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Between Hammer and Anvil: Sri Lanka's Muslims
Adam's peak, a symmetrically conical mountain set in
the gorgeous hill country of southern Sri Lanka, is sacred to all of
the island's main faiths. There is a strange indentation set in the
living rock of the summit. To the majority Sinhalese Buddhists (69%
of the total population) it is the footprint of the Buddha Gautama.
The Tamil Hindus (21%) know better - it is, of course, the sacred
footprint of the god Shiva. Then again, the island's Muslims (7%)
insist, it is the footprint left by Adam when, cast out of the
Garden of Eden by a wrathful god, he fell to earth in the place
nearest to that celestial grove in terms of beauty, fertility and
climate - Sri Lanka.
In happier times Buddhist, Hindu and Muslim -
together with the island's Catholic Christians, who believe the
footprint to be that of St Thomas - were content to disagree
amicably, sharing the pilgrimage season between December and April
each year, when every night thousands of people climb the seemingly
endless stairs to the 2,224 metre summit and await the sunrise.
As the whole world knows, those days of
inter-racial and inter-denominational harmony are long gone - though
not at Adam's Peak, secure in the government-dominated Sinhala
heartland. Rather the troubles are at the other end of the island,
where for twenty years, ever since the simmering hostility between
Buddhist Sinhalese and Tamil Hindu exploded into open warfare, the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have pursued their struggle
for a separate Tamil state.
As the third, and smallest, of the island's
racial-religious communities, the Sri Lankan Muslims - generally if
confusingly known as "Moors" - have become the forgotten losers in
this vicious struggle. The Tamils, evidently misclassified by the
British during their long hegemony in South Asia as a "non-martial
race", have fought with an extraordinary fanaticism under the cold
command of the LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakharan. From the
earliest days of the war they did not hesitate to employ "ethnic
cleansing" - that late 20th century euphemism for genocide - against
Sinhalese villagers living in the north. Subsequently, and with the
same ruthlessness, the same tactic has been used against Muslims.
Rainer Krack / CPA
Mosque, Haputale.
To understand why this should be so, it is
necessary to examine the anomalous situation of the Sri Lankan Moors
- Tamil speakers who yet, for the most part, support the
Sinhalese-dominated government of Chandrika Kumaratunga.
There have been Muslims in Sri Lanka for well over
a thousand years. Trading dhows plied the waters between the Middle
East and the island known to Arab sailors - like the legendary
Sinbad - as Serendib even in pre-Islamic times. The first Muslim
merchants and sailors may have landed on its shores during the
Prophrt Muhammad's life time. By the 10th century this predominantly
Arab community had grown influential enough to control the trade of
the south-western ports, whilst the Sinhalese kings generally
employed Muslim ministers to direct the state's commercial affairs.
In 1157 the king of the neighbouring Maldive Islands was converted
to Islam, and in 1238 an embassy to Egypt sent by King Bhuvaneka
Bahu I was headed by Sri Lankan Muslims.
From about 1350 onwards the predominantly Arab
strain in Sri Lankan Islam began to change as Tamil Muslims from
neighbouring South India moved to the island in increasing numbers.
By the late 15th century, when Portuguese vessels first arrived in
the Indian Ocean, Sri Lanka's Muslims were truly indigenous to the
island, representing a mixture of Sinhalese, Arab and Tamil blood,
and speaking Tamil with Arabic overtones, sometimes known as
"Tamil-Arabic". None of this made any difference to the
newly-arrived Portuguese, for whom all Muslims were "Moors" - the
name given to their traditional enemies in Morocco and southern
Spain. The name Moro - employed as a derogatory designation
by the Portuguese - stuck, and is today "worn with pride" by Sri
Lankan Muslims, in much the same way as the "Moros" of the southern
Philippines.
