Institutionalized racism against the Rohingya Muslims led Burma to genocide By Maung Zarni
For those outside Burma, the broadcast images of the Theravada monks of
the “Saffron Revolution” of 2007 are still fresh. Backed by the devout
Buddhist population, these monks were seen chanting metta and the Lovingkindness Sutta
on the streets of Rangoon, Mandalay, and Pakhoke-ku, calling for an
improvement in public well-being in the face of the growing economic
hardships afflicting Burma’s Buddhists. The barefooted monks’ brave
protests against the rule of the country’s junta represented a fine
example of engaged Buddhism, a version of Buddhist activism that
resonates with the age-old Orientalist, decontextualized view of what
Buddhists are like: lovable, smiley, hospitable people who lead their
lives mindfully and have much to offer the non-Buddhist world in the
ways of fostering peace.
But in the past year, the world has been confronted with images of the
same robed monks publicly demonstrating against Islamic nations’
distribution of aid to starving Muslim Rohingya, displaced into refugee
camps in their own country following Rakhine Buddhist attacks. The rise
of genocidal Buddhist racism against the Rohingya, a minority community
of nearly one million people in the western Burmese province of Rakhine
(also known as Arakan), is an international humanitarian crisis. The
military-ruled state has been relentless in its attempts to erase
Rohingya ethnic identity, which was officially recognized as a distinct
ethnic group in 1954 by the democratic government of Prime Minister U
Nu. Indeed, in the past months of violent conflict, beginning in June
2012, the Rohingya have suffered over 90 percent of the total death toll
and property destruction, including the devastation of entire villages
and city neighborhoods. Following the initial eruption of violence in
western Burma, several waves of killing, arson, and rampage have been
directed at the Rohingya, backed by Burma’s security forces.
Over the course of the past few years an extremely potent and dangerous
strain of racism has emerged among Burma’s Theravada Buddhists, who have
participated in the destruction and expulsion of the entire population
of Rohingya Muslims. The atrocities occurring in the name of Buddhist
nationalism in Burma are impossible to reconcile with the ideal of
metta. Buddhist Rakhine throw young Rohingya children into the flames of
their own homes before the eyes of family members. On June 3, 10
out-of-province Muslim pilgrims were pulled off a bus in the Rakhine
town of Taunggoke, about 200 miles west of the former capital, Rangoon,
and beaten to death by a mob of more than 100 Buddhist men. The crime
occurred in broad daylight and in full view of both the public and local
law enforcement officials.
One of the most shocking aspects of anti-Rohingya racism is that the
overwhelming majority of Burmese, especially in the heartland of upper
Burma, have never met a single Rohingya in person, as most Rohingya live
in the Rakhine State of western Burma adjacent to Bangladesh.
Physical appearance—aside from language, religion, culture, and class—is
an integral marker in a community of nationalists. The importance of
complexion is often overlooked when examining racism across Asia.
Rohingya are categorically darker-skinned people—sometimes called by the
slur “Bengali kalar.” Indeed, the lighter-skinned Buddhists of Burma
are not alone in their fear of dark-skinned people and belief that the
paler the skin, the more desirable, respectable, and protected one is.
The virulent hatred and oppression directed at Muslims extends to any
Buddhists who are considered to have helped them. In October 2012, local
Rakhine Buddhist men were named, degraded, punished, and paraded around
public places wearing handwritten signs that said, “I am a traitor.”
Their crimes? Selling groceries to a Rohingya.
The rose-tinted Orientalist take on Buddhism is so hegemonic that
Westerners are often shocked when they hear of the atrocities carried
out by militarized Buddhist masses and the political states that have
adopted or manipulated Buddhism as part of the state ideological
apparatus. Buddhism’s popular image as a peaceful, humanistic religious
doctrine immune to dogma contradicts a long history of violent Buddhist
empires—from Emperor Ashoka’s on the old Indian subcontinent to the
Buddhist monarchies of precolonial Sri Lanka and Siam, and the Khmer and
Burmese kingdoms—some of whom sanctioned war with recourse to the
dharma. The oppression carried out under Burmese President Thein Sein
and his Sri Lankan counterpart, President Rajapaksa, is just the latest
from a long line of violent Buddhist regimes.
Prejudice arises wherever communities of different faiths, classes, and
ethnicities coexist and interact. But genocide is not an inevitable
outcome of group prejudice; there have to be institutional mechanisms
and an organized harnessing of forces, generally enacted by the state.
Burma’s lay public and political society, while supposedly informed by
the worldwide ideals of human rights and democracy that spread across
formerly closed leftist polities, have evidently failed to undergo what
Aung San Suu Kyi famously called “the revolution of the spirit.”
