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Dhamma or Violence in Sri Lanka

“I write this article as a tribute to my late father, K.S. Gunaratne, a teacher, mentor and a true pacifist”  

A few weeks ago while in the Uda Walawe area I met an opposition party MP who had come to help in the provincial election campaign for the local candidates.  As I listened to the interesting stories he was relating, I could not help but be amazed as to what we have come to accept as normal, even if the behavior was total unacceptable to civilized society.  He told me of the impending violence, the gangs of thugs coming into the area to support the government party and at the same time how they were mobilizing their own thugs to respond.   It was related as if it was normal to have this kind of boorish behavior from the so called leaders of this nation.

So, we wonder why we are still lagging far behind in our system of justice, freedom of speech, economic prosperity, education, ability to compete in business and sports internationally, to have an acceptable quality of life for all and to live in dignity.  

Accepting this type of behavior, in an era of advanced technologies to connect the world, for space travel and more is a real contradiction.   We have focused on the physical world and ignored developing our minds.  That is why when two people disagree, the response is often the primitive one of violence.   At the same time, I am not a pacifist yet.  The Darwinian principle is well and alive in me as a martial artist.  If my survival is at stake, I use violence.  However, I strictly follow my martial arts philosophy of never ever strike first, but defend when you have to.  The response has to be skillful and we must be mindful of the consequences.

In many parts of the world, these issues are being debated and addressed in terms of emotional intelligence and spirituality, but in Sri Lanka, unfortunately our unskillful, or in youthful terms, “un-cool” violence is even perpetuated at the highest seat of the government – the parliament.  This un-cool behavior comes through the gross misuse of power.  It comes from people who do not respect themselves and have large egos to compensate for it.

Where does this all start ?.

The Home

If charity begins at home, then we have to focus on the importance of positive parenting.  This is where it all starts.   We as parents set the values and behave accordingly to live those values to be a wonderful example to our children to emulate.   This is our biggest challenge as we tend to take parenting for granted as natural. 

We may have qualities to be good parents, but it is also a skill.  If we are not aware, we could use our power as a parent in un-healthy ways to steer children. 

Apart from our natural capabilities, we emulate the way we were parented, how our teachers treated us and finally how our leaders, at work and at play treat us.  The model we have in Sri Lanka is yet very traditional and hierarchical.   

This system does not value the powerless, beginning with our children, so we impose our will on them, wittingly or not treat them poorly and essentially hurt their self-esteem.

Children can get negatively impacted in many ways.  It is not violence alone that would hurt them.  Lack of love, neglect, no appreciation, negative thinking, lack of support and other types of mental abuse will hurt them.  When a child grows up in a home where they have to protect themselves from their own parents, naturally they will develop their own survival mechanism.   This develops in the form of ego to envelope fears they have so they can continue to face their daily challenges outside the home.  This leads to low self-esteem and a fragile ego which is protected by being mean spirited and even violent. 

Lack of understanding the psychology behind parenting perpetuates a system that is fraught with fear, jealousy, hatred and finally a violent response we come to believe as normal.

To add to it, because we as parents do not have time, children spend many hours a day sitting in front of a TV watching violent acts, reinforcing this further.

Treating children with love and respect, listening to them, appreciating them will build their esteem and confidence.  They will become generous and open as love will dominate their hearts.

The School

Then comes the school.  If we have to hit students to discipline them, we have failed as a society.   I am so happy that many schools do not tolerate the degrading corporal punishment anymore.  I know my streak of violence comes through the school cane as my parents never hit me.  Therefore, a more skillful non-violent response to discipline should become the norm for the entire education system.   Schools should be positive environments to encourage young people to learn and think freely, instead we have a system based on fear, control and the final verdict coming from an exam.   The exam focus makes the system target driven and not process oriented.   Coming to school becomes drudgery when young people cannot relish the joy of learning, playing sports, the arts and culture – making music, acting, singing, dancing – or just hanging out with friends.   The system is teacher focused where the power is concentrated on the establishment and not shared with the students. 

