh,d' fou<;a" urlal,h;a fldÉÑh;a" yïnh;a tlh lsh,d Wka
lshdú' tfyu lsh,d Wka bx.S%isu rc lrdú' mkai,a jfÜ m,a,d fldaú,a yodú' WU, WU, fjkqfjka oshfiak l=udrhd
bmfokl,a n,d bkakjd' WMoskak bkak oshfiak,d ;sôrf.hosu urd oukak fï l¨ iqoaokag yels nj u;l ;shd .ks,a,d'˜
Although this is a popular quote from Anagarika Dharmapala, I could not nd the original source.
10 A summary of the career of Rev. Soma is provided later in this essay.
8
was to face two formidable challenges. One was the rising power of the Tamil
militant movements, and the other was the formidable intellectual onslaught
against Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism, especially in the aftermath of July 1983.
The response to both challenges came particularly from non-conventional sources.
The recovery of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) as a clandestine movement
after being proscribed following the anti-Tamil riots of July 1983 was mainly
enabled by its Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist orientation. A somewhat broader
informal alliance of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist forces emerged out of resistance
to the Indo-Lanka Accord signed in July 1987. The alliance was however weakened
when the movement began to be manipulated by the JVP, with the clear agenda of
capturing political power.11
The major outcome of the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord was the breakdown of
the hegemonic relationship between the governing elite and the Sinhala-Buddhist
constituency. This unsettled political situation was not resolved until 2005, when
Mahinda Rajapaksa won the presidential election with the backing of all the
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist forces.
Parallel to the JVP led nationalist resistance, an intellectual movement that the JVP
was not fully capable of manipulating also emerged. This movement was spearheaded
by a new group of intellectuals who were very well aware of the formidable threat
that came from the anti-nationalist intellectual forces. Jathika Chinthanaya (JC)
movement became the rallying point for this intellectual movement. The revival of
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism after 1983 was fundamentally due to the intellectual
eorts of the JC and its oshoots.
Although the Jathika Chinthanaya was only an intellectual movement and was
not capable of directly mobilizing the masses, it had a powerful impact on young
political activists. Three young radical political activists played a decisive role in the
mobilization of Sinhala-Buddhist public support to build the powerful political bloc
that brought Mahinda Rajapaksa into power. They were Patali Champika Ranawaka,
Rev. Athuraliye Ratana, a young Buddhist monk, and Wimal Weerawansa. The
11 See Wickramasinghe (2006) for a general introduction to the history of this period.
9
rst two were attracted towards the JVP-led university student politics in the latter
part of the 1980s, but later converted to the ideas of the JC. Although they parted
with the JC and initiated separate political movements, the ideological baggage
that they inherited from the JC was central to their political activism, especially in
the early 2000s when two of them worked hand-in-hand to form the Jathika Hela
Urumaya (JHU).
Wimal Weerawansa’s indebtedness to the JC was somewhat circuitous. Being in the
forefront of the JVP revival after 1990, which had a strong nationalist orientation,
he of course inherited a signicant political preference for nationalism. However,
there was a certain ambiguity in the JVP version of nationalism, because of its
heavy ideological bias towards the Marxist tradition, which prevents it from overtly
supporting Sinhala-Buddhist ethno-religious nationalism. 12
This was a particularly dicult task for the JVP, in the context of the anti-minority
potential of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. The political vision of the JVP did
not warrant an overt stand against ethno-religious minorities. When this was a
potential threat to the ideological integrity of the JVP, it managed to resolve it by
tactically manoeuvring the anti-Indian sentiment that was dominant in the latter
part of 1980s, triggered o by the aggressive Indian foreign policy towards Sri
Lanka, and articulated by Sinhala-Buddhist politics temporarily watering down the
anti-minority aspect of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.13
Even at this juncture, some nationalists were highly sceptical about the JVP stand
vis-à-vis the issues that were important to Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. There
12 The JVP stand vis-à-vis Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism and the political demands of the ethno-religious minorities
in Sri Lanka is a highly debated issue. Left wing critics of the JVP have been highly critical about the latter on this
issue. JVP leader, Rohana Wijeweera, in his work “What is the solution to the Tamil Eelam struggle?” (fou< B<dï
wr.,hg úi÷u l=ulao?) has made a comprehensive effort to solve this problem by reinterpreting the Marxist
discourse of the “national question” (Wijeweera, 1997).
13 This is clearly evident if one observes the discourse of the advocates of the Jathika Chintanaya movement. They
signicantly softened their approach towards Tamil nationalism in this conjuncture, where the Indian Peace
Keeping Force in Sri Lanka had engaged in a military conict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
They openly supported the political alliance led by the SLFP at the 1988 presidential election. Some Tamil and
Muslim parties were partners of this alliance and a territorially based power sharing arrangement was also proposed
in the alliance manifesto, which came to be known as The Manifesto of the Democratic National Alliance (or DPA
Manifesto). Under normal circumstances, they would have been vehemently opposed to these kinds of proposals.
10
was a “cold war”, for example, between the JVP and the Jathika Chinthanaya
followers, especially in the universities.14
There was however, a certain ambiguity in the JVP view on Tamil political demands
in the 1990s. It was dicult to maintain this view when the political preference of
the urban and semi-urban middle-classes, where its mass support mainly came
from, was fast drifting towards the extreme form of Sinhala-Buddhist ethno-
religious nationalism.
During this time, Wimal Weerawansa, the main link between the JVP and the
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp, had come under heavy inuence of the JC. He
had especially close contact with Gunadasa Amarasekera, one of the pioneers of
the JC. The Deshahithaishee Jathika Vyaparaya (DJV), which was meant to be a
political instrument of the JVP, was transforming into a purely ethno nationalist
entity. Wimal Weerawansa, the main link between the JVP and the DJV, was also
moving towards Sinhala-Buddhist ethno-nationalism.
The early 2000s saw the unprecedented rise of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism in
the South. This decisively sidelined the somewhat inuential “non-nationalist”
ideological orientations in the Southern political sphere. The moderate stand
followed by the governing elite was a manifestation of this “non-nationalist”
orientation. One may even assume there was popular support in the South for this
view, especially given the nature of the reception of the political leadership of the
People’s Alliance (PA), which came into power in 1994. Both the PA government
and its successor, the United National Front (UNF) government followed a “pro-
political solution” approach, which was based on the prospect of Sinhala-Buddhist
support for such a move.
Some public opinion surveys, conducted by Colombo-based Non-Governmental
Organizations, painted the picture that the large majority of the Sinhala-Buddhist
14 This tension that grew sometimes turned into open confrontation in the run up to the 1988 presidential election,
which the JVP boycotted, in a tactical move to make sure that Ranasinghe Premadasa wins so that they can
continue their armed insurgency when Premadasa would become unpopular. The Jathika Chinthanaya group, on
the other hand, strongly campaigned for Sirima Bandaranaike. The two groups engaged in aggressive polemics in
universities. This rivalry became quite tense at the Colombo University, where Jathika Chintanaya followers had
strong political support.
11
population was in favour of a peaceful solution to the ethnic conict. Massive
amount of funds, both by the state and internationally funded NGOs, were spent on
public campaigns to promote the idea of a ‘peaceful solution to the ethnic problem’
among the Sinhala-Buddhists.
These calculations were proved wrong. It is possible to argue that two signicant
steps taken by the PA and UNF governments, indeed, indirectly helped the
resurgence of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. One was the political package
introduced by the PA government in 1995 and the state-sponsored public awareness
campaign to support it. The other is the Memorandum of Understanding signed by
the UNF government with the LTTE in 2002. Both these initiatives were countered
by Sinhala-nationalist forces and proved to be extremely successful. The ultimate
outcome of this Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist counter-force was bringing the UPFA,
led by Mahinda Rajapaksa, into power in 2005, with strong Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalist backing. The new radicalization of political Buddhism is integrally
linked to the revival of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.
12
Part II
Rise of New Buddhist Organizations
Bodu Bala Sena (BBS), Ravana Balaya (RB) and Sihala Ravaya (SR) came into
the limelight owing to their aggressive behaviour towards Muslims and Christian
evangelical groups.15 These three organizations are closely linked with three highly
dynamic and extremely aggressive activist monks who began to dominate the
public space. They are Rev. Galagodaatte Gnanasara, Rev. Ittekande Saddhatissa
and Rev. Akmeemana Dayaratana.
The condence with which they displayed their violent behaviour in public spaces
was remarkable. They grossly violated the law even in the presence of the police,
who took no action. Apart from the political protection that they enjoyed with
impunity under the Mahinda Rajapaksa government,16 they fully exploited the
public respect for the robe and the authority that was commanded by those who
wore it. Perhaps the most exemplary moment was when Rev. Gnanasara clashed
with police and other ocials at an expressway entrance when his vehicle was
stopped from entering the expressway due to its poor technical condition. At one
point of the heated argument, he shouted at expressway ocials with the following
words: “oek .ks,a,d fï wïuf.a froafoka wdKavq fmr<kak;a mq`Mjka.” (Make note you
bastard!!! This piece of cloth is capable of even toppling governments”.) 17
15 Violent acts of these organizations have been well documented. See the report compiled by Centre for Policy
Alternatives on “Attacks on Places of Religious Worship in Post-War Sri Lanka” (CPA, March 2013).
16 The privileged position these groups enjoyed under Rajapaksa government is now well known. D.B.S. Jeyaraj
has provided a detailed report on the controversial public appearance of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, the secretary of the
Ministry of Defence under Mahinda Rajapaksa, at a BBS event (http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/17939). The
public perception that these organizations command strong government backing was a major factor in driving away
votes of non-Buddhists from the Rajapaksa-led UPFA coalition in the recent elections.