Instead, they have chosen to pursue a destructive nationalism that is
rooted in the fear of losing property, land, and racial and religious
purity.
The Burmese state has mobilized its society’s Islamaphobia through
various institutional mechanisms, including the state media outlets and
social media sites, the presidential office’s Facebook page among them.
Burmese-language social media sites, which thrive out of the purview of
international media watchdogs, are littered with hate speech. Postings
of graphic images of Muslim victims, including Rohingyas, on
Facebook—easily the most popular social media website in the newly
opened Burma—have been greeted with approving responses from the
country’s Buddhist netizens, both within the country and throughout the
diaspora. The few Burmese and foreign human rights activists and
journalists who dare to speak out against this rising tide of racist,
fascist tendencies in Buddhist society have been increasingly subjected
to slander, cyber-threats, and hate speech. Journalists have repeatedly
expressed dismay over the volume of angry hate email they receive from
Burmese citizens whenever stories are published condemning the recent
violence.
In a documentary first aired by Al Jazeera on December 9, 2012,
Professor William Schabas, one of the world’s foremost experts on
genocide and until recently the president of the International
Association of Genocide Scholars, characterized the sectarian violence
against the Rohingya as genocide. “We’re moving into a zone where the
word can be used,” Schabas said “When you see measures preventing
births, trying to deny the identity of the people, hoping to see that. .
. they no longer exist, denying their history, denying the legitimacy
of the right to live where they live, these are all warning signs that
mean that it’s not frivolous to envisage the use of the term genocide.”
The United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the
Crime of Genocide, which entered into force on January 12, 1951, states:
“In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts
committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
( a ) Killing members of the group;
( b ) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
( c ) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
( d ) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
( e ) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
The ruling Burmese, both the Buddhist society and the Buddhist state,
have committed the first four of these acts, though the state denies
wrongdoing by their security forces during the nearly six months of
violence in 2012 that left 167 Rohingya Muslims dead and 110,000
refugees.
As for paragraph (e), malnourished, poorly educated Rohingya children
have not been “forcibly transferred” to another group, but there have
been instances of Rohingya children being brutally murdered—stabbed,
drowned, burned alive—by the Buddhist Rakhine.
During a public lecture in Brunei, Southeast Asia, on December 2, 2012,
Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, Secretary-General of the Organization of
Islamic Cooperation (OIC), was asked by a student what the OIC—with its
57 member states representing, in theory, at least 1.5 billion
Muslims—was doing to address the persecution of Muslim minorities around
the world. In his response, Ihsanoglu described the Burmese democracy
icon and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi as a human rights
activist for Burma’s Buddhists. Suu Kyi, he said, is “only interested in
the human rights of the Buddhists because they are human beings and the
Muslims are not.” While the emotion behind the statement is
understandable, there is a political calculus at play. Aung San Suu Kyi
has little to gain from speaking out against the treatment of the
Rohingya Muslims. She is no longer a political dissident, she’s a
politician, and her eyes are fixed on a prize: winning the 2015 election
with a majority Buddhist vote.
Prior to his lecture in Brunei, Professor Ihsanoglu sent a letter to Suu
Kyi on behalf of the OIC in which he pressed the National League for
Democracy (NLD) leader to use her enormous awza, or earned societal
influence, to help stem the tide of Buddhist racism against the Rohingya
and the Muslim population at large. The letter was met with silence. In
failing to decry the human rights abuses against the Rohingya, Burma’s
iconic leader—who is seen in some Burmese Buddhist circles as bhodhi
saddhava (“would-be Buddha”)—has failed to walk the walk of Buddhist
humanism.
On January 4, 2013, the 65th anniversary of Burma’s independence from
British rule, Suu Kyi said in a speech at the NLD headquarters that
Burma’s people need to rely on themselves if they want to realize their
dream of a free and prosperous nation. “Don’t expect anyone to be your
savior,” she warned. But as the Burmese magazine The Irrawaddy pointed
out in a recent editorial, “Suu Kyi is right that Burma doesn’t need a
savior; but it does need a leader.”
The current leaders of Burma’s 25-year-old human rights movement now
speak the language of national security, absolutist sovereignty, and
conditional human rights, echoing the language and sentiment of their
former captors, the ruling military. The NLD and the democracy
opposition have failed to see their own personal and ideological
contradictions. Their embrace of conditional human rights and their
absolutist reading of sovereignty indicates that they have talked the
talk of Buddhism, with its ideal of universal lovingkindness, but have
failed to walk the walk. Many student leaders and human rights activists
of the 1988 uprisings who spent half their lives behind bars in the
notorious military-run Insein Prison as “prisoners of conscience” are
unprepared to extend such human rights ideals to the Rohingya Muslims, a
population that the United Nations identifies as one of the world’s
most persecuted minorities.