To add insult to injury, when the school day ends, they have to continue with their books to tuition classes.  This is another kind of violence the system unleashes on the students who are driven to be narrow focused, competitive and selfish.    Fear drives the system and naturally the response is violent.

Schools have to become more student centered and cater to the needs of the world around them.  For instance, in teaching religion they should not be made to memorize stanzas, but to teach them real values and behaviors coming out of these philosophies that will help them to decide what is right and wrong.   Finally, they should be appreciated for who they are and given the freedom to make choices based on their abilities and interests.   This respect will build love for self and compassion for others.  They will then have the esteem and confidence to make right choices.

Our Universities

Then comes our universities.   I have never heard of a university system in modern times anywhere the world where the students hurt their own through the ancient ritual of ragging and vandalize their own property.    This kind of barbaric self infliction of pain and violence is yet thought to be normal by many.   Recently, I met with a number of university students and when I asked them whether they have been ragged, most hands went up.  As they were final year students, when I asked them whether they had ragged anyone else, reluctantly a few male hands went up.   When I asked them why they hurt others when they themselves were hurt when they were ragged, they responded; “it is the accepted norm”.    So, we perpetuate this cycle of violence as normal.  

Next, a common response to implementing novel progressive ideas to keep up with a changing world or any disciplinary action taken by the management is to take violent action against those even with death, damage to property or equipment.   I do not even have to delve on this barbaric behavior, but it is clearly action of people who do not respect themselves, so they are not inclined to respect others.

There is also a two way process here, where we have to examine the way the university system is also managed.   Like the school system is it also hierarchical, archaic and teacher centered ?.  Maybe, if students are given more power and responsibility they may not hurt what is their own.    

We do not have to look far to see best practice in university education.  India is world class now.   Universities have to become open to the outside world, be it the business sector and even international students in order to become broad based and increase diversity.  There has to be the will to change this closed system through dialogue with all the stakeholders, then we will see universities playing a lead role in shaping a positive future for Sri Lanka.

The Working World

Then comes the world of work.   Many organizations are yet run in a very hierarchical manner.  Even though physical violence may not be a norm anymore, verbal abuse continues.  All you need to do is to talk to some of the women working in the garment industry.  When I ask managers why this continues, I yet get responses such as; “if we don’t shout they don’t work”.   The result is an acute shortage of workers as they rather stay at home and be poor than face the violence of the abuse. 

There are wonderful Sri Lankan examples in progressive businesses such as MAS and Loadstar where their charity begins with their people.  The focus on positive employee relations is relentless and they do it as it is the right thing to do.

Then there are the rural communities where thousands of women have left their homes to the middle east of earn money.   The mother‘s void has broken the cohesion of the family unit and often the father squanders the money on alcohol and commits violence against their own families.  The social fabric of our once tranquil and value based rural areas have been broken and violence has become the norm.

The Government

Then comes the government.  The ongoing war, acts of violence and bombs directed at civilians both in the north and the south has made violence a part of the routine of daily life.   In the name of the war, the government has turned violent on its own citizens.  Whether it is taking the LTTE head on or checking innocent people in the north and the south, the response is violent.  There are uniforms and guns involved.   These youth are often not trained enough on responsibly balancing the power they get with the uniform and the gun.  If this balance is not there, the focus is on a training to kill.  So, can we blame these soldiers when they respond violently as that is how they have been conditioned by the system.   So, we accept their violence too in the name of freedom, nationhood, race and religion.

We need to also be thoughtful of the need to help these youth on both sides where violence has been their vocation to live in peace in peaceful times expected ahead.

Religion

Then I come to religion.  I could proudly proclaim that in history Buddhism was a religion that never ever used violence or shed to blood to perpetuate or protect the Dhamma.    History of Christianity and Islam cannot claim this and the violence continues to date in different forms.   However, I lament at the way Sri Lanka perpetuates and protects is Dhamma and the Sangha.  We go to temple and do the ritual but we fail to live the non-violent philosophy of the Dhamma.  The other day seeing a Sangha representing the people protected by a gun was the ultimate contradiction.