17 It is not possible to translate “ammage redda” into English to render the actual meaning it carries. This is indeed
considered to be an extremely indecent expression, not supposed to be used in public. By using the term “ammage
redda” for the saffron robe he in fact ridiculed it. See the following link to view video clip of the particular incident:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDD5lKni7Qk
It would also be pertinent to cite two more incidents that show the way that the other two monks also behave in
public. Rev. Ittakande Saddhatissa, in a public gathering at a Buddhist temple, appealed to Buddhists to attack the
Christian evangelical groups with a broom and chase them away when they visit their houses with the intention
of converting them. See. https://lankacnews.com/sinhala/news/100881/. Note that this news website is run by
the supporters of Wimal Weerawansa, who also supports Rev. Saddhatissa. See also this link: http://lankapolity.
blogspot.com/2013/06/buddhist-extremist-kangaroo-court.html
13
These three monks have emerged out of the recent radicalization of young Buddhist
monks. Both Gnanasara and Dayaratana were linked to the JHU and contested
for the JHU at the 2004 general elections, where Dayararatana indeed won a
parliamentary seat. Gnanasara made his debut appearance in the public space
when he disrupted a rally organized by anti-war groups in Colombo in 2006.18
Ittakande Saddhatissa is known to have a close political association with Wimal
Weerawansa.19
Notwithstanding the claims to the contrary, these organizations are by no means the
illegitimate ospring of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism, and peripheral to its political
intervention. The original location of the BBS headquarters was quite signicant
and symbolic. It was located in the newly built Buddha Jayanthi Mandiraya, which
was ceremonially opened by the then President Mahinda Rajapaksa.20 The Buddha
Jayanthi Mandiraya was owned by the Buddhist Cultural Centre21 headed by Rev.
Kirama Wimalajothi, who was also the founding president of the BBS. After the
anti-Muslim riots in June 2014, he publicly announced his resignation from the
BBS.22 Nevertheless, he seems to be continuing as the BBS president even after this
announcement.23
It is also notable that these aggressive monks had no problem with taking part in
any event of the mainstream Sangha, and the high level of tolerance towards their
ill behaviour is conspicuous.
The scope of activity of these organizations covers a wide range. One of its
remarkable features is that, while they primarily targeted non-Sinhala-Buddhist
ethnic and religious groups, they also sporadically attacked unorthodox Buddhists.
18 http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items06/190806-6.html
19 Wimal Weerawansa has been a crucial player in Sri Lankan politics in the last two decades. He began his political
career as a young activist of the JVP during the JVP-led armed insurrection in the late 1980s. He became a central
gure in the recovering of the JVP after the insurrection was suppressed in late 1989. Through his oratory, he
became the most popular gure of the JVP and also became a central gure in Sinhala ethno-nationalist politics
in the last one and half decades. He left the JVP with a group in 2009 and formed the Jathika Nidahas Peramuna.
Later he joined the UPFA government and became a cabinet minister.
20 http://www.asiantribune.com/news/2011/05/16/2600th-sri-sambuddhatwa-jayanthi-being-commemorated-very-
grand-scale-sri-lanka
21 http://www.vivalanka.com/news/page.jsp?articleid=90809
22 http://www.asianmirror.lk/news/item/1590-bbs-leader-kirama-wimalajothi-resigns-from-organization
23 http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/33616
14
These organizations took on any issue that was perceived in the Sinhala-Buddhist
hegemonic discourse as detrimental to the Sinhala-Buddhist cause. Issues raised
related to Muslims are notable and could be listed as follows:
• Muslims live mostly as closely-knit communities in predominantly Sinhala-
Buddhist areas. Although there are amicable relations between the two ethno-
religious groups under normal circumstances, the negative perception towards
each other is also conspicuous. Sinhala-Buddhists have a tendency to look at
them with utmost suspicion, especially owing to some of their behaviour. Some
of the frequent allegations are worth mentioning. It is alleged that Muslim
motorcyclists do not, in deance of the law, wear helmets in the areas they live
as groups. It is also alleged that Muslims show extremely hostile behaviour
towards non-Muslims in areas they live in as groups.24
• Certain cultural habits of Muslims also trigger o anger towards them. Two such
instances of the recent anti-Muslim rhetoric were the dress practice of Muslim
women, i.e. covering the head (wearing abhaya and hijab) and the requirement
of Halal certication on some consumer items.25
• The most controversial issue is however the contest over sacred places, which
needs a detailed discussion.
The contest over sacred places became the centrepiece of the Buddhist-Muslim
showdown. “Sacred geography” is central to Sinhala-Buddhists’ relationship to the
land they live. As is represented by the ideological claim cited above “Me Gauthama
Buddha Rajyayai” the territory of the state has been given a strong religio-
ideological signication. The term Dhammadeepa” (Island of Dharma) powerfully
encapsulates this signication. This notion of “sacred land”, deeply rooted in the
Sinhala-Buddhist religious and political mind, sancties the religionization of any
Sinhala-Buddhist claim for land when they are confronted by counter-claims of
non-Sinhala-Buddhists.26
24 My personal observation is that these allegations are not entirely baseless. However, such behaviour patterns are
not restricted to Muslims in particular; many other groups historically tend to live as closely-knit communities.
This could be seen among some caste groups as well.
25 Farzana Hanifa has dealt with these issues in detail. See Hanifa (2016)
26 There is an exception to this rule of “Buddhist-Muslim” conicts over “sacred places”, i.e. conict over recent
15
One of the most sensitive issues in the Sinhala-Buddhist – Muslim conict of
the recent past has been over “sacred places”.27 The rst was the conict over
“Digawapi” in the Ampara district of the Eastern Province. This is a typical example
of how an issue over land usage by an agrarian community is transformed into an
ethno-religious conict over a “sacred place”. The issue was transformed into a
“national” issue, especially, when Rev. Gangodavila Soma took it over on the side
of the Buddhists.28
There were more Buddhist-Muslim battles thereafter, some of which still continue,
over “sacred places”. They include Anuradhapura,29 Dambulla,30 Devanagala,31 and
Kuragala.32 The rst two places are considered to be dominant Buddhist sacred
towns. In these two incidents, conict occurred over issues related to practising the
Muslim religion in what were known as Buddhist “sacred cities”.
In the last two cases, conicts occurred over contradictory historical claims to the
sites of Muslim settlements. In the case of Devanagala, Sinhala-Buddhists, being
mobilized primarily by SR and BBS, placed historical claims to a Muslim settlement.
Somewhat similar to Digawapi, the Muslim settlement area was claimed to be an
encroachment on the property of a Buddhist temple. The archaeological importance
of the location was also used by Buddhists to boost their claims. Kuragala is also
an example of how archaeological signicance is used as a ‘charter of rights’ by
Buddhists to impose restrictions on the religious and cultural behaviour of Muslims.
Confronting Evangelical Christians
The proliferation of Christian Evangelical activities has undoubtedly been a
marked feature of the religious life in Sri Lanka in the recent past. Sinhala-
Buddhist organizations and intellectuals have identied it as a formidable threat
Muslim settlements in Wilpattu. The counter-claim of the Buddhist protest campaigners against these settlements
was based on the environmental sensitivity of the area.
27 The Muslim Secretariat has produced a two-volume report on the Buddhist-Muslim conicts over “sacred”
places, with the title “Of Sacred Sites and Profane Politics: Tensions over Religious Sites and Ethnic Relations”
(Secretariat of Muslims I & II)
28 Secretariat of Muslims (Vol. II, p. 11, footnote 10). The career of Rev. Soma will be discussed later in this essay.
29 CPA, 2013, p. 51
30 Secretariat of Muslims (Vol. II, pp. 30-48)
31 Secretariat of Muslims (Vol. I, pp. 7-30)
32 Secretariat of Muslims (Vol. I, pp. 31-47)
16
to the endurance of Buddhism in Sri Lanka. There has been a formidable public
outcry among Buddhists to bring about legal restriction for what was identied
as “unethical conversions”. When the JHU monks contested in the 2004 general
election, this became one of the prominent issues in the campaign. JHU made an
unsuccessful eort to bring an “anti-conversion bill” in the parliament (DeVotta.
2008).
Although there is a history behind the tension between Buddhism and Christianity
in Sri Lanka, the two religious establishments have come to a tacit agreement
not to penetrate each other’s sphere of inuence in recent decades. As a result of
this tacit agreement, no major conicts occurred between mainstream Christians
and Buddhists. Probably the strongest testimony for this tacit agreement is Nalin
de Silva’s assessment of this relationship. He asserts that the acceptance of the
legitimacy of primacy of Sinhala-Buddhists in Sri Lanka by Christians and Catholics
is a major achievement in the last ve decades (De Silva, 1995: 16). What he claims,
in essence, is that there is no need for Sinhala-Buddhists to fear the Christians
and Catholics as a possible threat to the Sinhala-Buddhist cause. It is particularly
noteworthy because of the fact that he is quite critical about the political and
ideological role of established churches in Sri Lanka.
There were, of course, times in which the promotion of Buddhism as against
Christianity was the means through which the Sinhala-Buddhist population was
mobilized. Anti-Christian rhetoric has indeed a powerful attraction for the Sinhala-
Buddhists.33 As evident from the cartoon reproduced above (see page 5), anti-
Christian rhetoric played a major role in the 1956 election campaign, by enhancing
the popular attraction towards the MEP.
Christian Evangelical groups, however, have “violated” this tacit agreement. In the
last few decades, Christian Evangelical groups were very active not only among
non-Christian communities, but also among the Christians of established churches.
Established Christian and Catholic churches are also critical of the activities of
these evangelical groups.34
33 Early phase of the Buddhist revival has been sufciently documented. Malalgoda has provided a comprehensive
inquiry into the early phase of Buddhist Revival (Malalgoda, 1976). Also see, Bond (1992). For the complex nature
of the Buddhist-Christian relationship in the early phase of the Buddhist revival, see Haris (1995).
34 See Mathews (2007) and Perera (1998) for recent Evangelical activities in Sri Lanka. See also (CPA, March 2013).
17
Buddhists were seriously alarmed by the activities of Evangelical Christians. There
have been constant demands from Buddhists to take actions to stop the activities of
Evangelical organizations. This anti-Evangelical sentiment took a new turn when
Rev. Gangodavila Soma took up the issue (Mathews, 2007: 461).
