Reflections on the Buddha
and the myth of the Sinhala Buddhist origin
[see
also
Sinhala Buddhist Chauvinism - the Record Speaks]
"...The third
noble teaching of the Buddha regarding
nirvana/nibbana, �cessation�, also seems to have
been misunderstood. They seem to understand that
killing Tamils mean some kind of cessation of the
Tamils and so this is acceptable behavior for them.
A considerable section of the Tamils have run away
and are continuing to run away to escape the Sinhala
Buddhist militancy. A second section of the Tamils
are fighting to establish a separate homeland for
the Tamils in Lanka so that they could live normal
lives as free human beings in a secure environment.
But many Tamils in Lanka continue to live in dread
that they might face death and destruction at any
moment from Sinhala armed forces and
para-militaries. Of course, there are quislings like
Devananda, Anandasangary, Karuna, Rajan Hoole and
some others who hate the LTTE for different reasons.
They join the devil to crush the LTTE. They refuse
to look beyond to what happens to the Tamils, if the
LTTE were defeated..."
Mahinda
Rajapakse says that 1956 is back all over again. 1956 was
the year when S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike
ushered in Sinhala hegemony in Lanka. It was the year
when
Sinhala mobs attacked the Tamil leaders who were engaged
in peaceful protest and shouted �ape aantuva�, equating
Lankan government to Sinhala government, effectively denying
the Tamils a share. Even though the slogan of �Sinhala only�
was said to be about making Sinhala language only as the
official language of the country, steps soon followed which
made for Sinhala hegemony and then
Sinhala Buddhist hegemony.
Fifty years later in
2005, the Sinhala electorate gave a similar verdict, in
electing Mahinda Rajapakse as the President.
The
turbulent period of half a century in which the country
as well as the Tamils suffered so much agony has not made
any effect on the Sinhala psyche. How is it possible for the
Sinhalas to be so intransigent? Scholars, analysts and
politicians have identified the Mahavamsa mindset about the
Sinhala Buddhist claim to the island of Lanka, as the reason
why most of the Sinhalas could not be rational and liberal.
Therefore, it is necessary to study critically the Mahavamsa
as a source of Lankan history to understand the ethnic
conflict between the Sinhalas and the Tamils. This article
will confine its attention to the myth of origin of the
Sinhalas as found in the Mahavamsa and the Sinhala
transformation of Buddhism, a universal religion, into a
narrow ethnic religion.
Sinhala Buddhists
have preserved some historical material in the form of
�vamsa� texts, some of them from ancient times in Pali
language and some others from later times in Sinhala
language. Of these, the Mahavamsa in Pali is very important.
Modern scholars characterize the Mahavamsa as a chronicle.
It was a document of the Mahavihare monastery of Theravada
Buddhism. There was a chronological framework and what the
Sinhala rulers did - whether good or bad- have been
mentioned, mainly from the point of view of the Mahavihare.
The earliest portion
of the Mahavamsa (only this portion of the long chronicle is
referred to as the Mahavamsa by some scholars; they refer to
the subsequent portion as the Culavamsa) was composed by
Mahanama, a Buddhist monk in the sixth century ACE.
This portion of the Mahavamsa tries to trace the beginnings
of Sinhala Buddhism from the sixth century BCE to the end of
Mahasena�s reign in the fourth century ACE. There was the
Dipavamsa, a Pali chronicle dealing with events of the same
period but Mahanama found some shortcomings there. He wanted
to improve it and elaborate it. He was referring to Sihala
Attakatha as the original authority from which he obtained
his material. Even though nothing more is known about this
Sihala Attakatha, he must have had some other sources also,
besides the Dipavamsa. He was also influenced by the Indian
Epics and Puranas.
It is on this
Mahavamsa mindset that the Sinhalas base their exclusive
claim, to possession of the whole island. They say that it
was ignorance of the Lanka history that makes the Tamils
demand power-sharing and the foreigners talking of federal
solution to the ethnic problem. Many non-Sinhalas are
baffled by the so called historical claim of the Sinhalas.
How exactly has this historical claim of the Sinhalas been
established? Many Sinhalas are either not willing or not
capable of distinguishing myths from facts in a critical
study. The Sinhalas use the same word itihasaya to indicate
both epic and history and that could be one of the reasons
for their difficulty in distinguishing fact from fiction.