In our Dhamma we have all the answers.   Love and compassion to fellow beings and nature around us and to live life mindfully and skillfully in the middle path is the undisputed call of the Dhamma.   

Therefore, we need to examine how we perpetuate our Dhamma now.  How can I be proud when we call ourselves a Buddhist nation and act in total contrast to the very nature and the values of the Buddha Dhamma?

So, why should I be so surprised that we have also fallen prey to the most basic of human frailties – fear, in the name of globalization where money and economics share the top spot for god.   Studying history we learn that violence has perpetuated the dominant western  system over the last 500 years.  French philosopher Descarte’s statement “I think, therefore I am”, separating mind and body has disconnected us from each other and nature around us.  We in Sri Lanka have finally been dragged down to their level.

At least in the west, they have set up systems of justice to look after their own.  The violence is unleashed at outsiders only.   Our violence is directed at ourselves.

The west is also waking up to the fact that money and power has not brought inner peace and contentment.  So, they are embracing our Dhamma vigorously.   Therefore, we need to re-examine our present.   It requires us to inquire and question the way we think and live and to assess how far we are moving away from the real philosophy of the Dhamma.       

Back to Self

To end, I come back to self.   As individuals we need skillful reflection and dialogue with an open heart.   We have to put a mirror on ourselves and become aware of the consequences of our thoughts and action.   We have to be mindful and aware.   Finally, we do not have to accept violence as a normal part of the human condition.   My quest is then to become a true pacifist like my father.

May all beings be well and happy!

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CHINTHANA MAHINDA said,

September 16, 2008 @ 11:53 am

Lalith…my great grand mother told me when I was small…”Sinhalaya modayaa…kavun kanna sooraya!”

I did not get her drift then…but today I understand what she meant, when I hear our politicians pay compliments to our “Boodhimath Janathaawa!”

God bless my great grandma, (may she rest in peace) and ‘Long Live The Majority!’ (also known as, the “Boodhimath Janathaawa!”) May they continue in their ‘Boodhimath’ ways!

Lalith Goonewardene said,

September 16, 2008 @ 12:22 pm

I read the Buddist perspective of the damma & violence.
As a born again Catholic I wish to quote from the Gospel of St. John chpt. 13 vrs. 1to 9.In verse 3 Jesus says he knows that God has given him complete power to do any thing. He could have just shaken the earth or shaken the moon or sun for that matter. Then every one at that time in Isreal including the chief priest & Roman Emperer would have accepted & worshipped Jesus as God or he would have been the King of Kings.BUT what did he do…. the Gospel continues in vrs. 4 to 6 that he tied a towel round his waist and washed the feet of his own 12 diciples. Mind you out of the 12 one fellow (Judas) betrayed him and the another fellow (Petre) denied him and the rest of the 10 left him and ran away.The most heartening thing his according to Gospels Jesus knew every every thing the Diciples going to do but yet he loved them.
Can we love tamils and can tamils love us in the same way……….???????????
OR can we love a person who is going to deny us………..??????????
This challenge is to all Christians.
IF WE CAN DO THEN WE CAN CHANGE THE WORLD !

punitham said,

September 16, 2008 @ 12:46 pm

Lalith
Thank you. Frequent appraisals are urgently needed.A very brief note about the author at the end of any contribution will be very useful.

The Under Dog said,

September 16, 2008 @ 3:26 pm

Every Buddhist monk I have met so far is very supportive of the war and the use of military force to solve the ethnic problem. I re-read the Dhammapada but could find no justification for this view on their part (since they wear the saffron robe, i assume they are guided by it). Isn’t the whole concept of sinhala-buddhism an attachment, a desire that we must avoid? The overall problem with the Buddhist priesthood is…that they are not very Buddhist!

