Mad monks: The greatest threat to Myanmar's fledgeling democracy
Mad monks: The greatest threat to Myanmar's fledgeling democracy
An unlikely partnership has emerged in Myanmar between the Buddhist clergy and the military, allowing for horrific violence to develop against the Rohingya with religious cover, reports Aurangzeb Qureshi.
5 min read
, a 13-year-old Rohingya Muslim, was home with her father when a group of men broke into the family dwelling.
She was raped by 15 men as her father was forced to watch. He begged them to stop but was beaten until he died of his injuries.
Months later, Tasnim realised she became pregnant, and now lives in a refugee camp where she cares for her child and sick mother.
Stories like these aren't new. According to Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, the UN’s top human rights official, the situation in Myanmar is a In past few weeks, at least a thousand Rohingya have been killed and close to 350,000 have fled to Bangladesh as the latest military campaign against the Muslim minority group intensifies.
Some 400,000 Rohingya who had already fled their homes to live in squalid refugee camps along the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.
She was raped by 15 men as her father was forced to watch. He begged them to stop but was beaten until he died of his injuries.
Months later, Tasnim realised she became pregnant, and now lives in a refugee camp where she cares for her child and sick mother.
Stories like these aren't new. According to Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, the UN’s top human rights official, the situation in Myanmar is a In past few weeks, at least a thousand Rohingya have been killed and close to 350,000 have fled to Bangladesh as the latest military campaign against the Muslim minority group intensifies.
Some 400,000 Rohingya who had already fled their homes to live in squalid refugee camps along the Bangladesh-Myanmar border.
The Patriotic Association of Myanmar - simply referred to as Ma Ba Tha - acts as the catalyst behind the violence. Its spiritual leader and founder, the saffron-robed, baby-faced Ashwin Wirathu looks like someone who preaches peace, compassion and tolerance. Yet the charismatic 49-year-old is quick to quash such perceptions with his fiery rhetoric describing Muslims as "mad dogs", "cannibals" and "trouble-makers".
"You can't underestimate a snake just because there's only one," he said. "It's dangerous whatever it is. Muslims are just like that."
A recent by the Belgium-based International Crisis Group issued a dire warning on the current political situation in Myanmar - continued hate speech combined with nationalistic rhetoric could deteriorate a delicate political situation even further. The report recommends that the ruling government address the underlying economic and social factors that contribute to widespread support for the Ma Ba Tha.
"When the [military] junta receded and with democracy around, more voices could be heard again and people were freed from jail again - and Wirathu, who's very prominent and high-ranking, was able to voice things again," says Dr Michael Jerryson, associate professor of religious studies at Youngstown State University.
"Ma Ba Tha is a very organised, erudite group of monks and others that draw upon a sizeable amount of the population that feels the same way."
But not all its supporters in Myanmar find common ground with the Ma Ba Tha's anti-Muslim views. Its vast network of support also comes from those that see the organization as a provider of welfare, social services and education. Others see the Ma Ba Tha simply as a means to keep Buddhist traditions alive in a country governed by a secular party.
"The movement may well have a virulent nationalist, anti-Muslim element, but it also serves as a provider of welfare and social support, and thus fills a huge gap," says Francis Wade, journalist and author of Myanmar's Enemy Within: Buddhist Violence And The Making Of A Muslim Other.
"There would be also be a large cross-section of its support base that may not hold these deep prejudices towards Islam, but is anxious about the health of Buddhism in a modernising country."
Myanmar's de facto leader, the Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi knows this all too well. Her refusal to run Muslim candidates in the last election was an early indication of how she would abdicate to the monks in efforts to gain power.
After her landslide election victory in 2016, she kept in place the discriminatory passed by the last military government - laws that aim to constrain religious conversion, regulate child birth and restrict Buddhist women from marrying non-Buddhist men. Most recently, her refusal to condemn the violence and tepid acknowledgement of it has exposed her own complicity and revealed the power of Myanmar's religious class.
Although her approach may have been justifiable in the past, Jerryson believes she has gone too far. "She's done some actions that are more direct and hard to defend than previously," he says. "She's prevented aid in the form of distributing food. She's accused aid workers of helping 'terrorists'. She's not allowing people to use the word 'Rohingya'... there's things under her purview I think we have to hold her accountable for."
Wade agrees: "The difficulty in controlling Ma Ba Tha is that monks have always held a position of reverence in Myanmar society and so it's very difficult to criticise them - doing so carries both material and otherworldly consequences, hence they function with little recrimination.
"There should be more substantial action from the government in tackling hate speech in general, and this would hopefully begin to affect how freely these ultra-nationalist groups can agitate against Muslims."
"You can't underestimate a snake just because there's only one," he said. "It's dangerous whatever it is. Muslims are just like that."