It is in this context that the attacks against Evangelical Christians could be assessed.
As the 2013 report of the Centre for Policy Alternatives indicates, there has been a
series of attacks against Christian Evangelical groups since 2009. BBS, RS and SR
have targeted Christian evangelism as one of the imminent dangers to Buddhism.
Who are the true Buddhists? Attacks on “Other” Buddhists
Buddhist spaces and individuals were also targeted by a number of recent acts of
violence. In these cases, the new extremist Buddhist organizations assumed the
task of distinguishing “true” and authentic Buddhist practices from “false” and
unauthentic practices, and justied their violent behaviour towards “false” and
“unauthentic” Buddhist elements in terms of re-installing “true” and “authentic”
Buddhism.
The Centre for Policy Alternatives has documented 10 incidents, between January
2010 and August 2012, where Buddhist religious spaces and individuals were being
targeted. Some of them, indeed, cannot be considered as religiously, or politically,
motivated acts of violence, as they seem to be acts of treasure-hunters etc. But there
are several incidents which can be directly linked to the recent upsurge of religion-
based violence. Three out of these ten incidents need special attention here: an
attack on a Mahayana centre in Colpetty, Colombo. The incident took place in the
“Ashramaya” of the famous preacher Pitiduwe Siridhamma (who was later self-
styled and renamed himself as Samanthabadra), where a group of monks entered
the premises and forced Siridhamma to stop his activities. The second incident
took place in Wanduramba, Galle district, where a mass protest against a popular
preacher, who claimed to be an incarnation of the Maithree Buddha, turned into an
act of violence against him and his centre. There are indeed other intra-Buddhist
violence that could be highlighted here.
18
Then a series of attacks took place against Rev. Wataraka Vijitha, who had close
connections with Muslims. His eccentric behaviour and overt links with perceived
anti-Buddhist elements enraged extremist Buddhist forces, irrespective of the fact
that Vijitha was a local government representative from the ruling UPFA. The
highlight was the forceful entrance of BBS activists, led by its leader Gnansara,
to a media conference in which Vijitha was taking part. In this instance, he was
harassed by BBS activists in the presence of the police.35 It is also important to
mention his abduction claim in June 2014. Vijitha was found with injuries in an
isolated location and claimed that he was abducted and physically harassed. When
the blame was initially directed towards the BBS, they vehemently opposed the
allegation and claimed that the incident had been orchestrated by Vijitha Thero
himself.36
“Soma Hamuduruwo” as a Turning Point
The sudden rise of Rev. Gangodavila Soma as a popular preacher was a landmark
phenomenon in the resurgence of radical political Buddhism in the post-1994
phase.37 His unconventional approach to preaching captured the imagination
of the semi-urban Buddhist laity who were somewhat critical about established
Buddhism. The most signicant aspect of his preaching was the way he politicized
the Sinhala-Buddhist sentiments. His way of politicization, particularly, became
attractive to the Buddhist audience, as he took meticulous eort to not show
support to any political party.38
While his relatively short career as a popular preacher awakened the Buddhist laity
into a new type of religio-political imagination, his sudden death was a traumatic
experience to the Sinhala-Buddhist community. A massive upsurge of public
emotions was unleashed through the rupture of the hegemonic setting that had
been in crisis since the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987.
35 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTJnLEGzHvI
36 <http://newsrst.lk/english/2014/06/venerable-watareka-vijitha-thero-assaulted/40744>.
37 For a critical review of the career of Rev. Soma see Uyangoda (2007) and Berkwitz, (2008).
38 There were even rumors that he was preparing himself as a candidate for the next presidential election. For a
review of the political appeal of Rev. Soma, see Berkwitz, (2008: 95-98).
19
It is possible to argue that his own unconventional career as a monk symbolizes the
new Buddhist revival which became evident through his work. Unlike most other
Buddhist monks, who enter the order at very young age, he entered the order at
the age of 26. He also did not occupy any higher position in the established order
(Uyangoda, 2007: 167).
Soma Hamuduruwo turned the conventional Buddhist sermon (nK) upside down.
He fearlessly touched upon many controversial and contemporary topics that most
ordinary monks would avoid, particularly in a sermon. They ranged from day-to-
day politics to the state of existing religious life of Buddhists. He also introduced
this dimension to the religious TV programs that he attended regularly. Until his
intervention, this type of TV programs too discussed only issues related to the
conventional themes of Buddhism. He made extremely controversial interventions
in relation to existing aairs in public life, including very controversial political
issues.
If the conventional Buddhist sermons were signicantly detached from the daily
experience of the audience, the topics he covered were directly related to it. Even
the way he delivered these sermons was unconventional. He touched upon sensitive
issues for the Buddhist laity, especially female devotees, such as alcoholism. He was
highly critical of Buddhists worshipping, and seeking favours of, Hindu deities, and
alerted Sinhala-Buddhists to the threats from Muslims and evangelical Christian
groups.
It was certainly this innovative and controversial approach that led to the cancellation
of his popular program on the state-run ITN TV channel. This happened during
the PA government under Chandrika Kumaratunga, who was considered to be
hostile to the Sinhala-Buddhist cause. This negative response from the top of the
governing elite indeed made him more popular, when he continued the program on
a privately owned TV channel.
He was indeed the role model for the bhikkus who intervened in public aairs in
later years. It is possible to see his legacy in two forms. On the one hand, there
was a mushrooming of bhikkus delivering sermons, following his example, in an
20
unconventional manner, sometimes even duplicating his voice and mannerisms.
On the other hand, another group claimed to continue his legacy by representing
his political views. The JHU was founded quite soon after the death of Rev. Soma,
exploiting the intense public emotion generated by his death, and the post-JHU
extremist Buddhist organizations use Rev. Soma as their point of reference.
Rise of the JHU and Post-JHU Bhikku Politics
Although the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) was formed just before the April 2004
general election, its genealogy goes back to the latter part of the 1980s. It emerged
out of a group of radical young political activists who were initially politicized in
the JVP in the late 1980s. At the centre of this radical group was Patali Champika
Ranawaka, an energetic and intelligent engineering undergraduate from the
University of Moratuwa.39 He, together with a group of like-minded student
activists, broke ranks with the JVP and moved towards the “Jathika Chinthanaya”
(JC). JC was becoming a formidable intellectual force in the latter half of the 1980s
and was more attractive to student activists with an intellectual orientation.
One of the major limitations of JVP politics in the mid-1980s was that it was not
attractive to politically conscious students with a high level of intellectual curiosity,
who did not respond to the oversimplied vulgar Marxism of the JVP. An instance,
which Champika Ranavaka has cited in his autobiography, is exemplary of the gap
between the JVP and the other students with high intellectual curiosity.
“When we were undergraduate students (1985), a student in our batch,
Indunil, asked a question from our student leader, Thilakasiri Gallage.
The question was, “Why are you a Marxist?” The answer of Gallage was,
“Marxism is scientic”. Then Indunil asked, “What is science?” Gallage’s
reply was: “The system of theories that are based on the scientic
39 His Wikipedia page provides some basic information about his early political career.
< https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Champika_Ranawaka>
He also published an autobiography in 2009. It has, however, been written in a highly self-glorifying manner
(Ranawaka, 2009).
21
method, i.e. proving theories through experiments. (isoaOdka;-ks.ukh-
mÍlaIKh - idOkh hk úoHd;aul l%ufõoh wkqj ìyslrk isoaOdka; moaO;sh.)
Then Indunil asked whether Marxist theories have been proved by an
experiment. I cannot recollect the answer given by Gallage to this last
question.” (Ranawaka, 2009: 60).
Students such as Indunil were highly inspired by Nalin de Silva’s intellectual
arguments at that time. The founders of the JHU, including its central gure
Ranawaka, belonged to this group of undergraduates.
Before the foundation of the JC, it was the sophisticated version of Marxism
that was attractive to such intellectually oriented student activists. Especially in
the late 60s and 70s, there were a number of Marxist groups that made a strong
intellectual appeal to young undergraduates. With the emergence of the JC, a non-
Marxist and nationalist intellectual alternative was made available to this group in
the late 1980s. As Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism had become the most important
ingredient in the ideological baggage of the radical youth of the Sinhala-Buddhist
South, the JC was more attractive as an intellectual alternative to the JVP.
The association of Ranawaka and his group with the JC did not however last long.
As Nalin de Silva was more focused on intellectual work and less on political
activism, he was too slow moving in the eyes of this ery young group. They slowly
moved away from the JC and attempted to combine intellectual work with intensive
political activism. The turning point of this orientation was the foundation of the
organization “Janatha Mithuro” (Friends of the People) in 1992 (Ranawaka, 2009:
64).
Interestingly enough, the intellectual orientation of the Janatha Mithuro (JM)
was less nationalist and more environmentalist, compared to the political vision
of the JC. Nalin de Silva was highly critical about this approach and would blame
Ranawaka at a later period for dismissing nationalism as a “dead body” (cd;sljdoh
u<ñkshla).
22
At this stage, Champika Ranawaka seems to have been more inuenced by the
environmental movement that was gaining global popularity (see Ranawaka,
2009: 60-66). The intellectual orientation of the JM could be seen in Ranavaka’s
work Sanwardanaye Thunveni Yamaya (The Third Phase of Development), which
is a strong critique of the ‘Development Discourse’.
The progress of the JM was hindered by the reorganization of the JVP. The JVP
managed to make a strong comeback after the suppression of its armed insurgency
in 1989, benetting from the democratic political atmosphere that emerged after
the victory of the PA in 1994. This was a severe blow to the growing popularity of
the JM among the politically conscious youth.