Some choice quotes from the Dhammapada that I wish Buddhists (especially the Sangha) would practice:
Verse 5. For hatred does not cease by hatred at any time: hatred ceases by love, this is an old rule.
Verse 129. All tremble at violence; all fear death. Putting oneself in the place of another, one should not kill nor cause another to kill.
Verse 201. Victory begets enmity; the defeated dwell in pain. Happily the peaceful live, discarding both victory and defeat.

groundviews said,

September 16, 2008 @ 10:55 pm

Punitham,

Details of Lalith can be found here – http://www.sagetraining.org/team-sage.php

Balasubramaniam Chenaiah said,

September 17, 2008 @ 2:03 am

I’m a Tamil Hindu. Yet, I got to that when it comes to religion, Dhamma or Dharma or Gospel, or whatever, politics and nationalism go hand in had with religion. This reality is not just manifest in Sri Lanka. This is a universal reality. Christian crusades, Islamic caliphat idea, Jewish idea of promise land, and Buddhist encouragement of nationalist sentiments, are all politically and religiously sincretistic. If the original doctrines of a religion were used, a nation would never be able to have military, police, law enforcement authorities, etc. Buddhism, Hinduism, or any other religion is inseparably interconnected. THE IDEA OF A SPIRITUAL KINDOM IS IMPOSSIBLE. As a Hindu I never blame my swamis for their nationalistic involvement, and instead, I as a lay Hindu practice Hinduism in my capacity. Most lay Buddhists in Sri Lanka drink alcohol. Hmm.. I find the writer biased.

Justin said,

September 18, 2008 @ 7:28 pm

There is a moral decay in Sri Lanka. It started in 1956, when SWRD Bandaranayake wanted to satisfy his greed for power. He sought the Buddhist Monks to monkey in politics. If he was patriotic he would have said to the monks “Guys don’t come into politics, keep to your religious preaching”. “Allow politics to the politicians.” “You preach and make the citizens to be morally right.”

From 1956 the Sinhalese had a moral and spiritual decay culminating in what the writer of this article has expressed. It will worsen more rapidly.

Recently, a Buddhist monk failed to follow a court order about loud speaker usage. He was disturbing the neighbourhood. When he was arrested and refused bail by the judges, came in more than 20 of them, clad similarly to the court room. When the judges came in the 20 monks refused to stand up and honour the position. When asked to go out for contempt of court they refused.

Funnily enough, the judges were trying to compromise. They asked them to just go out and come in. Still there was defiance !!!!

How could these guys who are given the duty to preach Dhamma preach the right thing?

There are soldiers fighting in the North. When they come back to the South, one can witness more violence, gangsterism, rape, murder and mayhem.

One has to reap what one sows. You sowed violence and will reap much violence. Wait for the coming days.

Sam Thambipillai said,

September 23, 2008 @ 7:10 pm

Genocide in Sri Lanka(SL)is the intention of the Sinhalese to adversely harm the ethnic Tamil people and exterminate them in stages. And the present war in the North East(NE) is a collective intent of the Sinhalese to do just that, though, the war was started as “war on terrorism”.

Genocide intent can never be kept secret.

Radovan Karadzic, while addressing the Bosnian Parliament said that the independence bid would take Bosnia “to hell and Muslim people to extermination”. He carried on with the brutal war in Bosnia and caused genocide of Bosnians.

This inhuman attitude of Karadzic “qualified” him for indictment for war crimes committed in Bosnia.

When Dayan Jayatilaka, a Sinhalese, a former representative of the UN Human Rights Council, Kicked out from it with disgrace, writes “take it and kill it”, refering to the Tamils and freedom fighters who are in an independence bid for Tamil Eelam, it has exactly the same intent as Kardzic and deserves arrest and a trial in the Hague.

Colin Powell might have said as Chief of Staff or the head of the US Military to “take it and kill it” but as Secretary of State in September 2004 he also told a senate hearing that genocide has been committed in Darfur and might still be occuring there.

He recognised unequivocally that the government of Sudan and the Janjaweed militias were “taking and killing” the people of Darfur. This genocide is exactly waht Dayan and the Government of Sri Lanka(GOSL) desire the Sinhalese soldiers to do in Kilinochchi. Dayan is expresing in clear terms the genocidal policy of the GOSL.

