Deconstructing Buddhist Extremism: Lessons from Sri Lanka
Abstract
:1. Buddhism and Violence: A Concise Exploration
2. Religious Extremism Unpacked
3. Seven Core Characteristics of the Buddhist Extremist: Lessons from Sri Lanka
3.1. Identity Supremacism
3.2. In-Group Bias
3.3. Out-Group Prejudice
3.4. Obssession with Preserving In-Group “Purity”
3.5. Low Integrative Complexity and Dualistic Thinking
The BBS offers a compelling narrative in which the Sinhala nation is at a crucial juncture for its own survival. Islam has swept away the vast stretch of Buddhist countries across Asia, the Sinhalese are constantly under attack from foreign threats, and Muslims are encroaching on Buddhist spaces and threatening to turn the Sinhalese into second-class citizens in their own homeland. Heroism is needed to save the nation.
3.6. Dangerous Speech
“[T]here is no explicit use of prima facie in the BBS rhetoric, but there is an implicit prima facie logic within their narrative: something needs to be done, or Sinhalese Buddhism will become obsolete. Violence is not named, but it is implied. The Buddhists who listened to Gnanasara Thero’s speech understood this. The following day, they attacked the nearby Muslim community” [my italics] (Ibid).
“[In] this country we still have a Sinhala police; we still have a Sinhala army. After today if a single Marakkalaya [Muslim, in context used derogatorily] or some other paraya [alien, outcast, also a derogatory term] touches a single Sinhalese… it will be their end”.
3.7. Drive for Political Power
4. Conclusions and a Further Research Agenda
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For an excellent and concise analysis of the role of psychology in inter-group conflict, see (Waller 2005). |
2 | It should be noted though that some Buddhist scholars point out that such a conclusion violates the ahimsa principle. See (Jerryson 2010, pp. 4–5). |
3 | The author would like to extend his gratitude to NEJPP for permission to draw upon and re-use some material for the current Religions article. |
4 | This section employs concepts first articulated in (Ramakrishna 2020). |
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Ramakrishna, K. Deconstructing Buddhist Extremism: Lessons from Sri Lanka. Religions 2021, 12, 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110970
Ramakrishna K. Deconstructing Buddhist Extremism: Lessons from Sri Lanka. Religions. 2021; 12(11):970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110970
Chicago/Turabian StyleRamakrishna, Kumar. 2021. "Deconstructing Buddhist Extremism: Lessons from Sri Lanka" Religions 12, no. 11: 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110970
APA StyleRamakrishna, K. (2021). Deconstructing Buddhist Extremism: Lessons from Sri Lanka. Religions, 12(11), 970. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12110970