When the JVP was able to regain its command on the domain of youth politics,
especially in the all-important university student politics, the Ranawaka group
was pushed back to nationalism, which it viewed with some reservation in the
early 1990s. Beneting from the new political situation which was marked by
the introduction of a political package by the People’s Alliance government
under Chandrika Kumaratunga in 1995, the Ranawaka group smartly gained the
ascendency of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist political front. This move forced
the JVP to take another new leap towards nationalism. The JVP had watered down
its nationalist orientation through most of the 1990s and even went to the extent of
forming a loose alliance with some non-nationalist left groups.40
Losing the battle for youth politics, the Ranawaka group now tuned towards
nationalism, and began to establish contacts with politically conscious Buddhist
monks. This is how Ranawaka described this decisive political metamorphosis:
40 There was a serious internal discussion on the Sinhala nationalist turn of the JVP in the early years of the 1990s.
The critical moment of this discussion was the split of the group, which came to be known as Hiru Kandayama.
Hiru was one of the newspapers that the new young leadership of the JVP published as a part of its reorganization.
A signicant number of young activists who worked for the newspaper later gained control of its publication and
split from the JVP, criticizing its nationalist orientation. Even then the JVP showed signs of softening some of its
strong nationalist views, which were dominant in the late 1990s. Around 1997, it even entered into a loose alliance
with the anti-nationalist Nava Sama Samaja Party (NSSP), which was well known for its sympathy towards Tamil
nationalist political demands. Moreover, the JVP at that time cultivated close relationships with many small non-
nationalist left groups as well as intellectuals. What is important is that the leading gure of the JVP leadership,
who worked closely with these non-nationalist elements of the political left, was Wimal Weerawansa, who became
one of the most vociferous spokesmen of the Sinhala-Buddhist political camp.
23
“The change of our political line had been reported by the JVP newspaper
as follows: “Janatha Mithuro who came by train from Matara to Colombo
and gathered in front of the Colombo-Fort train station and dispersed to
go home. JVP might have thought that the group, which challenged it from
their university days, and became a big headache, was dissolved. Some
others might also have thought so. Indeed the Janatha Mithuro ceased to
exist as an organization. But we built an organization of a dierent type.
Even we did not realize that this is going to be a new beginning in our
own lives as well as in the country.” (Ranawaka, 2009: 72).
They began to penetrate the bhikku political organizations with signicant eect.
This culminated in the foundation of the “National Sangha Council” (cd;sl ix>
iNdj) in 1995, particularly to protest the “package of political solutions” presented
by the PA government. The politically most eective Buddhist monks, such as Rev.
Ittepane Dhammalankara, Rev Maduluwawe Sobhitha, and Rev. Muruttettuwe
Ananda were in the forefront of the National Sangha Council.
The 2004 election was an important showdown of the strength of these forces.
Both the JVP and the Ranawaka group emerged as formidable forces. What was
important was the fact that the Ranawaka group was able to form the Jathika Hela
Urumya (JHU) by mobilizing a large contingent of popular Buddhist monks and,
to gain large support among the semi-urban middleclass, even contesting against
the UPFA, which had the support of a large number of Sinhala nationalist groups
including the JC and the JVP.41
As already mentioned, the formation of the JHU and its gains in the 2004 general
election was a major turning point in the history of modern radical political
Buddhism in Sri Lanka. However, this electoral victory also produced the spark
for division within the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp, in particular setting the
stage for the emergence of a new wave of extremist Buddhist organizations.
The formation of the BBS by a group of Buddhist monks, who were previously
attached to the JHU, was the most signicant manifestation of this inner division.
41 For more detail about the history of the JHU, see De Votta and Stone (2008).
24
The formation of the BBS was followed by the emergence of several other
organizations with the same ideological orientation. Ravana Balaya (RB) and
Sihala Ravaya (SR) are such organizations.
The way in which a conducive environment was created for the emergence of these
organizations after the JHU gains at the 2004 general election have to be explained.
The formation of the JHU as an organization was a carefully calculated move
by the Ranawaka group in order to carve a niche for themselves in the political
mainstream, at a time when they found themselves in a sort of political wilderness.
They especially took advantage of the dramatic eect of the death of Rev. Soma on
public sentiment.
The Ranawaka group transformed this public trauma into a political force,
establishing the JHU with the participation of a large number of popular monks.
These monks were not from the upper echelons of the hierarchy of the Sangha but
had emerged as popular preachers and intellectual gures in the preceding period.
It is also important to note that they did not have a political history.
Broadly speaking, the monks who rallied around the JHU could be classied into
three main groups:
1) Popular preachers (Uduwe Dhammaloka, Kolonnawe Sumangala): These
popular preachers followed the example of Rev Soma and attempted to emulate
him. After his death, these monks gained popularity, especially among middle
class Buddhist women.
2) Intellectual monks (Ellawala Medhananda, Omalpe Sobhitha): Medhananda is
particularly signicant as a popular writer on historical issues from a Sinhala-
Buddhist perspective.
3) Young activist monks (Galagodaattte Gnanasara, Hadigalle Wimalasara): These
were young politically conscious monks who had been attracted to the work of
the Ranawaka group since the late 1990s.
25
The paradox of the post-election JHU politics was how to nd a working balance
between the interests of the Ranawaka group, which engineered the entire process,
and those of the monks who were indeed the source of the public support for the
JHU. A similar situation had emerged with Sihala Urumaya (SU), the predecessor
to the JHU, which was, again, masterminded by Champika Ranawaka in the late
1990s as part of his strategy to gain the upper hand over the JVP after the JM
strategy was aborted.
Tensions occurred very early, in the form of a defection of two elected members to
the UPFA camp, at the election of the speaker in the 2004 parliament. The crisis
worsened after the 2005 presidential election, where the JHU began to play a crucial
role. The source of the tension was the eort by the Ranawaka group to dominate
JHU aairs at the expense of the monks, who aspired for relative autonomy.
Some monks were extremely unhappy about the way in which the Ranawaka group
was trying to dominate the aairs of the JHU. This certainly contradicted the initial
claim by them that they oered the Sihala Urumaya to the Sangha (mlaIh Ydikhg
mQcd l<d). Gradually, the Ranawaka group regained the ascendency in party aairs
at the expense of the other monks.
Radicalization of Young Buddhist Monks
The backbone of the new Buddhist extremism was the new generation of young
radical monks. Their aggressive behaviour is always at the forefront whenever
the work of these organizations is discussed. The front pages of newspapers often
carried photographs of young Buddhist monks showing intensely aggressive
behaviour at public demonstrations. Even at university students’ demonstrations,
the participation and the violent behaviour of student monks was constantly
highlighted. Notwithstanding the fact that these images caused a critical and
negative perception of these monks, they also showed the signicance of the young
Buddhist monks as a radical political force.
The radicalization of young Buddhist monks was a process that was closely linked
to the radicalization of rural youth since the late 1960s. Until the end of the 1980s,
26
the JVP commanded the political orientation of these young monks. In the 1980s,
the JVP took the initiative to form a separate organization, the Inter-University
Bhikku Federation (IUBF), alongside their Inter-University Student Federation
(IUSF). Moreover, young Buddhist monks played a signicant role in the JVP-led
armed insurgency in the late 1980s. Young monks in universities and rural temples
were frequently targeted by state oppression.
Parallel to the JVP activism in the 1980s, inspiration for politically conscious
young monks was coming from the emerging new Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.42
Some leading monks were at the frontline of these activities. H.L. Seneviratne has
incisively demonstrated how the role of the Buddhist monk was redened as a
social activist during this period. He observed, “… how the liberation of the monk
has led to an opening of the oodgate for them to do more or less as they please”.
He refers to these monks as, “… those with a modern education, often a university
degree…” He further argues that, “ … the idea of the monk’s vocation as “social
service” has … trickled down to the less educated monks who live in villages or
small town monasteries as well,” (Seneviratne, 1999: 210).
The steep decline of the JVP’s inuence over young radical monks was notable.
The JVP’s ambiguity towards Sinhala-Buddhist ethno-nationalism gave the
upper-hand for other players with purer Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist ideological
credentials. Nalin de Silva had always branded the JVP as a false nationalist force
(jHdc cd;sljdoSka).43
The JVP managed, for the time being, to continue to be attractive to the Sinhala-
Buddhist constituency by maintaining its anti-secessionist stance in opposition to
42 Ananda Abeysekara has documented in detail how politically active leading monks addressed young monks and
inspired them in radical nationalist politics (Abeysekera, 2001).
43 In 2007, a group of students who organized themselves in the University of Peradeniya as the “Sarasavi Sanvada
Kendraya” (Centre for Dialogue in the University) published a series of letters exchanged between them and
the JVP. The purpose of the letter written by them to the JVP was to request the JVP to abandon Marxism. They
identied the JVP as a genuine political force that represents the social ethos of Sinhala-Buddhist youth and
its Marxist orientation was identied as incompatible with its Sinhala-Buddhist heritage. Signicantly, the rst
letter was written on 25 June 2004, immediately after the 2004 general election, in which JVP emerged as a
formidable political force in the Sinhala-Buddhist South. This young group comprised active members of the
Jathika Chinthanaya movement (Jayasumana, 2007).
27
the LTTE. The success of this strategy, however, foreshadowed the coming split
where its most popular leader of the time left the party, taking with him the Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist sentiment. 44
While the JVP’s ability to attract radical young Buddhist monks was weakened
by this splitting, other contending players such as the JHU and JC were gaining
strength.
The JVP suered another blow in 2012, when “radical Leninists” left the party and
formed a separate movement. Both the IUSF and IUBF supported the new group,
virtually ending the JVP monopoly on student politics, and also on student monks.
The relationship between the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP), the new group, and
the radical monks, who were organized in the IUBF was even more problematical.
While the FSP was ideologically inclined more towards the anti-nationalist line,
student monks in the IUBF fold were inclined more towards the nationalist line.
When the JVP was part of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp, this paradox did
not emerge. In the recent past, however, FSP leadership of the IUBF had found
itself in a somewhat embarrassing situation, over balancing these two opposing
ideological lines.
The lack of a political centre to mobilize young radical monks was clearly evident
at the time of the emergence of the new radical Buddhist organizations. The stance
of the JVP, the organizational crisis of the JHU, and the lack of commitment of
the JC to function as a centralized organization, left the large contingent of radical
nationalist Buddhist monks uncontrolled in a highly turbulent political arena.
