June 20,2013
New York Times
THOMAS FULLER
Adam Dean for The New York Times
TAUNGGYI, Myanmar — After a ritual prayer atoning for past sins, Ashin
Wirathu, a Buddhist monk with a rock-star following in Myanmar, sat
before an overflowing crowd of thousands of devotees and launched into a
rant against what he called “the enemy” — the country’s Muslim
minority.
“You can be full of kindness and love, but you cannot sleep next to a
mad dog,” Ashin Wirathu said, referring to Muslims.
“I call them troublemakers, because they are troublemakers,” Ashin
Wirathu told a reporter after his two-hour sermon. “I am proud to be
called a radical Buddhist.”
The world has grown accustomed to a gentle image of Buddhism defined by
the self-effacing words of the Dalai Lama, the global popularity of
Buddhist-inspired meditation and postcard-perfect scenes from Southeast
Asia and beyond of crimson-robed, barefoot monks receiving alms from
villagers at dawn.
But over the past year, images of rampaging Burmese Buddhists carrying
swords and the vituperative sermons of monks like Ashin Wirathu have
underlined the rise of extreme Buddhism in Myanmar — and revealed a
darker side of the country’s greater freedoms after decades of military
rule. Buddhist lynch mobs have killed more than 200 Muslims and forced
more than 150,000 people, mostly Muslims, from their homes.
Ashin Wirathu denies any role in the riots. But his critics say that at
the very least his anti-Muslim preaching is helping to inspire the
violence.
What began last year on the fringes of Burmese society has grown into a
nationwide movement whose agenda now includes boycotts of Muslim-made
goods. Its message is spreading through regular sermons across the
country that draw thousands of people and through widely distributed
DVDs of those talks. Buddhist monasteries associated with the movement
are also opening community centers and a Sunday school program for
60,000 Buddhist children nationwide.
The hate-filled speeches and violence have endangered Myanmar’s path to
democracy, raising questions about the government’s ability to keep the
country’s towns and cities safe and its willingness to crack down or
prosecute Buddhists in a Buddhist-majority country. The killings have
also reverberated in Muslim countries across the region, tarnishing what
was almost universally seen abroad as a remarkable and rare peaceful
transition from military rule to democracy. In May, the Indonesian
authorities foiled what they said was a plot to bomb the Myanmar Embassy
in Jakarta in retaliation for the assaults on Muslims.
Ashin Wirathu, the spiritual leader of the radical movement, skates a
thin line between free speech and incitement, taking advantage of
loosened restrictions on expression during a fragile time of transition.
He was himself jailed for eight years by the now-defunct military junta
for inciting hatred. Last year, as part of a release of hundreds of
political prisoners, he was freed.
In his recent sermon, he described the reported massacre of schoolchildren and other Muslim inhabitants in the central city of Meiktila in March, documented by a human rights group, as a show of strength.
“If we are weak,” he said, “our land will become Muslim.”
Buddhism would seem to have a secure place in Myanmar. Nine in 10 people
are Buddhist, as are nearly all the top leaders in the business world,
the government, the military and the police. Estimates of the Muslim
minority range from 4 percent to 8 percent of Myanmar’s roughly 55
million people while the rest are mostly Christian or Hindu.
But Ashin Wirathu, who describes himself as a nationalist, says Buddhism
is under siege by Muslims who are having more children than Buddhists
and buying up Buddhist-owned land. In part, he is tapping into
historical grievances that date from British colonial days when Indians,
many of them Muslims, were brought into the country as civil servants
and soldiers.
The muscular and nationalist messages he has spread have alarmed Buddhists in other countries.
The Dalai Lama, after the riots in March, said killing in the name of
religion was “unthinkable” and urged Myanmar’s Buddhists to contemplate
the face of the Buddha for guidance.
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