Early material about
the Buddha and his teachings have been collected in the Pali
Canon by about the first century BCE. The Pali Canon is
available now. Voluminous material is available about the
Buddha�s life and his teachings. The Buddha�s travels and
teachings, from the time of his enlightenment when he was
thirty five years old to his death when he was eighty years
old, his criss-crossing the Gangetic valley mostly in
present day Bihar, eastern Uttara Pradesh and may be western
Bengal, coming across a cross-section of all groups of
people, varying his teachings to make them appropriate to
different occasions, are matters that could be gleaned from
the Pali Canon.
There is no evidence
that the Buddha has heard about the island of Lanka.
In fact, except for probably a later identification of Lanka
mentioned in the Ramayana with the island of Lanka, there is
no evidence that the present day Sri Lanka was known as
Lanka at the time of the Buddha. Even in ancient Tamil, the
island that goes on as Sri Lanka now was known as Ilam
(=Eelam) and not as Ilankai. The message of Buddhism was
universal. There is no indication that it was parochial.
The Mahavamsa has
transformed the Buddha into a special patron of Sinhala
Buddhism, an ethnic religion. The enlightenment of the
Buddha seems to have involved realization of some truths
about worldly life and about how to transcend that life. The
Mahavamsa Buddha had tremendous far sight into the long time
future of the world. He knew that his teachings would be
preserved in purity in Lanka only in the distant future. So
he decided to prepare the ground by making three visits to
the island.
This is how the
Mahavamsa begins and the beginning of the Mahavamsa is
clearly a historical fiction. Early Buddhism has given the
Buddha, another title jina, �conqueror� also. What it seems
to refer to is Buddha�s disciplined life, controlling his
senses and resisting temptations and perhaps his getting a
large number of followers. But the Mahavamsa Buddha appears
to be a real conqueror, imposing himself on the others, in
the usual sense. When the Buddha made his visits to the
different sites in Lanka, those sites were said to have been
occupied by Yakkhas and Nagas. There is some controversy
about identifying these groups but they must have been
different tribes or communities as modern day archaeologists
report that human beings were occupying the island for many
thousands of years.
The first visit of
the Buddha was to Mahiyangane area where Yakkhas lived. The
Mahavamsa Buddha did not try to win them over with his
compassion as the original Buddha did in similar
circumstances. He terrorized the Yakkhas by manipulating
natural phenomena. The Yakkhas appealed to the Buddha not to
terrorize them; if they were not harmed, they would vacate
the land for the Buddha. The Mahavamsa Buddha seems to have
taken the innate evil character.
The second visit of
the Buddha was to Nagadipa, now identified with northern
part of Lanka. Two Naga princes were about to fight fiercely
for a gem set throne and bloodshed was imminent. The Buddha
made his visit to prevent bloodshed. There too, the Buddha
seems to have used terrorist methods of manipulating natural
phenomena to frighten the princes so that they themselves
offered the Buddha the throne out of fear. The Mahavamsa
portrayal of the Buddha�s second visit also shows that the
Buddha had been brought down to a level which the Sinhalas
could understand.
The third visit of
the Buddha was for Kelaniya at the invitation of the Naga
prince who met the Buddha during his second visit. It was on
this visit that he was said to have left his footprint on
Adam�s Peak.
Vijaya and his
followers are said to have landed on the island of Lanka, on
the date of the Buddha�s passing away. According to the
Mahavamsa, the Buddha had to make arrangements for the
safety of Vijaya and his followers. He calls on Sakka
(=Indra), who in turn calls Upulvan (=Vishnu ?) for divine
intervention for help. When Vijaya and his followers landed
on the island, Upulvanna helped him. Soon, they were among
the Yakkhas. What happened to the Nagas who were so friendly
to the Buddha just about thirty five years before Vijaya�s
landing? The Buddha could have directed Vijaya to the Nagas.
In that case, Vijaya and his followers could have started as
Buddhists when they were said to have established their
kingdom. It is strange to note that the Mahavamsa does not
refer to any contact between Vijaya and the Nagas. How could
Vijaya become king of Lanka, if he had not even made contact
with the Naga areas in the northern and western regions of
Lanka? This portion of the Mahavamsa appears to be a
super-imposition of a myth to the main narrative of the
Mahavamsa; it does not make for a connected story.
