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EDITS | Tuesday, June 9, 2009 | Email | Print |


Lanka Buddhists take on Church

Sandhya Jain

Lion-hearted Sri Lanka leads by example once again. It was the first nation in the post-World War II era to elect a woman Prime Minister; then it became the first nation to spurn ineffective external intermediaries in a fratricidal war and launch a concerted armed effort to end violent secessionism once and for all.

Now, the island’s Buddhist religious leadership has risen to redeem the Indic tradition by repudiating inter-faith dialogue and demanding national legislation against conversions. India would do well to take a leaf out of Sri Lanka’s book, given the mischief Christian colonial powers are wreaking in our neighbourhood: Myanmar, Nepal, Tibet, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and of course, Iraq.

Sri Lanka’s Joint Committee of Buddhist Organisations wants re-introduction of the stalled Bill on Prohibition of Forcible Conversion of Religion (LDO/INC/7/2004). This is being criticised by Christian bodies, and 24 mainline Christian leaders, including 18 Catholic Bishops and retired Bishops, the Anglican Bishop of Colombo, Baptist Sangamaya, Presbyterian Church and Salvation Army have appealed to parliamentarians against it.

They contend that the proposed Bill will undermine the democratic right of religious freedom to choose a religion according to one’s conscience; prevent Christians and adherents of all religions to stand with the affected and serve one another for fear of legal consequences in spite of their innocence; and, provoke more inter-religious suspicion, tension and conflict than resolve them. They claim that all religions in Sri Lanka have originated outside the island nation, and that over the centuries, the Christian Church and Christians have become an intrinsic part of the social fabric.

This mischievous re-packing of the colonial Aryan-Dravidian divide insinuates Hinduism and Buddhism as imports from India (with ‘Dravidian’ Tamils as Hindus). This has been rebuffed by Mr Gamini Perera and Ms Chitra Wijesekera, co-conveners of the JCBO. They contend that the Christian Church has emanated from a colonial background of repression and cannot equate itself with Buddhism, which has moulded the life, culture and traditions of the country for over 2,550 years.

The JCBO says the barbaric manner in which different brands of Christianity have spread is well-documented. Despite this, tolerant Buddhist rulers and people have permitted other believers to merge with the national social fabric and even protected the Catholic community when hunted by Dutch Protestants, offering temple premises for religious activities. Similar asylum was given to Muslims attacked by the British. All religions enjoy all privileges only because of the magnanimity of the Buddhists.

Addressing Christian leaders directly, the JCBO says some of their major activities are directed at expanding Christianity through questionable means. Their commendable humanitarian services stand marred by subtle, long-term strategies to attract people of other religions to their faith.

Christians have established good educational infrastructure and turned this to undue advantage by alluring non-Christian parents to accept immoral conditions for the admission of their wards to Christian schools, even though many schools receive sizeable public funds. In India too, Christian NGOs corner governmental aid in the name of their developmental expertise, and the possible misuse of these funds has never been probed.

Mr Gamini Perera and Ms Chitra Wijesekera charge that the Church has never denounced or took action against Catholic Bishops with LTTE links. In fact, the activities of some senior members of the Christian clergy are aimed at breaking up the nation; even today, some Christian leaders’ statements are unduly biased in favour of the LTTE.

The JCBO has openly charged various churches of synchronising their myriad activities to achieve the objective of Christianising the Buddhist world. The late Pope John Paul II said when he visited India: “The task ahead of the Church is the evangelising of Asia during this millennium.” Way back in 1940, Rt Rev Lakdasa De Mel, on elevation as Assistant Bishop of the Anglican Church, had asserted: “The task of the Church in Ceylon will not be finished till the remaining 90 per cent of the population, who are not Christian, are converted.”

The Buddhist leaders rejected Christian concerns about the anti-conversion Bill, pointing out that original Bill had been placed before the Supreme Court and after two full days of comprehensive arguments by both sides, the court determined that its main contents were acceptable, barring a few amendments necessary to qualify it to be passed by ordinary majority in Parliament; these have been attended to since. The Bill has no provisions to prevent acting according to one’s conscience or make one who does so an offender.

