The Problem with Karma: Notes from
the Conflict in Sri Lanka
By Amarnath Amarasingham
Over the past month, there has been some speculation among members of the
global Tamil community on whether Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa
visited
Texas
to obtain cancer treatment in secret. The story in itself is not particularly
interesting, but it does have relevance for the post-conflict situation in
Sri Lanka. Many
reacted to the news not with sadness, but with a sense that cosmic justice was
being meted out. Some argued that Rajapaksa, responsible for mass human rights
violations during the final months of the Sri Lankan civil war, was now getting
his just desserts. Although many nationalist Tamils profess to be atheist or
secular, the reaction to the news was always framed in Hindu and Buddhist
notions of karma, popularly defined in the West as "what goes around comes
around."
For Sinhala soldiers as well, the notion of karma was ever-present
throughout the war with the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE),
which came to a bloody conclusion in May 2009. As Daniel Kent's recent research
makes clear,
Buddhist monks blessed Sri Lankan soldiers before they went
out for training, preached at their funerals, and counseled soldiers and
their families about the conduct of war and its justification.
For many years, scholarship on Buddhism, and Eastern religious traditions
generally, was often guided by a crude assumption that Western religions held a
monopoly on violence, while the East was largely peaceable. Over the last
several years, research into conflict in Buddhist societies has forced scholars
to rethink our assumptions. According to
Kent's
research in
Sri Lanka,
for example, there is real debate within the Sri Lankan army about notions of
karma and intention in the killing of enemy soldiers. While there are many
different aspects to the discussion, I focus here on one important question:
whether religion, particularly discussions of karma and intention, restrict
genuine reconciliation between Sinhala and Tamil communities in post-conflict
Sri Lanka. I
rely heavily on
Kent's
research on the Sri Lankan army, but much of what follows can likely be applied
to the Tamil community as well.
Karma may complicate moves toward reconciliation in
Sri Lanka,
firstly, by assigning causal explanations to events that are largely
inexplicable.
Kent recalls
interviewing a Sri Lankan Corporal, named Specs, at Panagoda army camp near
Colombo, who told the
story of narrowly escaping a blast from an improvised explosive device. His
friend, who was not so lucky, was blinded and had both of his hands blown off.
For Specs, his survival is explained with reference to karma. "That sort
of thing must occur as the result of merit," he says, "one becomes
disabled like this because of some sort of negative karma, but one's life is
saved because one has done some sort of merit. That is what we think. It must
be that. It is the way of karma." Not only do karmic explanations bring a
spiritual rationalization to bear on worldly events, but these justifications
often tend to be self-serving. In other words: I survived because I am good.
Perhaps more important for our present purposes is the way in which karma is
linked with intention.
Kent
interviewed one monk, the Venerable Pilassi Vimaladhajja, who pointed out that
negative karma does not accrue when an enemy is killed. "Vimaladhajja is
not giving soldiers a blank check to kill whomever they wish while fighting the
enemy," writes
Kent,
"He stresses that if a soldier has the intention to kill, a negative karma
occurs. If a soldier's intention is to fight the enemy in order to protect the
country and religion, however, their actions do not produce negative consequences."
As
Kent
observes, those who hold this belief look at killing as secondary with the
primary intention being the protection of the country.
As with the example above, however, it is assumed that karma, as a cosmic
force, is supremely capable of discovering one's underlying intentions.
Depending on how the soldier's life subsequently turns out, his ideas of karma
and intention may have to be re-evaluated. As one soldier told
Kent:
"Honestly it is possible to rape and pillage during war without being caught.
However, if you do that, nothing will ever go right for you ... there was one
incident when we were in Trinco ... the Tamils had cultivated a field and left
it. Our guys went and harvested the rice. They harvested the rice, sold it and
took the money ... there were 21 guys who did that. All 21 of them were killed
on the same day at the same time."
Such faith that karma will mete out punishment with mathematical certainty
may work against the potential for remorse, regret or reconciliation. The very fact
that some soldiers are still alive and living a life of health, wealth and
happiness, is, with profound circular logic, seen as evidence of just conduct
during war. This, in essence, is the problem with karma.
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