Buddhism, as a religious and philosophical system, has absolutely
nothing to say about the political, economic, and cultural organizations
that we call nation states. Buddhism is not about people imagining a
national community predicated upon adversarial relations but rather
about using one’s own intellectual faculties to see through the
nonexistent core-essence of self. Yet in Burma, this humanistic
philosophy has proven itself indisposed to guard against overarching
societal prejudices and their ultranationalist proponents, those Burmese
who vociferously profess their adherence to Buddhist faith, practice
religious rituals and patronize Buddhist institutions, and then proceed
to commit unspeakable atrocities against anyone they imagine to be an
enemy of Buddhism, the Buddhist state, Buddhist wealth, Buddhist women,
and Buddhist land. Instead of propagating the guiding societal
principles of religious tolerance, nondiscrimination, and social
inclusion among lay devotees, the influential Buddhist clergy themselves
have, in their outspoken criticism and picketing against the Royingya,
become an entire people’s most dangerous threat.
Throughout the alien British rule from 1824 to 1948, the Buddhism of
colonial Burma contributed to the formation of a common national
identity, providing a basis for concerted anti-imperialist efforts among
disparate social classes and ethnolinguistically diverse Buddhist
communities with conflicting political interests. The current resurgence
of racism is a direct result of a half century of despotic military
rule. The careful construction of an iron cage—a monolithic
constellation of values, an ad hoc ethos—locks in and naturalizes a
singular view of what constitutes Burma’s national culture. The dominant
population remains potently ethnonationalist, essentializing Buddhism
as the core of an authentic Burmese national identity.
For a minority of Burmese Buddhists, the combination of Buddhist
nationalism and strong racial distinctions that served as an ideological
springboard and a rallying cry against the British Raj is now scorned
as a thing of the past. But for many Burmese Buddhists, the same
ethnoreligious nationalism that once served the Burmese independence
movement has provided an environment in which their racism can
flourish.
Buddhist-inspired social forces have proven to be a double-edged sword
over the years. In the newly independent post–WWII Burma of the late
1940s, Marxist-inspired revolutionary nationalists led by the martyred
Aung San (Aung San Suu Kyi’s father) set out to forge a new
multiculturalist, secular, and civic nationalism. In 1948, after Aung
San was assassinated by a rival Burmese politician (and less than 90
days after the country’s newly acquired independence), Burma plunged
into a long series of armed revolts against the central state. Aung
San’s successors gradually abandoned any attempts to secularize Burmese
nationalism along the lines of civic nationalism, which would have moved
the Burmese away from the premodern provincialist blood- and
faith-based view of national identity.
Against this backdrop, the popular racism of the Buddhist majority
presents itself as a potent social force that can be appropriated by
Burma’s national security state to unify and rally anti-Muslim Burmese
citizens. Burma’s state authorities, consisting predominantly of
generals and ex-generals, are also generous patrons of Buddhist
institutional activities such as dana and pagoda and temple building.
These military leaders will continue to feed the masses their opiate—the
pretension of Buddhism, with its effect of normalizing human
suffering—to the masses, as long as the Buddhists believe that their
faith, and not their political economy, promises better rebirth. As one
regime official told me, “The bottom line is, we don’t want any more
‘Mus’ in our country, but we can’t possibly kill them all.” As a
solution, the reformist state leadership has outsourced the job of
cleansing its Golden Land to the Rakhine Buddhists.
Maung Zarni is a Burmese activist and scholar. He is a visiting
fellow at the London School of Economics and the founder of the Free
Burma Coalition.
Image 1: Jonathan Saruk/Getty images. Thousands of unregistered
Rohingya Muslim refugees from Burma live next to the registered refugee
camp at Kutupalong Refugee Camp, Bangladesh.
Image 2: Thet Htoo/Zuma Press/Newscom. Rakhine men and a Buddhist
monk hold handmade spears and watch as a fire burns in Sittwe, capital
city of Rakhine State. Two weeks of clashes between Rohingya Muslims and
ethnic Rakhine Buddhists left an official death toll at 50, with 58
injured and more than 2,500 houses burned down.
Image 3: Soe Than Win/AFP/Getty/Newscom. Rakhine Buddhist monks pray
in Langon, Burma, in June 2012. Several thousand monks took to the
streets of Mandalay to protest against a world Islamic body’s efforts to
help Muslim Rohingya in strife-hit Rakhine State.
Image 4: Jonathan Saruk/Getty images. An unregistered Rohingya child
draws on the wall of a classroom provided by the charity Islamic Relief
at Leda Refugee Camp, Bangladesh.
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