In Sri Lanka, as everywhere they went, the
Portuguese made a special point of persecuting the Muslims. As a
consequence, many fled the western littoral which had passed under
Portuguese control, and settled in the north and east of the island
where their descendants live to the present day. A hundred years
later, in 1656, when the Dutch replaced the Portuguese, a third (and
final) element was added to the island's Muslim population - the
Malay. Malay sailors had been visiting Sri Lanka for centuries using
long-distance outrigger canoes; now, with the arrival of the Dutch,
many more were brought from Java to serve their Dutch colonial
rulers in Sri Lanka. In time they were absorbed into the island's
ethnically diverse Muslim community, though even today many Sri
Lankan Muslims identifying themselves as "Malays" rather than
"Moors" can be found living in Western Province, and especially in
Colombo.
Today Sri Lanka's Muslims live scattered
throughout the island, from Galle in the south to the
Tamil-dominated Jaffna peninsula in the north. Generally they are
involved in commerce, from running local dry goods stores to
dominating the wealthy gem business associated with Ratnapura -
"Jewel City" and much of the capital's import-export business. In
the disputed north and east of the country, where the LTTE are
currently battling the Sri Lankan armed forces, many Muslims are
farmers or fishermen, living in small villages far from the
protection of government forces. It is these people - the poorest of
the island's "Moors", descendants of the orginal refugees displaced
by the Portuguese four hundred years ago - that are now caught up in
the struggle for "Tamil Eelam".
Rainer Krack / CPA
Muslim school near Nurelia.
Most Moors speak Tamil as their first language,
regarding Sinhalese and English as languages of commerce to be used
in their business dealings. Despite this linguistic affinity they do
not consider themselves Tamil, however, and have precious little
sympathy for the Tamil Tigers' cause. Rather they tend to support
the government, albeit passively, wishing simply to pursue their
business interests with the full freedom of religion they have long
been accustomed too. Unfortunately, this is no longer possible. In
those areas contested by the LTTE with a substantial Muslim
population - for example, Northern Province's Vavuniya District, and
Eastern Province's Tricomalee and Batticaloa Districts - they are
under serious pressure.
Initially, it seems, the Tamil separatists hoped
to enlist the Tamil-speaking Moors in their struggle for an
independent Tamil state encompassing all of Northern and Eastern
Provinces. When the Moors remained aloof - and even indicated
support for the government position - they became identified as
enemies. Worse than that, as Tamil-speakers there seemed, to Tiger
minds at least, an element of treason in their lack of support.
Subsequently, as the LTTE struggle for secession developed into open
warfare with the government in Colombo, Prabhakharan, showing
characteristic ruthlessness, targeted the Moors for "ethnic
cleansing" - that is, physical expulsion or elimination - from the
lands sought by the Tigers as a Tamil homeland.
The Tigers first began to attack the Moors on a
systematic basis over a decade ago. In August, 1990, in two separate
incidents, more than 230 Muslims were massacred at prayer at towns
near Pulmoddai, in the north-east of the island. At the same time
Prabhakharan gave notice that the entire Muslim population of
Northern Province, including the then rebel-held capital of Jaffna,
should leave contested areas forthwith or face being killed. An
estimated one hundred thousand people were affected by this threat,
many of who have since fled to government-controlled areas in the
centre and south of the island. Tens of thousands were made
destitute, the majority of whom still eke out a living in refugee
camps. Following this incident, Muslim fishermen became a favourite
target of LTTE maritime patrols, and Muslim businessmen a preferred
target for abduction and ransom.
Muslim leaders in the north and east have
responded by voicing their own claims for autonomy in the region,
making it clear that - should the LTTE reach an agreement with
Colombo on autonomous status - they would seek to opt out from Tamil
control. Prabhakharan's response has been as vigorous and ruthless
as ever. If the Muslims won't accept Tamil rule, they must be
expelled from Northern Province and Eastern Province en masse.
Caught in the intricate and seemingly endless web
of violence between Tamil Hindu and Sinhalese Buddhist, Sri Lanka's
Muslims are increasingly desperate, unsure which way to turn, and
whom to trust. Forgotten victims of a particularly vicious war, they
are trapped between hammer and anvil, a long way indeed from the
Garden of Eden.
Text copyright © Andrew Forbes / CPA 2001.
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