But, and here lies the rub, it designates as offenders those who convert or attempt to convert by force, allurement or fraud, or aid and abet such conversions. The Buddhist clergy forcefully asserts that it does not accept “Sri Lankan society as presently constituted as a pluralistic society, but this notwithstanding, the Bill in no way undermines or tampers with the right to one’s conscience”. There are, it points out, special protections to ensure frivolous actions are not brought before a court. Clearly, six decades of dominant Western political rhetoric is meeting its Waterloo in Sri Lanka.

Batting valiantly for the Buddhist-Hindu ethos, the JCBO alleges that inter-religious tension is rising because of the activities of evangelical churches, better known as fundamentalist Christian groups. This was admitted by Bishop Malcolm Ranjith, Secretary-General of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference, in a letter to the Ministry of Cultural and Religious Affairs in May 2000.

Christian fundamentalists boldly oppose Buddhist monks defending the freedom of religion of Buddhists targeted for unethical conversions; monks are often subjected to threats and violence. In northern Sri Lanka, where Christian churches have long had a privileged presence, an alarmingly large number of helpless Hindus have been pushed to change their faith. In India, Hindu monks defending the underprivileged against forced conversions are shot to death (Shanti Kaliji, Agartala; Swami Laxmanananda, Kandhamal) or hacked to pieces (Swami Ramcharan Das, Puri).

The Buddhist clergy maintains that 80 per cent Sri Lankans are legitimately aggrieved at the absence of a law against unethical conversions. Rejecting the Christian plea for an Inter-Religious Council to discuss conversions because the goal of the Church to evangelise the entire region is unchanged, it has urged Parliament to debate the Bill and take it to its logical conclusion. India needs a dose of such clear thinking and bold affirmation in defence of its civilisational ethos.


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Bullet Sri Lanka has never discriminated Hindus
By Vinod on 1/12/2010 10:49:44 AM

To Vivek and Singha, It is an utter lie to say that Sri Lanka has discriminated Hindus. Tamils have been claiming to be discriminated ever since they realised that when the British went their unfair priviledges will come to an end. Hinduism is not synonymous with Tamils. The govt of Sri Lanka spends millions building Hindu temples and all people want those temples. It is the govt that pays for the maintainance and up keep of the Hindu temples. Sinhalese also go to Hindu temples sometime.

Bullet To Srinivas
By Vinod on 1/12/2010 10:23:09 AM

Srinivas, It is utterly wrong to say that Buddhism is like Islam. You are just showing that you have no idea what Buddhism or Sri Lanka is. The problem in sri lanka is not Buddhism nor the Sinhalese, but people like you, who want to distort the true situation for political gains and bitterness coming out of an inferiority complex. The Sinhalese have fought wars with invading Tamil Hindu bigots through out history and later the european colonists to keep their way of life and their faith.

Bullet Illegal conversion
By Shahid on 6/13/2009 9:27:15 AM

We have to stop this mass conversion in India, especially in south and in the east!!!! we have to do something. We have to learn from socities from UP or Bihar how they check increase in christian population and why southern states cant!!!

Bullet Sandhya Jain's article
By Srinivas on 6/10/2009 12:59:52 PM

The LTTE is not a religious organisation.

Buddhism in Sri Lanka is not true Buddhism. Buddhism was, is and never will be a state religion. Buddhism in SriLanka is like the Islam of Pakistan or Saudi Arabia. To support the SriLankan army is simply inhuman and unjust.

Bullet Misguided rhetoric
By Vivek on 6/9/2009 11:53:49 PM

While unchecked conversions of hindus in India is definitely a concern, I take exception to the strident endorsement by the author of Sri Lanka's Buddhist hegemony. Hindus in Sri Lanka have always been discriminated against and it is precisely the Buddhists who lambast Hinduism as a "foreign" import in to Sri Lanka. Just recently, Buddhist fanatics demolished a Ganesha temple in Colombo. As for LTTE, it never was and never will be a religious organization.

Bullet Christian Missionaries at Work
By Hriday on 6/9/2009 11:51:56 PM

The Christian Missionaries take advantage of the poverty & innocence of our people to convert them to Christianity.They create pathetic & bewildered creatures who become aliens in their own land.Read the ninety fifties report on the Activities of Christian Missionaries in India, by late Chief Justice of MP, Neogi.These missionaries need to be booted out of India & Sri Lanka. They could try their tricks in Pakistan.