There could have been no better time for the mushrooming of radical nationalist
Buddhist organizations such as BBS, RB and SR.
44 A group of frontline activists, led by its propaganda secretary and parliament group leader, Wimal Weerawansa, left
the JVP in 2009 to join the UPFA government as a separate party.
28
Part III
New Buddhist Radicalism and Sinhala-Buddhist Nationalism
The activities of the new extremist Buddhist organizations posed a major dilemma
for Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. The ambivalence with which many frontline
players of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism responded to the aggressive behaviour of
these organizations clearly demonstrates this. On the one hand, these organizations
embarrassed major players in the Sinhala-Buddhist mainstream, owing to their
aggressive behaviour towards those they identied as enemies. On the other hand,
these organizations addressed issues that were acknowledged by all in the Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist camp as important.
Quite similar to the anti-Tamil riots of July 1983, the work of these extremist
Buddhist organizations provides a supreme opportunity to destroy the image
of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. Due to this, responses to these extremist
organizations are highly diverse and require closer scrutiny before coming to swift
conclusions.
The new extremist organizations were a double-edged sword to the Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist cause. These organizations command a formidable capability
to mobilize Sinhala-Buddhist public opinion. Therefore, any organization which
depended on Sinhala-Buddhist public opinion, which takes a critical stand on these
organizations, is exposed to the wrath of Sinhala-Buddhist public opinion. These
organizations mostly intervened in matters that many mainstream organizations
found uncomfortable to handle. They were capable of handling them because there
seemed to be no boundary that these organizations could not cross. They were not
only aggressive in their character, but also had the willingness to take up any issue
which would be perceived to be important for Sinhala-Buddhist interests.
One of the frequent allegations by Sinhala-Buddhist opinion leaders is that non-
Sinhala-Buddhists in Sri Lanka misuse the complacency of Sinhala-Buddhists
and their tolerance towards non-Sinhala-Buddhists. Their non-violent attitude is
29
perceived as a weakness and being exploited by outsiders with a malevolent agenda.45
The claimed benevolence of the Sinhala-Buddhists is viewed to be detrimental to
the very survival of the Sinhala-Buddhists. This situation had created a sort of
surreptitious desire in the mind of Sinhala-Buddhists, to cross the threshold of this
zone of benevolence and face the threat of the evil forces of non-Sinhala-Buddhists.
These new organizations satised, in full, that desire.
There is also a desire to safeguard the self-proclaimed Sinhala-Buddhist
benevolence towards the non-Sinhala-Buddhist “other”. It is this image that
mainstream Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism desires to project to the outside world.
Frontline advocates of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism is well aware that the work
of these extremist organizations inict heavy damage to this image and provide
ammunition to the critics of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. This ambivalence is
conspicuous in the array of highly diverse responses to the work of these extremist
organizations from the various other voices of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist
camp.
There were, and are, a number of dominant voices in the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist
camp who were very keen on distancing themselves from these organizations in
general, from the BBS in particular. At one extreme of this critical discourse is
the view that the BBS is a conspiracy. At the prospect of non-Sinhala-Buddhist
constituencies, especially Muslims, becoming a potential danger to Mahinda
Rajapaksa’s victory in the upcoming presidential election, this conspiracy theory
was tried out by at least two major voices of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp,
namely the Jathika Chinthanaya movement and Jathika Nidahas Peramuna (JNP).
The popular news website, ‘lankacnews.com’, known to be run by the supporters
of Wimal Weerawansa, the leader of JNP, maintained a critical stand on the BBS.46
45 There is a belief that Sri Lanka is a country where religious coexistence prevailed. This view is shared by scholars
irrespective of whether they are ideologically in the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp or not. This is mainly based
on the assumption that the Sinhala-Buddhists were naturally a people who welcomed and tolerated outsiders. This
way of thinking is explicit in the recent novel ‘Maharaja Gamunu’ by Jayantha Chandrasiri (Chandrasiri, 2011).
See Dewasiri (2013) for a detailed discussion of this novel.
46 Whenever there was an incident which would be embarrassing for the BBS leader lankacnews.com gave wider
publicity. The most controversial incident in this connection was when the BBS leader Gnansara was grilled by
the host of a popular TV talk-show presenter Dilka Samanmalee in the program “3600” of Derana TV (http://
lankacnews.com/sinhala/main-news/95956/).
30
This seemed to be linked to two factors. Firstly, the JNP was very much concerned
about a possible rift between the UPFA and its Muslim vote base. The JNP media
spokesperson, a Muslim, made a desperate eort to pacify the Muslim sentiment
towards the UPFA, damaged by the acts of the BBS. The other factor is the
competition between BBS and Ravana Balaya (RB). As already mentioned RB has
the backing of the political camp of Wimal Weerawansa.
Nalin de Silva and his followers kept their distance from the BBS.47 The website
yuthukama.com was started after the January 2015 presidential election to promote
the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist political discourse that had been dealt a severe
blow with the defeat of Mahinda Rajapaksa. The major intellectual and ideological
backing for this website come from Nalin de Silva’s politico-ideological project.48
The writers of this website, mostly supporters of the JC, make constant eort to
argue that the BBS and its aggressive behaviour towards religious minorities is not
a part of the authentic Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. They specically attempt
to locate the BBS activities within the JHU political project.49 When the issue of
Halal certication became a major political issue in 2013, Nalin de Silva made the
following remarks in his weekly column in the Divaina Sunday newspaper:
“Today all the problems in this country are understood in order to gain narrow
benets for one’s individual politics, for the benet of one’s political party, or in
order to attack rival political parties. Another reason for this state of aairs is the
weakening of the national movement today. The national movement, which was
strong in the 1990s, has been derailed by various monks and laymen, and weakened
through the power agendas of two political parties.”50
47 See http://www1.kalaya.org/ for Nalin de Silva’s writing on political and ideological issues.
48 There are several writers who are strong supporters of Nalin de Silva and regular contributors to the website.
Shirantha Chamara, Charitha Kariyawasama, Lasantha Wickramasinhe and Mahinda Pathirana are among them.
The president of the Yuthukama Sanwada Kawaya is Gevindu Kumaratunga. He is intellectually and politically
associated with the Jathika Chintanaya movement since the mid-1980s, when he was an undergraduate at the
University of Colombo. He runs a successful book publishing business, which contributed immensely to the
dissemination of the ideas of the JC movement.
49 Shirantha Chamara provided probably the most sophisticated explanation on this. See the following link: http://
www.yuthukama.com/2015/07/HelaUrumaya.html.
50 Divaina, 3rd March, 2013 —furg iEu m%Yakhla foiu wo nef,kafka bka ;u fm!oa.,sl foaYmd,khg" ;u
mlaIfha foaYmd,khg jdishla ,nd .ekSu yd m%;sjdoshdg" m%;sjdoS mlaIj,g mry .eiSu hk lreKq fmroeß
lr.ksñks fuhg ;j;a fya;=jla kï furg cd;sl jHdmdrh wo jk úg kej;;a ÿ¾j, ùuh' wkQfõ oYlfha
Yla;su;aj ;snQ cd;sl jHdmdrh úúO NslaIQka o .syshka o úiska j,au;a flÍ wo jk úg foaYmd,k mlaI folla
;u n, jHdmD;s Tiafia ÿ¾j, flÍ we;'˜
(http://www.divaina.com/2013/03/03/nalin.html)
31
Nalin de Silva blames some “monks and laymen” for derailing the national
movement. He is certainly referring to the radical monks of BBS and other
organizations, and his archrival Champika Ranawaka. He also accuses two political
parties. Obviously, he is referring here to the JHU and the JNP.
Although Nalin de Silva was an outright critic of all the new extremist Buddhist
organizations, and the two political parties, namely JHU and JNP, which provided
political backing for them, his young followers maintained a somewhat cautious
approach towards them. They were ercely critical of Champika Ranawaka and the
JHU, but not of Wimal Weerawansa and the JNP.
Writing also to yuthukama.com, Wimukthi Wanigasekera bluntly links BBS to the
overall political agenda of the JHU. His essay is published with the provocative
title: “The BBS project that was directed by Patali (Champika Ranawaka)’s media
maa”.51 His main argument is that, while the entire BBS project was orchestrated by
Champika Ranawaka, the discredit and blame went to the Rajapaksa government.
He further argues that there is a hidden agenda behind all these activities that
the BBS leadership themselves too may not have been aware of. He seems to be
implicitly arguing that the BBS leadership was also a victim of a major conspiracy.
It is notable how Wimukthi Wanigasekera locates Wimal Weerawansa’s role in
this. He states, approvingly, that Weerawansa warned at the very beginning that
the BBS is a mere puppet organization, dependent on Norwegian funds. Then he
says: “To my knowledge no successful response for this allegation came from this
organization. Nonetheless, a massive resistance came against Wimal Weerawansa
from the BBS and also in the social media.”
Wanigasekera’s attempt to associate the BBS project with Champika
Ranawaka is fairly vindicated by an account that has been provided by Ashoka
Abayagunawardana.52 A longstanding and close political associate of Champika
51 mdG,Sf.a udOH ud*shdj wOHlaIKh l< fndÿ n, fiakd jHdmD;sh
(http://www.yuthukama.com/2015/03/ChampikaBBS.html)
52 This account is found in his recent work “Yuga Peraliya” (Abayagunawardana, 2015). This work ostensibly
provides “the hidden story” behind the campaign that ousted Mahinda Rajapaksa from the presidency on January 8
2015. An engineering graduate from the University of Moratuwa, Asoka Abayagunawardana is closely associated
with Champika Ranawaka since the early 1990s. He is known to be a part of the think tank of the Ranawaka group.
It seems, however, there is a subtle tension between the two in recent times.