According to later
chapters of the Mahavamsa, Buddhism was introduced to the
island about two centuries later. The Buddhist monk-author
does not seem to have noticed the contradiction. Asoka, the
famous Magadhan emperor, was taking the initiative to send
Buddhist monk missionaries to Lanka. Tissa, his friend, was
said to be ruling Lanka. The Mahavamsa gives the impression
that Asoka cared very much for Lanka and gave special
attention to it.
First he sent
Mahinda, his son, who had become a monk, for the purpose of
propagating Buddhism in Lanka. Mahinda was on Mihintale hill
when Tissa met him. Mahinda is said to have conducted tests
on Tissa to find out whether he could comprehend Buddhism.
When one reads this portion of the Mahavamsa, the question
arises how far Asoka and Tissa could be friends and how much
he knew of Tissa. The Sinhala Buddhists do not question them
because it is in their interests to hold on to the myths.
How could they expect the non-Sinhala Buddhists to swallow
these myths as historical facts?
Asoka was a great
emperor who was well-respected in India and elsewhere. He
had left many inscriptions, from which his greatness could
be deduced. He was proclaiming dharma � which seems to be
the core of many Indian religions- in most of his
inscriptions. Modern historians will give much more
weightiness to contemporary inscriptions issued by the ruler
himself than to chronicles, written many centuries later by
sectarian monks with their own agenda to promote. The
Mahavamsa makes him a zealot of Theravada Buddhism. The
Mahavamsa tradition narrows down Asoka�s perspective as it
has narrowed down the Buddha�s perspective. Claiming that
the whole island of Lanka belongs to the Sinhalas is another
of these narrowing downs.
It is interesting to
note that according to the Mahavamsa, the Buddha wanted to
provide for the safety and well-being of Vijaya and his
followers, as he knew that his teachings in all its purity
would endure in Lanka only. A study of the Buddha from early
sources does not indicate that this kind of clairvoyance was
part of the Buddha�s enlightenment. It is important to note
the character of these people, as described in the
Mahavamsa. Vijaya�s grandfather was a lion. This lion
cohabits with a Bengali princess and begets two children.
Beastly and brutal nature comes in as inherited feature for
their descendents.
The son of the lion
escapes with his sister and mother from the den of the lion.
When a king offers a big award for killing the predatory
lion, the son kills his father and accepts the award.
Parricide becomes the second inherited feature of this
strange culture. The son of the lion marries his sister and
beget many children. Incest becomes the third inherited
feature. Vijaya was the eldest son of this couple and he
seems to have inherited all the evil genes of the two
previous generations of his ancestors. People of that part
of Bengal were so much harassed by Vijaya and his followers
that his father was forced to exile them by putting them on
a boat and pushing them into the sea.
After many days of
sailing, they were said to have landed at Suparaka, a port
identified in northwestern coast of India. What is important
to note here that Vijaya and his followers were found to be
so troublesome that they were chased away even from there.
Descendents of people who were chased out of both eastern
and western coasts of north India are in control of Sri
Lanka and are now appealing for help from India to
maintain their hegemony and to deny Tamils their rights!
India should take account of these matters which the
Sinhalas claim as their history.
A study of how
Vijaya and his followers established the first Sinhala
kingdom reveals much about the character of the Sinhalas.
Upulvan, the guardian deity, received Vijaya and his
followers to fulfill Buddha�s wishes and gave them
protective threads tied round their arms to protect them
from harm. Vijaya meets Kuveni, a Yakkha, who could be
described as a daughter of the soil (bhumiputri !). She
falls for Vijaya; Vijaya marries her and they beget two
children. As Yakkhas will not accept Kuveni marrying a
foreigner, Vijaya, with assistance from Kuveni massacres
them, taking them unaware, when they were attending a
celebration.