Bullet Money.
By P. Joshipura on 6/9/2009 11:31:00 PM

The Christian churches has a lot of money which they use 'unethically' to convert by hooks or crooks; our Hindu temples have a lot of money too. Shouldn't they be used more ethically to prevent conversions? Why are they indulging in frivilous competetion such as 40 feet statue of Shri Lord Ganesha or 60 feet statue? Anybody has any proof that 40 feet Shri Lord Ganesha gives 10 times more blessing than 4 feet Shri Lord Ganesha?

Bullet India Focus
By Ris on 6/9/2009 4:14:40 PM

It is an open secret that European and American protestant and Evalengical groups back by some politicians have targetted India & China as a major push for their religion in Asia and massive amounts of funds are raised on both these continents. There are several Christian organizations which focus entirely on India and Hindu conversion...

Bullet Subtle conversions
By sg on 6/9/2009 3:28:04 PM

Let me not go too far beyond, but recently my driver, told me that he was called to the school and was offered a far reduced fee for his children, but the catch was he and his family were to convert. In the last couple of years there has been active conversions in my city. And he told me that there is a systamatic way they do it. They have fully paid people whose only work is to look for gullible people willing to convert and both parties get monetary benifits.

Bullet Perfect Article
By pavan on 6/9/2009 1:12:54 PM

Srilankans withstood Terrorism and fought/eliminated it successfully. Now they are going one step further to root out its root .. Christianity in their case. Bravo!. Its really intriguing how LTTE deceptively repackaged itself as Hindu Organization though all of its cadre are Christians and their motivation is to create rift between two branches of hinduism, saivism and Buddhism.

Bullet Kudos to Lanka
By Bhanu on 6/9/2009 9:49:46 AM

The Sri Lankans have showed us , once again, that its not size that matters but the will and determination to get things done. Way to go Sri Lanka!

Bullet lanka
By raghu on 6/9/2009 8:01:07 AM

The Hindus now have only one choice which is convert or perish.This is exactly what happened 700-800-years ago & those who dont learn from history have to repeat it again.

Bullet It is high time to stand against.....
By Vijay Gupta on 6/9/2009 7:32:06 AM

It is for the people to understand the very basic principles of their religious and cultural background. The allurement the way it is implemented is very unethical and immoral, it is very subtle for ordinary people to understand. In case of India, it is a very tragic and sad story, during Mogul rule how conversion to Islam took place (our faults were more), and during British rule how Christianity spread. And, what we got the division of our country.

Bullet Sandhya is wrong on Hinduism
By Singha on 6/9/2009 7:20:47 AM

While it is a fact that SL Buddhists are rightly taking on catholic church, it is her typical exaggeration that they are batting for Hindu ethos. SL Buddhists have not hesitated to undermine Sri Lanka's native Hinduism as a foreign import. That said, I agree India needs to regulate the church and its deceitful actions for its own wellbeing.

Bullet Lanka buddhists take on church
By suchit on 6/9/2009 5:59:25 AM

I wish our government and our Hindu seers take a note of this. We hindus in India should unite and force govt. to do something like that. will it be ever possible with so much of foreign power working in India? Lots can be written but will not be published. Why can't we have a channel for supporting hindu interests when there are channels doing so much of hindu bashing directly or indirectly. Thanks for publishing this article atleast.

Bullet WHAT IS Christian 20/20 window?
By Mahesh Kapoor on 6/9/2009 2:52:10 AM

North East India, Kerala, Orissa, Coastal Karnataka, TN, Coastal AP and even Punjab are under Evangicals 20/20 Window for conversion of poor Hindus into christians. These missionaries want poor hindus to hate their fore-fathers and parents not to follow Jesus and Christanity, and there-by denounce them.

Bullet Lanka Budhists take on Church
By Om Saini on 6/9/2009 2:51:03 AM

It is well written article by Ms. Jain and such should be followed in India as well. But the top leadership of the ruling party is interested in spreading Christanity in India and will not allow such efforts. People in general and Hindus in particular have to be awakened from thier long slumber of thousnads of years, I think religious leaders of Hindu faith should take the first lead in this matter.Thanks to Ms. Jain


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