32
Ranawaka, Abayagunawardana provides a personal testimony into the origin and
evolution of the BBS. According to him, even though the former had no direct
link with the launch of the BBS, it was consistent with his political agenda at that
moment and, therefore, he tactically promoted it. Abayagunawardana further says
that Ranawaka initially attempted to persuade Rev. Athuraliye Rathana, another
close associate of Ranawaka, to form a new “movement of Buddhist monks”, to
drive away the Sinhala-Buddhist constituency from Mahinda Rajapaksa, and to
ght the “Muslim challenge”.
Mahinda Pathirana is another prominent writer for yuthukama.com, who
launched a harsh attack against these organizations.53 He classies JHU, BBS and
the recently emerged ‘Sinha-le’54 in one category, having a negative impact on the
image of the Sinhala-Buddhist. He argues that the monks and laymen who founded
these organizations are opportunists and promote an agenda that paints Sinhala-
Buddhists as racists before the world. He warns Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist
forces to be vigilant of this danger and argues that Mahinda Rajapaksa’s inability
to manage these forces caused his downfall.
These views are, however, subtly dierent from that of Nalin de Silva. He has a
more fundamental critique of these organizations. His argument that, “… the
(Sinhala-Buddhist) nationalist movement was strong in the 1990s and it has been
weakened now,” is a crucial point. This claim is somewhat problematical because it
might seem to an outside observer that Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism was stronger
in the period between 2005 and 2015 than in the 1990s. His assessment seems to
be based on the “essence” of the nationalism that developed since the late 1990s.
One needs a detailed study of Nalin de Silva’s vast corpus of writings to understand
the highly nuanced vision that he produces. He has a strong idiosyncratic thinking
pattern, where he projects his version of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism as the most
genuine and authentic version. His approach to “true” Buddhism is also relevant
here. He discards most current Buddhist practices, as variants of what he terms as
53 http://www.yuthukama.com/2015/12/Sinhale.html
54 Although an organization has been established by name “Sinha-le” (Lion-Blood), it is more than an organization.
It has become a popular trend to display the sign ‘isxy-f,a’ in various forms, such as stickers, t-shirts etc.
33
“Olcott Buddhism”.55 His young followers, notwithstanding the enormous respect
they have for their undisputed ‘grand thinker’, are more pragmatic and aware of
the fact that a more accommodative approach towards other voices in the Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist camp is needed.56
The attempt to launch a collective initiative under the auspices of leading Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalist groups to address the issue of “religious harmony” has to be
understood in this context. These organizations and individuals, under the banner
of the Federation of National Organizations, held a media conference on 20th
March 2014 to announce the establishment of a ‘Collective for Religious Harmony’
(wd.ñl ixys¢hd tluq;=jla).57 The timing of this initiative was very important. It
was at the height of BBS activism. The objective was certainly to water down the
negative impact of the anti-minority campaigns led by the BBS and other extremist
Buddhist organizations. It has been, however, dicult for this initiative to continue
to be a signicant one. There seems to be no serious eorts from the organizers to
take this initiative further.
Irrespective of raised concerns over the activities of extremist Buddhist
organizations, there were clear manifestations, among the mainstream voices of
the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist camp, of implicit approval of their work. It has
been already argued above that the discourse of these extremist organizations
tacitly represents certain aspects of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist aspirations.
This becomes clearer when observing the responses of the leading Bhikku voices
to the aggressive behaviour of the BBS and other extremist organizations. Their
complacency is conspicuous.
When the BBS aggressively sabotaged the media conference of a rival monk,
even in the presence of the police, a leading newspaper published responses from
several prominent Buddhist monks.58 The highlight was one from the late Rev.
55 One needs to venture through the vast scope of his writings to understand the highly elusive meaning of what he
calls “Olcott Buddhism”. However, this essay may give a general idea: http://www.divaina.com/2012/06/10/nalin.
html
56 Nalin de Silva is severely critical even of Gunadasa Amarasekera, who indeed popularized the term Jathika
Chinthanaya. De Silva openly claims in recent times that Amarasekera has no idea what ‘Jathika Chinthanaya” is.
57 http://lankacnews.com/sinhala/news/112382/
58 http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2014/04/20/mixed-reactions-of-sangha-to-bbs-antics/
34
Maduluwawe Sobhitha, who was widely respected by the Muslims for his social and
political interventions.59 While opting not to criticize openly the aggressive actions
of the BBS, he went on to question some “provocative actions” from the “Muslim
side”, which should have resulted in legal action by the government. This stand
seems like an indirect justication of the behaviour of the BBS (and other parallel
organizations).
Chief of the Asgiriya chapter of the Siyam Nikaya, Rev. Tibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha
Sumangala was more straightforward in defending the BBS. He said he was pleased
with the “aims and aspirations” of the BBS, and encouraged such organizations, “…
at a time when Buddhism and the country were facing challenges.” When a BBS
delegation led by its president Rev. Kirama Wimalajothi visited him to formally
present to him the resolutions adopted by the BBS at its convention, Rev. Sumagala
openly admitted that he is in agreement with these ve resolutions.60
In summary, it is safe to conclude that conventional Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism
has failed to resist these extremist Buddhist organizations, although there were
discontents. Even they object most strongly to the possible damage they might
cause to the image of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism, and not to mention the damage
they inict on the multi-ethnic and multi-religious social fabric of Sri Lanka, this
dissent cannot be seen as more than a tactical move to distance themselves from
the negative eects. None of these dissenters seem to have made any serious eort
to raise their voice or apply pressure on the authorities when these extremist
organizations were on a rampage against religious minorities, and even against
some Buddhists, in gross violation of the law.
The capability of these organizations in mobilizing Sinhala-Buddhist public support
is signicant. Compared to this, the criticisms from the Sinhala-Buddhist camp
59 Rev. Maduluwawe Sobhitha, who passed away recently, had been a dominant public gure in the last few years. He
was the charismatic gure that unied the diverse political forces that opposed the regime of Mahinda Rajapaksa,
who was defeated at the presidential election of January 2015. Most importantly, Muslims and other non-Buddhist
communities acknowledged the moderate stance of Rev. Sobhitha, in contrast to the anti-Muslim rhetoric of the
likes of Galagodatte Gnansara. Sobhitha’s career as a public socio-political activist is, however, in an extremely
contradictory one. It has swung from one extreme to another. He was at the forefront of the oppositional political
camp, hated by the overwhelming majority of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalists. See Seneviratne (1999: 237-240) for
an assessment of his early public career.
60 http://www.island.lk/index.php?page_cat=article-details&page=article-details&code_title=58829
35
seem to be insignicant. Moreover, it is notable that these extremist organizations
receive indirect or direct acknowledgement from the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist
camp. It is possible to conclude that these extremist Buddhist organizations are
not illegitimate or peripheral in the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist universe; they are
very much part of it.
New Radical Buddhism, Minorities and Ethno-Religious Coexistence
One of the central political problems faced by Sri Lanka at present is the strained
relationships between the dierent ethno-religious communities. Although the
military conict that was linked with territorially based political demands of ethnic
Tamils in the North and East came to a decisive end, the underlying issue of the
conicted political relationship between Sinhala-Buddhists and Tamils was not
eased. One may argue that the crisis has become more complicated, because certain
voices and concerns that were sidelined during the war are now freely expressed.
The end of the military conict has therefore set the stage for multiple players to
raise their voices. The political character of the Rajapaksa regime however, made it
utterly incapable of handling the delicate political balance in the post-war period.
It has been widely acknowledged that the defeat of the Rajapaksa regime was
primarily due to the unication of non-Sinhala-Buddhist constituencies under the
candidacy of Maithripala Sirisena, the common opposition candidate. It was also
widely believed that the defeat of the Rajapaksa regime would have been a big blow
to the extremist Buddhist organizations. There were reasonable grounds for this
belief because a major factor behind the rapid growth of these organizations was
the direct or indirect blessings that came from that regime. The unprecedented
level of impunity that the members of these organizations enjoyed has already been
referred to. One might have expected that there would be no possibility for these
organizations to continue to behave the way they used to, when they no longer had
the blessing of the state machinery.61
61 Even nationalist critics of the BBS believed that its organizational mechanism has been dismantled following
the presidential election. Wimukthi Wanigasekera (see supra, p. 39), in his critique of the BBS and its JHU links,
argues that the entire BBS organizational mechanism is dismantled after JHU “withdrew its support to the BBS”
(http://www.yuthukama.com/2015/03/ChampikaBBS.html).
36
The experience since the regime change, however, shows otherwise. There is not
only a gradual resurgence of the BBS activities, but also the emergence of other
similar organizations. A new organization called Sinhale Jathika Balamuluwa
(isxyf,a cd;sl n,uq`Mj - popularly known as ‘Sinha-Le’ - isxy f,a) has been added
to the list of extremist Sinhala-Buddhist organizations recently. As in the other
organizations, Sinhale Jathika Balamuluwa (SJB) is also led by two monks,
namely Rev. Madille Pannaloka (general secretary) and Rev. Yakkalamulle Pavara
(president).62
It is obvious that they do not enjoy the same level of impunity under the new regime.
For example, legal action was taken against the BBS leader and other monks when
they attempted to disrupt a court hearing recently. The irony, however, is that the
legal measures taken against the monks seem to be enhancing their popularity.
Contrary to the belief of some that these organizations would not be capable of
continuing without the direct or indirect support of the authorities, they continue
to make their presence felt.
It is possible to arrive at several conclusions from the discussion of Part I and Part
II of this essay:
• These organizations are an integral part of the historical development of
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. They emerged and engaged in their activities
not in violation of the fundamental norms of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism;
they were fully a part of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist imagination and
performed certain tasks that were desired by, but beyond the reach of, Sinhala-
Buddhist nationalism because of certain restrictions that surrounded them. The
validity of this conclusion is proven by the pronouncement by none other than
the Mahanayaka of the Asgiriya chapter of the Siyam Nikaya, Rev. Tibbatuwawe
Sumangala, that he is “pleased with the aims and aspirations” of the BBS, and
they emerged “at a time when Buddhism and the country were facing challenges”.