The extent of
destruction of the Yakkhas seems to have reached the point
of genocide. The Mahavamsa does not say that Vijaya and his
followers made any peaceful accommodation with the Yakkhas,
the indigenous inhabitants. The Sinhalas were starting a new
community, marrying people from India and thus bringing new
settlers.. Vijaya seems to have done more harm to the
earlier inhabitants of the country, when compared to later
invaders from South India. In this context, it is very
amusing to see some Sinhalas claiming that they were �sons
of the soil.� The Sinhalas were a people who committed the
genocide of �sons of the soil.� That is how Vijaya�s rule
was established in Lanka. The later South Indian invaders
appear to have behaved much better than Vijaya and his
followers.
Vijaya and his
followers decided that Vijaya should marry into a royal
family to confirm his royal status. They sought out a
princess from Pandya royal family; to southern Maturai, they
sent emissaries with valuable presents of pearls and gems.
The Pandya king is said to have sent a princess as well as
many women for Vijaya�s followers. Vijaya must have used
Kuveni connection to obtain access to Lanka�s resources of
pearls and gems. But now, he was getting married to a high
class lady and he didn�t want to have Kuveni and children
around. He becomes treacherous to Kuveni, who was an
indigenous inhabitant of the island. In spite of pleadings
from Kuveni, she was exiled to the jungles, along with her
children. Remembering her betrayal of her Yakkha kinsmen,
the Yakkhas kill her. Thus betrayal and treachery also
become the inheritances of the Sinhalas. If the Sinhalas
want to stick on to Sihala urumaya (inheritance), how could
the Tamils expect justice within a Sinhala dominated
country?
When people of such evil inheritance
accept Buddhism, it is only natural that at their level of
understanding, only a debased form of religion is accepted.
The Sinhalas claim that they preserve pure Buddhism, by
which they seem to be referring to an early form of
Buddhism. But many Sinhalas are not interested in his
teachings. Not many are interested in practicing Buddhism.
What we witness is a kind of political Buddhism trying to
promote the interests of the Buddhist people; what the
Buddhist people seem to care is in celebrating the outward
trappings of Buddhism. Many scholars consider the Buddha�s
first teaching at Sanchi, after his enlightenment at Bodh
Gaya, of the �four noble truths� as the essence of early
Buddhism.
The first noble teaching is that life is
suffering. The Buddha defines suffering very broadly to
include what are considered pleasurable activities also, as
pleasures, when there are no ends/ limits, lead to
suffering. Probably not understanding the nuances of this
truth, the Sinhala Buddhists are bent on teaching the Tamils
that life in Lanka is suffering without end. In South Asian
origin religions, it is a common belief that Death (=Yama)
and destruction come from the Southern direction. Sinhala
South Lanka has been actively bringing death and destruction
to Tamil North Lanka.
The second noble teaching of the Buddha
deals with the cause of the suffering which he ascribes to
the law of karma. Karmas come along and accumulate,due to
what the Buddhists call,�three poisons� of desire, hatred
and ignorance. When JHU monks speak and act, it is amazing
how all these �three poisons� are blended together.
Ignorance of how ethnic problems like ours are solved in
other countries, desire for Sinhala Buddhist hegemony over
the whole island and hatred of the Tamils are the hall-marks
of the JHU politics.
The third noble teaching of the Buddha
regarding nirvana/nibbana, �cessation�, also seems to have
been misunderstood. They seem to understand that killing
Tamils mean some kind of cessation of the Tamils and so this
is acceptable behavior for them. A considerable section of
the Tamils have run away and are continuing to run away to
escape the Sinhala Buddhist militancy. A second section of
the Tamils are fighting to establish a separate homeland for
the Tamils in Lanka so that they could live normal lives as
free human beings in a secure environment. But many Tamils
in Lanka continue to live in dread that they might face
death and destruction at any moment from Sinhala armed
forces and para-militaries. Of course, there are quislings
like Devananda, Anandasangary, Karuna, Rajan Hoole and some
others who hate the LTTE for different reasons. They join
the devil to crush the LTTE. They refuse to look beyond to
what happens to the Tamils, if the LTTE were defeated.
Do the Sinhalas
accept the early portion of the Mahavamsa as history? If
this is history and if this is what they are proud of, it is
very difficult to be optimistic about the future of the
country. Even if it is just myth, myths exercise lot of
influence on people who take them seriously. Some critical
studies of the Mahavamsa mindset could induce Sinhalas to
take the myth less seriously; it could also help the Tamils
and others to understand the straitjacket thinking of the
Sinhalas. |