A recent by the Belgium-based International Crisis Group issued a dire warning on the current political situation in Myanmar - continued hate speech combined with nationalistic rhetoric could deteriorate a delicate political situation even further. The report recommends that the ruling government address the underlying economic and social factors that contribute to widespread support for the Ma Ba Tha.
The movement may well have a virulent nationalist, anti-Muslim element, but it also serves as a provider of welfare and social support, and thus fills a huge gap |
"When the [military] junta receded and with democracy around, more voices could be heard again and people were freed from jail again - and Wirathu, who's very prominent and high-ranking, was able to voice things again," says Dr Michael Jerryson, associate professor of religious studies at Youngstown State University.
"Ma Ba Tha is a very organised, erudite group of monks and others that draw upon a sizeable amount of the population that feels the same way."
But not all its supporters in Myanmar find common ground with the Ma Ba Tha's anti-Muslim views. Its vast network of support also comes from those that see the organization as a provider of welfare, social services and education. Others see the Ma Ba Tha simply as a means to keep Buddhist traditions alive in a country governed by a secular party.
"The movement may well have a virulent nationalist, anti-Muslim element, but it also serves as a provider of welfare and social support, and thus fills a huge gap," says Francis Wade, journalist and author of Myanmar's Enemy Within: Buddhist Violence And The Making Of A Muslim Other.
"There would be also be a large cross-section of its support base that may not hold these deep prejudices towards Islam, but is anxious about the health of Buddhism in a modernising country."
Myanmar's de facto leader, the Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi knows this all too well. Her refusal to run Muslim candidates in the last election was an early indication of how she would abdicate to the monks in efforts to gain power.
She's prevented aid in the form of distributing food. She's accused aid workers of helping 'terrorists'. She's not allowing people to use the word 'Rohingya' |
After her landslide election victory in 2016, she kept in place the discriminatory passed by the last military government - laws that aim to constrain religious conversion, regulate child birth and restrict Buddhist women from marrying non-Buddhist men. Most recently, her refusal to condemn the violence and tepid acknowledgement of it has exposed her own complicity and revealed the power of Myanmar's religious class.
Although her approach may have been justifiable in the past, Jerryson believes she has gone too far. "She's done some actions that are more direct and hard to defend than previously," he says. "She's prevented aid in the form of distributing food. She's accused aid workers of helping 'terrorists'. She's not allowing people to use the word 'Rohingya'... there's things under her purview I think we have to hold her accountable for."
Wade agrees: "The difficulty in controlling Ma Ba Tha is that monks have always held a position of reverence in Myanmar society and so it's very difficult to criticise them - doing so carries both material and otherworldly consequences, hence they function with little recrimination.
"There should be more substantial action from the government in tackling hate speech in general, and this would hopefully begin to affect how freely these ultra-nationalist groups can agitate against Muslims."
At the same time, the military dimension cannot be ignored. It was only a decade ago, a conflict between the military and the monks dubbed "the Saffron revolution", led to the imprisonment of Myanmar's clergy, including Wirathu.
Ten years later, an unlikely partnership between the clergy and military has emerged - while the Ma Ba Tha whips up the populace into an existential frenzy, the military is able to execute its atrocities with religious cover.
Jamila Hanan, a UK-based human rights activist, says that there is a mutual interest at play.
"Buddhist extremism is used as a weapon by the Myanma military to carry out its political and economic agendas," she says. "By whipping up the racial hatred between ethnicities they are able to follow a divide and conquer strategy, whereby the Rakhine people in that strategically important area of Myanmar will side with the military as their protectors from the Rohingya people - who they have been taught to fear and hate."
Aurangzeb Qureshi is a freelance journalist and writer. He has written for numerous publications including Al-Jazeera English, Huffington Post Canada, Middle East Eye, CBC and Pakistan Daily Times.
His writing focuses primarily on civil rights, minority rights and the impact of energy on foreign affairs.
Ten years later, an unlikely partnership between the clergy and military has emerged - while the Ma Ba Tha whips up the populace into an existential frenzy, the military is able to execute its atrocities with religious cover.
Jamila Hanan, a UK-based human rights activist, says that there is a mutual interest at play.
"Buddhist extremism is used as a weapon by the Myanma military to carry out its political and economic agendas," she says. "By whipping up the racial hatred between ethnicities they are able to follow a divide and conquer strategy, whereby the Rakhine people in that strategically important area of Myanmar will side with the military as their protectors from the Rohingya people - who they have been taught to fear and hate."
Aurangzeb Qureshi is a freelance journalist and writer. He has written for numerous publications including Al-Jazeera English, Huffington Post Canada, Middle East Eye, CBC and Pakistan Daily Times.
His writing focuses primarily on civil rights, minority rights and the impact of energy on foreign affairs.
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