• As organizations, they are directly linked to the dynamics of the recent history
of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. The mobilization of young Buddhist monks as
62 http://nethfm.com/article/92986
37
a political force is a marked feature of this history. While the JHU, and the JVP,
to some extent, played a major role in bringing bhikku politics onto a new level
by transforming organized groups of monks into a formidable political force,
the internal crises in these political parties ushed out a large contingent of
these politically active monks, paving the way for this new type of extremist
Buddhist organization.
• Contrary to the belief that the support of the government was the main source of
the organizational capability of these organizations, it is clear that they not only
draw signicant public support, but also full certain unrealized, and mostly
suppressed, desires of the Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist mind. Their violent
behaviour against ethno religious minorities is a fundamental desire of the
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist imagination, mostly kept in check by “civilized”
moral restrictions. The recent rally of the new kid in the block ‘Sinha-Le’, in
Kandy (see image p. 40), clearly demonstrates their ability to mobilize the
masses around these hitherto suppressed and now unleashed violent desires of
Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism, even without the direct backing of the political
authorities. It is also notable that the recent wave of arrests of BBS monks has
drawn more public sympathy towards them.
What do these conclusions mean in the context of the present political situation?
There is a possibility that these organizations will continue as signicant players in
the public-political life and pose a serious threat to the fragile relationships between
ethno-religious minorities. There is a new political context where the major rallying
cry of the political camp led by ousted president Mahinda Rajapaksa, organized
as the “Joint Opposition”, is Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. While the extremist
Buddhist organizations are criticized by them as the biggest factor in the defeat
of Mahinda Rajapaksa, they continue to reap the political harvest from the work
of these organizations. This became clear when a series of arrests of BBS leaders
occurred recently. Spokesmen of the Joint Opposition showed their solidarity
and made use of this opportunity to create a rift between the Sinhala-Buddhist
mind and the political leadership of the present government. In this context it is
possible to expect a new trajectory in the development of these extremist Buddhist
organizations and their activities.
38
Public rally of Sinha-Le organization on 23rd January, 2016
Photo courtesy: http://www.lankanewsweb.today/archives/8030
39
Bibliography
Abayagunawardana, Ashoka, (2015) Yuga Peraliya (Change of an Era), (Colombo)
Abeysekera, Ananda (2001) ‘The Saron Army, Violence, Terror(ism): Buddhism,
Identity, and Dierence in Sri Lanka’ in Numen, Vol. 48, No. 1, pp. 1-46
Berkwitz, Stephen C. (2008) ‘Resisting the Global in Buddhist Nationalism:
Venerable Soma’s Discourse of Decline and Reform’, The Journal of Asian
Studies, Vol. 67, No. 1 (Feb., 2008), pp. 73-106.
Bartholomeusz, Tessa J. (2002) In Defense of Dharma: Just-war ideology in
Buddhist Sri Lanka, (Routledge Curzon: London).
Bond, George D. (1992), The Buddhist Revival in Sri Lanka: Religious Tradition,
Reinterpretation and Response (Motilal Banarsidass Publishers: Delhi).
CPA (2013), Attacks on Places of Religious Worship in Post-War Sri Lanka
(Centre for Policy Alternatives, Colombo).
De Silva, Nalin, (1995), Prabhakaran, Ohuge Seeyala, Bappala ha Massinala
(Prabhakaran, his grandfathers, uncles and cousins), (Chintana Parshadaya,
Boralesgamuwa).
--- (2009) Demala Jathivadayata Erehiwa (Against Tamil Racism), (Chintana
Parshadaya, Maharagama)
--- (2010) ‘Ape Pravada 3’ (Our Theories 3) (Visudunu: Boralesgamuwa).
De Silva Premakumara (2007) Anthropology of Sinhala Buddhism, in Religion in
Context (ed.) Jayadeva Uyangoda (SSA, Colombo).
DeVotta, Neil, (2007) Sinhala-Buddhist Nationalist Ideology: Implication for
politics and conict resolution in Sri Lanka, (East-West Centre, Washington).
40
DeVotta, Niel and Stone, Jason (2008). Jathika Hela Urumaya and Ethno-Religious
Politics in Sri Lanka Paciic Aairs, Vol. 81, No. 1 (Spring, 2008), pp. 31-51
Published by: Paciic Aairs, University of British Columbia
Dewasiri, Nirmal Ranjith (2013) History after the War: Historical Consciousness
in the Collective Sinhala-Buddhist Psyche in Post-War Sri Lanka, (ICES:
Colombo).
Hania, F. (2016), Who gave these fellows this strength? Muslims and the Bodu
Bala Sena in Post-War Sri Lanka. In The Struggle for Peace in the aftermath
of War. Amarnath Amarasingham and Daniel Bass Eds. (London: Hurst)
Jayasekere, P.V.J. (1984 & 1985) ‘Temperance and Nationalism in Sri Lanka’,
Kalyani, Journal of Humanities and Social Science o the University of
Kelaniya, Vol.III and IV, pp.289-312.
Jayasumana, Channa Sudath, (2007), Maksvadaya Athharinnayi javipeta yavu
lipi, (Letters sent to the JVP appealing it to abandon Marxism) (Sarasavi
Sanwada Kendraya, Kandy)
Jayawardena, Kumari, (2000) Nobodies to Somebodies: The Rise of the Colonial
Bourgeoisie in Sri Lanka (Colombo: SSA)
Malalgoda, K., (1976) Buddhism in Sinhalese Society, 1750–1900: A Study of
Religious Revival and Change (Berkeley: University of California Press).
Mathews, Bruce (2007), ‘Christian Evangelical Conversions and the Politics of Sri
Lanka’ in Pacic Aairs, Vol. 80, No. 3 (Fall, 2007), pp. 455-472.
Muslim Secretariat ‘Of Sacred Sites and Profane Politics: Tensions over Religious
Sites and Ethnic Relations” (Secretariat of Muslims I & II).
Perera, Sasanka (1998) New Evangelical Movements and Conicts in South Asia
Sri Lanka and Nepal in Perspective, RCSS Policy Studies 5 (RCSS, Colombo).
41
--- (2006), Fiction Creativity & Politics: Reading Gunadasa Amarasekara’s
Gamanaka Meda” The Island” (Upali Newspapers: Colombo” 25th &27th
May 2006)
Ranawaka, Patali Champika (2003) Al Jihad Al Quaida: Islam Muladharmavadaye
Atheethaya, Varthamanaya ha Anagathaya (Al Jihad Al Quaida: past,
present and the future of Islam fundamentalism), (Tharanga Publishers:
Mudungoda)
--- (2009) Patisothagamiwa Tis Wasak (Moving against the current for Thirty
Years - an Autobiography) (Nugegoda)
Seneviratne, H.L. (1999), Work of Kings, (University of Chicago Press)
Thambaiah, S.J. (1992) Buddhism Betrayed?: Religion, Politics, and Violence in
Sri Lanka (University of Chicago Press).
Uyangoda, Jayadeva, (2007), ‘Soma Thero: Signicance of His Life and Death’, in
Religion in Context: Buddhism and Socio-Political Change in Sri Lanka (Ed.
Jayadeva Uyangoda, (SSA: Colombo) pp.166-171.
Weerawardana, I.D.S. (1960), Ceylon General Election 1956 (M.D. Gunasena & Co.
Ltd., Colombo)
Wickramasinghe, Nira (2006), Sri Lanka in the Modern Age (Vijitha Yapa
Publications: Colombo).
Wijeweera, Rohana, (1997), Demala Eelam Aragalayata Wisanduma Kumakda?
(What is the solution to the Tamil Eelam struggle?) (Education Wing- JVP-
rst published in 1986).
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri
This study attempts to understand the emergence of politically motivated
Buddhist organizations, their modes of activism, the way in which their role
is being perceived and responded to by the other forces of Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalism, and lastly, how the activities of these organizations affect the
precarious political equilibrium in the post-Eelam war Sri Lanka which is
dominated by antagonistic relationships among a number of ethno-religious
nationalisms. It argues that these organizations are very much part of the
hegemonic Buddhist organizational network in Sri Lanka and logical
offspring of a recent evolution of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism.
Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of History,
University of Colombo.
ISBN 978-955-580-191-1
Printed by Horizon Printing (Pvt) Ltd.
9789789 555802
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to
Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
New Buddhist Extremism and the Challenges to
Ethno-Religious Coexistence in Sri Lanka
... For example, the British plundered Buddhist temples following the conquest of the island in 1815. These existential fears are evoked in contemporary socio-political settings due to the continued practice of propagation, particularly by smaller Christian groups (Dewasiri, 2016). Such propagation is often viewed by Buddhist monks and community leaders as forms of 'exploitation' and 'deceit' perpetrated by Christian groups against unsuspecting Sinhala-Buddhist villagers. ...
Article
Full-text available
Sri Lanka’s Constitution authorises the state to limit certain fundamental freedoms on the grounds of specific public interests. This article examines how this constitutional limitation regime has become vulnerable to majoritarian influence. It uses a case study approach, supplemented by key informant interviews, to delve into Sri Lanka’s constitutional practice with respect to limitations on fundamental freedoms such as the freedom of religion or belief, and the freedom of expression. The article illustrates how organs of the Sri Lankan state have equated notions of ‘public interest’ with the majority community’s conceptions of ‘security’, ‘order’, ‘health’ and ‘morals’. It argues that this practice reflects a cleavage between the moral legitimacy and the legal claimability of fundamental freedoms of minorities and satirists in Sri Lanka. It concludes that legal regimes designed to guarantee fundamental freedoms offer very little protection to minorities when the underlying politics driving the application of law is majoritarian.
... When the "otherness" of the LTTE disappeared as a tangible threat to the Sinhala-Buddhist population, it was not easy to justify the immediate political significance of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. 2 This paper attempts to argue further that Sinhala Buddhist ideology's role as a source of cultural justification for the majoritarianism in re-producing both the direct and structural violence against the Muslims in the post-war Sri Lanka is more for stronger reasons. Thus, this paper stresses that unless cultural justification for the majoritarian ideology is challenged by the deployment of the relevant constitutional and institutional changes, it is impossible to transform Sri Lanka into a proper civil state where all the communities, regardless of ethnic, linguistic and religious differences, can prosper equally. ...