The Sinhalese now realise that the claim of the GOSL about “liberating the East” was nothing but a sham to initiate genocide by boosting the ego of the Sinhalese. Combats between soldiers and the LTTE combatants are almost a daily occurence there now, with the soldiers shamefully on the losing side.

Kilinichchi will definitely not be different, even if the hearts of “patriots” are warmed up, if and when the soldiers capture it.

One thing is very clear and that is; the GOSL wants to tell the world by its defiant actions that NE will be ruled by it with violence, Human Rights abuses and genocide and not by anything else. The GOSL challenges even the UN and the International Community on this matter.

If a person tries to break a hard rock with his head, it is the head that will break. Never the rock. It is the foolish who resort to such stupidity

CHINTHANA MAHINDA said,

September 25, 2008 @ 11:35 am

When people of different origins, speaking different languages and professing different religions inhabit the same country and live under the same political sovereignty, ethnic and racial conflict is the usual outcome. More often than not, this happens when the majority tries to impose its language, religion and cultural values on the minorities!

There is an old saying: If your only tool is a hammer, then all your problems look like nails. In the ‘Aluth Sri Lanka’ that we live in today, our tools for problem solving consist of multi-barrel rocket launchers, migs, kafirs, white vans, goon squads and rigged elections. And the Tamils in the north and east and other parts of the country including journalists and the general public at large are the nails that are bombed into submission, abducted, beaten, killed and terrorized!
The ‘Maanushika Meheuma’ or ‘Humanitarian Operation,’ an euphemism for the ongoing war is fought today as a scared and justifiable war! A war of good against evil, black versus white! But let us not forget the many shades of grey in between!

’Fighting for peace is like copulating for virginity,’ is a pithy saying attributed to an American GI during the Vietnam war. This saying describes Sri Lanka’s predicament in a nutshell! Using military might to settle a dispute might seem logical in the short term, taking the peoples minds off the rising cost of living, but in the long term we are all losers!

Maximum devolution of power is the only way forward. In Sri Lanka’s 60 year history, agreements were made but not implemented! Pacts were signed and abrogated! This time around, if the majority community does not agree to devolution, the country’s future will be quite bleak, and it will not be the beginning of the end, but the end of the end, and Sri Lanka will meander along as ‘A can’t be developed country,’ the ‘Sick man of Asia.’

Nimal Wimalasuriya said,

January 5, 2009 @ 12:05 pm

Lalith, I really appreciate your article.

When we look back in history, Sri Lankans have been a violent lot. I remember learning in school, about the various forms of torture that were used during the times of the ancient kings. One was, tying two coconut trees together, then tying the left arm and left leg of the "prisoner" to one tree, the right arm and right leg to the other, and then cutting the ropes that tie the trees together!

I guess Buddhism has had a calming effect on our people, without which we would have been more or less like the natives of Papua New Guinea (where canibalism was practiced up to the 1970's).

From time to time though we have seen the gory side of our people emerging. This was evident during the 1983 "riots" when innocent Tamil civilians were butchered by Sinhalese mobs, and again in the late 1980's when the JVP "liberators" shot people at point blank range for the "crimes" of not obeying their "curfew" or for voting during elections!

… this comment continues …

Nimal Wimalasuriya said,

January 5, 2009 @ 12:09 pm

… continued …

As a follower of Buddhist principles, I personally think that the Buddha never visited Sri Lanka. If he did, and if he in fact was able to resolve the conflict between the Naghas and Yakshas, what was the message that he preached to these warring factions? There is no such sutra in the Buddhist teachings. If there was, it would have been an excellent teaching that could be applied today to solve the current conflict in this country!

What I believe is that during the time of the Buddha, our people in Sri Lanka were so primitive and the Buddha knew that we were not ready to comprehend his teachings! Some 500 years later we were more civilized and were able to comprehend His teachings.

Unfortunately though, up to now, no politician in this country has had the will or conviction to implement this profound teaching of non-violence in to practice.
As a positive thinker, I think that there will come a day in the near future when Sri Lanka will have a leader who will have the courage to take this country on a path of true peace.

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