Lawi Weng
Rangoon: Leading Buddhist monks of the nationalist 969 movement said they have been holding sermons in several townships in northern Arakan State, which has been wracked by bloody violence between Arakanese Buddhists and the Rohingya Muslim minority.
Rangoon: Leading Buddhist monks of the nationalist 969 movement said they have been holding sermons in several townships in northern Arakan State, which has been wracked by bloody violence between Arakanese Buddhists and the Rohingya Muslim minority.
The activities raise
concerns that the monks, who have been accused spreading hate speech against
Islam, will inflame tensions and cause new outbreaks of anti-Muslim violence in
the volatile state.
Myanan Sayadaw U Thaddhamma
said he and six monks from the Mon State capital Moulmein arrived in Arakan
State in mid-December and have since visited Arakanese Buddhist communities to
give Dhamma sermons—talks that are supposed to explain Buddhist teachings.
“The main intention of our
talks is that we want to share a religious experience with our Buddhist people.
We also wanted to show our sympathy to the people who are suffering and we will
tell them that the [Burmese] heartland people did not abandon them,” U
Thaddhamma told The Irrawaddy in a phone call.
“We recognize that Rakhine
[Arakan] people and monks protected their state and religion very well. This is
why we went to go and meet people from town to town,” he said. U Thaddhama
claimed that Arakan State, on Burma’s border with Muslim-majority Bangladesh, was
the “Western Gate” that is being “protected” by Arakanese Buddhists.
U Thaddhamma said his monks
had visited Thandwe and Myebon townships and were currently holding three days
of talks in Sittwe, adding that they also planned to visit Buddhist communities
in the mostly Muslim townships of Buthidaung and Maungdaw.
The 969 movement, led by the
Mandalay-based monk U Wirathu, has become extremely controversial in the past
year after it began a nationwide campaign that claims that Burma’s Muslim are
threatening the Buddhist majority.
The monks, who are deeply
revered in Burma, have called on Buddhists to shun Muslim communities and buy
only goods from Buddhist-owned shops. The sermons are considered hate speech
and have been linked to outbreaks of Buddhist mob violence against Muslim
communities throughout Burma.
Since 2012, such violence
has left more than 200 people dead and displaced about 150,000 people, most of
them Muslim. Northern Arakan State has been the worst-affected after
long-standing tensions between Arakanese Buddhists and the Rohingya Muslim
minority exploded and mob attacks led to the death of 192 people in June and
October last year.
The most recent outbreak of
deadly inter-communal violence occurred in Thandwe Township in October and the
Buddist mob attacks there were preceded by sermons organized by the 969
movement.
U Thaddhamma denied the
movement’s activities in the region would contribute to rising tensions, adding
that local authorities had allowed the monks to travel and spread their
message.
“We did not hold talks to
create any problem,” he said, before claiming that the Muslims had initiated
the inter-communal violence in Burma in the past year. “They were first people
who started the violence. Then, when they were suffered, they blamed our 969
monks,” he said.
Arakan State spokesperson
Win Myaing said the authorities saw no problem with the 969 events planned in
their volatile region. “It is a normal Dhamma talk. The people here do it
yearly. There will be no problem because they did not hold talks in the Muslim
community,” he said.
Tens of thousands of
displaced Rohingyas languish in poorly-run camps and tensions between the
communities in Arakan State remain high. The central government and state
authorities have been accused of siding with the Buddhist communities in the
conflict and are said to have done little to promote inter-communal harmony and
dialogue.
The government denies the
roughly 800,000 Rohingyas citizenship and claims that the minority in northern
Arakan are “Bengalis” who entered the country illegally from neighboring
Bangladesh.
Aung Win, a Rohingya human
rights activist and community leader in Sittwe, said he did not oppose the
holding of Buddhist ceremonies, but expressed concern over the fact that 969
monks were spreading their message throughout the strife-torn state.
“They have the right to hold
talks. But, it is better not to insult the other religion when they are
speaking,” he said. “These monks speak about how [Buddhists] should not accept
Bengali people and that Islam is organizing a migration of Muslims into Arakan
State.”
“We mostly need interfaith
dialogue here. This is very important. But, I do not see it,” Aung Win said.
Source: The Irrawaddy Magazine
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