|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
2009 brought the end of the protracted civil war in Sri Lanka, and
observers hoped to see the re-establishment of harmonious religious
and ethnic relations among the various communities in the country.
Immediately following the war's end, however, almost 300,000 Tamil
people in the Northern Province were detained for up to a year's
time in hurriedly constructed camps where they were closely
scrutinized by military investigators to determine whether they
might pose a threat to the country. While almost all had been
released and resettled by 2011, the current government has not
introduced, nor even seriously entertained, any significant
measures of power devolution that might create meaningful degrees
of autonomy in the regions that remain dominated by Tamil peoples.
The Sri Lankan government has grown increasingly autocratic,
attempting to assert its control over the local media and
non-governmental organizations while at the same time reorienting
its foreign policy away from the US, UK, EU, and Japan, to an orbit
that now includes China, Burma, Russia and Iran. At the same time,
hardline right-wing groups of Sinhala Buddhists have
propagated-arguably with the government's tacit approval-the idea
of an international conspiracy designed to destabilize Sri Lanka.
The local targets of these extremist groups, the so-called fronts
of this alleged conspiracy, have been identified as Christians and
Muslims. Many Christian churches have suffered numerous attacks at
the hands of Buddhist extremists, but the Muslim community has
borne the brunt of the suffering. Buddhist Extremists and Muslim
Minorities presents a collection of essays that investigate the
history and current conditions of Buddhist-Muslim relations in Sri
Lanka in an attempt to ascertain the causes of the present
conflict. Readers unfamiliar with this story will be surprised to
learn that it inverts common stereotypes of the two religious
groups. In this context, certain groups of Buddhists, generally
regarded as peace-oriented , are engaged in victimizing Muslims,
who are increasingly regarded as militant , in unwarranted and
irreligious ways. The essays reveal that the motivations for these
attacks often stem from deep-seated economic disparity, but the
contributors also argue that elements of religious culture have
served as catalysts for the explosive violence. This is a
much-needed, timely commentary that can potentially shift the
standard narrative on Muslims and religious violence.
Since 2004, the violent conflict between Thai Buddhists and Malay
Muslims has caused more than 7,500 deaths and 13,000 injuries in
the southern border provinces of Thailand. This will be the first
collection published in English to give voice to those who have
rebounded from these profound personal tragedies to demand justice
and peace.The ethnic and religious separatist insurgency in the
southern provinces of Thailand is complex. Ninety to ninety-five
percent of Thai citizens are Buddhists. In the southernmost
provinces, however, Muslims are in the majority-yet they are
governed by the Buddhist Thai capital in the north. In 2006 and
2014, the Thai government went through separate coups, resulting in
differing policies to address this problem in the south, including
a National Culture Act to promote "Thai-ness" throughout the
country. In the south, this has resulted in a repressive and
corrupt police force and military raids on Muslim villages,
provoking the burning of schools and other symbols of Thai
government, bombings, and even the killing of teachers and monks.
The narratives collected here, primarily from women, testify that
although the violence has been generated from both sides of the
Buddhist/Muslim divide, the actions undertaken by armed forces of
the Thai Buddhist state-including repressive violence and
torture-have served as a catalyst for increased Muslim insurgency.
These contributions reveal the fundamental problem of how a
minority people can fully belong within a state that has insisted
on religious, cultural, and linguistic homogenization.
Since 2004, the violent conflict between Thai Buddhists and Malay
Muslims has caused more than 7,500 deaths and 13,000 injuries in
the southern border provinces of Thailand. This will be the first
collection published in English to give voice to those who have
rebounded from these profound personal tragedies to demand justice
and peace.The ethnic and religious separatist insurgency in the
southern provinces of Thailand is complex. Ninety to ninety-five
percent of Thai citizens are Buddhists. In the southernmost
provinces, however, Muslims are in the majority-yet they are
governed by the Buddhist Thai capital in the north. In 2006 and
2014, the Thai government went through separate coups, resulting in
differing policies to address this problem in the south, including
a National Culture Act to promote "Thai-ness" throughout the
country. In the south, this has resulted in a repressive and
corrupt police force and military raids on Muslim villages,
provoking the burning of schools and other symbols of Thai
government, bombings, and even the killing of teachers and monks.
The narratives collected here, primarily from women, testify that
although the violence has been generated from both sides of the
Buddhist/Muslim divide, the actions undertaken by armed forces of
the Thai Buddhist state-including repressive violence and
torture-have served as a catalyst for increased Muslim insurgency.
These contributions reveal the fundamental problem of how a
minority people can fully belong within a state that has insisted
on religious, cultural, and linguistic homogenization.
The Sri Lanka Reader is a sweeping introduction to the epic history
of the island nation located just off the southern tip of India.
The island’s recorded history of more than two and a half
millennia encompasses waves of immigration from the South Asian
subcontinent, the formation of Sinhala Buddhist and Tamil Hindu
civilizations, the arrival of Arab Muslim traders, and European
colonization by the Portuguese, then the Dutch, and finally the
British. Selected texts depict perceptions of the country’s
multiple linguistic and religious communities, as well as its
political travails after independence in 1948, especially the
ethnic violence that recurred from the 1950s until 2009, when the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam were defeated by the Sri Lankan
government’s armed forces. This wide-ranging anthology covers the
aboriginal Veddhas, the earliest known inhabitants of the island;
the Kings of Kandy, Sri Lanka’s last indigenous dynasty;
twenty-first-century women who leave the island to work as
housemaids in the Middle East; the forty thousand Sri Lankans
killed by the tsunami in December 2004; and, through cutting-edge
journalism and heart-wrenching poetry, the protracted violence that
has scarred the country’s contemporary political history. Along
with fifty-four images of paintings, sculptures, and architecture,
The Sri Lanka Reader includes more than ninety classic and
contemporary texts written by Sri Lankans and foreigners.
Historical, anthropological, and philosophical in approach, Buddha
in the Crown is a case study in religious and cultural change. It
examines the various ways in which Avalokitesvara, the most well
known and proliferated bodhisattva of Mahayana Buddhism throughout
south, southeast, and east Asia, was assimilated into the
transforming religious culture of Sri Lanka, one of the most
pluralistic in Asia. Exploring the expressions of the bodhisattva's
cult in Sanskrit and Sinhala literature, in iconography, epigraphy,
ritual, symbol, and myth, the author develops a provocative thesis
regarding the dynamics of religious change. Interdisciplinary in
scope, addressing a wide variety of issues relating to Buddhist
thought and practice, and providing new and original information on
the rich cultural history of Sri Lanka, this book will interest
students of Buddhism and South Asia.
|
|