Article
Full-text available
In postwar Sri Lanka waves of anti-Muslim riots and violence has become a common trend. This paper critically analyses how the century old Sinhala Buddhist majoritarian ideology contributes to the postwar anti-Muslim violence in Sri Lanka. This paper argues that postwar Islamophobia and anti-Muslim violence is not just a matter of political gambling or electoral strategy of political parties. Instead, it resulted from the deep-rooted extreme Buddhist majoritarian ideology that tries to drive the state and the society towards an exclusive Buddhist state. The ideology creates a cultural legitimacy to criminalize the Muslims as "invaders" and "the other" within Sri Lanka. This cultural cover up has led to epidemic direct and structural violence across the island. Hence, this paper suggests that the conflict management process should diverted towards structural changes, which includes both the constitutional and educational aspects, into account, rather than depending solely on the civil society driven inter-community coexistence projects.
... For documentation of events that unfolded see report by Law & Society Trust (2014). For an analysis of the discourse of Sinhala-Buddhism see Dewasiri (2016). xxi) See for example the concept of "third space" discussed by Bhabha (1994). ...
Article
Full-text available
Policies that address post-war displacement often reflect temporal linearity as transitional periods during which they are developed imply a shift from one situation to another. These policies obscure complexities experienced by local communities for whom displacement is ongoing and interminable. This essay applies Sri Lanka’s National Policy on Durable Solutions for Conflict-Affected Displacement (NPDSCAD) to the case of Northern Muslims who were expelled from the Northern Province of Sri Lanka in 1990 and have lived in prolonged displacement for over 25 years. For these Muslims, return-remain is an oscillation and not an either/or option. Using “frames of recognition” to analyze policy documents and data from fieldwork, the paper critically unpacks the category of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) – the displacement-related frame applied to the Northern Muslims – to reveal the multiple subject positions respondents navigate in presenting their own stance to this category. Calling for recognition of the circumstances of their displacement, the respondents’ footing to the IDP frame holds in it both needs-based and justice-based discourses and demands that Northern Muslims be recognized as political subjects. Return-remain is complicated by issues respondents face as they travel between their current home in Puttalam and origins in the North. The paper concludes that while the Northern Muslims are denied full recognition by the NPDSCAD, their complex experiences continue to contest the frames deployed by the policy.
Chapter
The first case study discusses how the perception of Sri Lanka being the ‘sanctuary and bulwark’ of Theravāda Buddhism has shaped the religio-political discourse, leading to the emergence of an exclusivist ultra-nationalist Sinhalese Buddhism from the late nineteenth century onwards to the detriment of non-Buddhist and non-Sinhalese inhabitants of the island, especially the Tamils, be they Hindu or Muslims. To better understand the emergence of this extremist Buddhism, a brief overview of the religio-political history of the island will be provided before we examine the works of Anagārika Dharmapāla and Walpola Rahula in some detail. The current ‘nationalist thought’ or Jathika Chintanaya will be discussed as well, and so also the current rhetoric of a number of extremist monks such as Inamaluwe Sri Sumanala Thero, Gangodawila Soma Thero, Athuraliye Rathana Thero, and Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thero: who do they target, what do they say, and what do they want? And, most importantly, how do they justify and legitimize the resort to violence?
Book
Full-text available
This essay examines the renewed importance of historical consciousness as a part of the hegemonic discourse of the Sinhala-Buddhist South in Sri Lanka after the end of the military engagement between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the Sri Lankan state. This post-war revival of historical consciousness is a continuation of the long standing historical narrative based on an imagined past which links present-day Sinhala-Buddhist ethnic identity with the pre-colonial and pre-modern historical developments in Sri Lanka. The specific character of this renewed discourse of ‘history’ is that it is becoming an integral part of the everyday social and political life of the Sinhala-Buddhist South. It also enjoys the overwhelming support of the dominant political players of the Sinhala-Buddhist South. The post-war order that is envisaged within this discourse — through the notion of ‘Sinhala-Buddhist Heritage of North and East’, that was constructed as an ideological answer to the notion of ‘Traditional Tamil Homeland in the North and East’ — categorically denies any positive accommodation of the political demands of Tamil nationalism including devolution of power. While highlighting two instances where this post-war discourse of ‘history’ is embodied in two popular practices, namely pilgrimage and popular literature, this essay raises the need to critically engage with this ideological discourse as a part of any meaningful attempt at This reconciliation between Sinhala and Tamil ethnic identities.
Chapter
Full-text available
This paper looks at the anti Muslim movement at its moment of ascendency in 2013. It also describes a particular post war sensibility that supported the assertion of anti Muslim sentiment in this manner. It argues that, additionally the power wielded by monks was utilised to its fullest in taking forward the movement.
Article
Full-text available
This study argues that political Buddhism and Sinhalese Buddhist nationalism have contributed to a nationalist ideology that has been used to expand and perpetuate Sinhalese Buddhist supremacy within a unitary Sri Lankan state; create laws, rules, and structures that institutionalize such supremacy; and attack those who disagree with this agenda as enemies of the state. The nationalist ideology is influenced by Sinhalese Buddhist mytho-history that was deployed by monks and politicians in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries to assert that Sri Lanka is the designated sanctuary for Theravada Buddhism, belongs to Sinhalese Buddhists, and Tamils and others live there only due to Sinhalese Buddhist sufferance. This ideology has enabled majority superordination, minority subordination, and a separatist war waged by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The study suggests both LTTE terrorism and the ethnocentric nature of the Sri Lankan state, which resorts to its own forms of terrorism when fighting the civil war, need to be overcome if the island is to become a liberal democracy. The present government of President Mahinda Rajapakse is the first to fully embrace the Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist ideology, suggesting that a political solution to Sri Lanka's ethnic conflict is unlikely. Meaningful devolution of power, whereby Tamils could coalesce with their ethnic counterparts amidst equality and self-respect, is not in the offing. A solution along federal lines is especially unlikely. Instead, continued war and even attacks on Christians and Muslims seem to be in store for Sri Lanka as the Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist ideology is further consolidated. The study recommends that the international community adopt a more proactive stance in promoting a plural state and society in Sri Lanka. In addition to countering the terrorist methods employed by the LTTE, the international community should initiate and support measures to protect fundamental civil liberties and human rights of Sri Lanka's ethnic and religious minority communities.
Article
The twin forces of religion and nationalism are well-known partners in world history. More often than not, the religion in question is adjusted to meet the political claims of adherents in a given situation. Buddhism is no less exposed to this than any other faith, despite its reputation as a religion of peacefulness and personal equilibrium. The case of Buddhism in Sri Lanka is an urgent example of this, as indicated by recent controversy surrounding the conversion of Buddhists to other faiths. Traditionally, Christian evangelical activity has not been as problematic in Sri Lanka, but in the wake of the 26 December 2004 tsunami, which brought unrestricted Western and Korean-based Christian evangelical aid and mission outreach, the subject has suddenly become extremely vexed, the focus of parliamentary debate and proposed government policy. In June 2005, Sri Lanka's Ministry of Buddhist Affairs brought forward the so-called "Freedom of Religion Act," which dictates exacting terms that severely restrict conversion to Christianity. In view of the return to civil war conditions between the government of Sri Lanka and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in mid-2006, this anti-conversion bill and one other proposed by the monastic political party, the Jathika Helu Urumaya, have the potential to cause social and political distress if Parliamentary legislation is eventually introduced to curb the outreach of non-Buddhist faiths.
Article
Part of the general problem in the anthropology of Buddhism as I demonstrate in this article is that the theoretical significance of the fact that the category 'Buddhism' is a recent and Western invention has not been sufficiently appreciated. Therefore, the anthropology of ‘Sinhala Buddhism’ continues to address the ahistorical and essentialist questions of who are Buddhists and who are not. In my view, such questions can only serve to further establish the essentialist assumptions about ‘authentic Buddhism’. Contrary to that, I explain how recent scholarship has challenged such established academic assumptions as what Buddhism is and who Buddhists are, and proposes questions of a different kind.
Article
This paper proposes alternative approaches to conceptualizing the relation between religion and violence, Buddhism and terror(ism). An important body of scholarship seeks to theorize religion and violence as transparent objects of disciplinary knowledge in terms of their supposed difference or interrelation, while chronically failing to appreciate them as discursive categories. The relation between religion and violence, the paper contends, is not available for disciplinary canonization as it is conventionally conceived in the now familiar terms of "Buddhism Betrayed?," "religious violence," "religious terrorism," etc. Rather the questions, terms, and parameters defining which persons, practices, and knowledges can and cannot count as religion or violence, civilization or terror are produced, battled out, and subverted in minute contingent conjunctures. Put differently, they are authorized to come into (central) view and fade from view, to emerge and submerge, to become centered and decentered within a microspace of competing authoritative "native" debates and discourses.
Article
This article examines Buddhist nationalism as an effort to resist the intrusion of globalizing forces into local religious and cultural heritage. By analyzing the discourse, persona, and life of Venerable Gangodawila Soma (1948–2003), a renowned and controversial Buddhist monk from Sri Lanka, the author demonstrates that Buddhist nationalism is largely a discursive formation that affirms an essential relationship between Buddhism and nation over against external forces that threaten their existence. A charismatic and skillful preacher, Venerable Soma employed a variety of media to reverse the perceived decline of Buddhism and the nation in the face of what he saw as immoral and hostile interests—including corrupt politicians, Tamil separatists, Evangelical Christians, and nongovernmental organizations. Venerable Soma's discourse, which privileges local forms of knowledge and morality, shows how globalization stimulates both new possibilities and new contradictions in contemporary forms of Buddhist nationalism.
Yuga Peraliya (Change of an Era)
  • Ashoka Abayagunawardana
Abayagunawardana, Ashoka, (2015) Yuga Peraliya (Change of an Era), (Colombo)