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The content and opinions expressed in this blog are mine. They do not represent the US Government or US Peace Corps - Jud Dolphin

Sunday, June 2

Curiousity - Buddha, Violence & Fanaticism

Travel can be more than pictures and places. Often, it can trigger curiosity.

What happened here? 
Why is this place important. 
What’s the context - political, social, etc? 
How does this history and place connect with us?

Travels through Sri Lanka is leading me into deeper understandings. I especially want to know more about Buddhism and its role in Sri Lankan history.

First stop is Buduruwagala Temple. The name Buduruwagala is derived from the words for Buddha ( Budu) image ( ruva) and stones ( gala).


One thousand years ago, devotees of the Mahayana school of Buddhism carved a colossal image of Buddha into a natural stone wall. Imagine the tools and engineering it took. It’s not primitive.

To get there, we leave a two lane highway and take a scenic side lane. Our driver navigates ruts and curves. As it becomes more narrow, it also becomes more beautiful.





There’s a small lake and a grassy Stupa or burial mound where sacred relics are often deposited. 


These places have drawn pilgrims for more than 1000 years to meditate on the human condition. 

Through a grove of teak wood trees, we catch our first glimpse of the Buddha. 

It stands 51 feet high. It’s been carved into the rock face. Remnants of colored stucco reveal a once colorful persona.  Other figures are flanking the Buddha on the left and right. They are believed to be important for Buddhist Mahayana worship.

Buddha welcomes al
Notice the fingers pressed into the palms. It’s a gesture of welcome beckoning us to come to the Buddha. 

But please read the sign. It requests visitors to be respectful.



No pictures taken with backs to the Buddha. 

The Buddha welcomes everyone – face to face.

Temple complex with the gold roof of the central building
Onward to Kandy. 

It’s the center of Buddhism in Sri Lanka and a most important pilgrimage site for the relic of the Sacred Tooth of the Buddha.

Gautama Buddha is said to have died around 543 BCE. From the ashes of his burial pyre, followers vied for relics including a tooth.

According to tradition this one tooth, enduring over thousands of years of travel, eventually came to Kandy, Sri Lanka. It’s become not only an object of religious veneration, but also a symbol of governmental authority.

Whoever has the “tooth” has power. It’s a blending of religion with government. While modern Sri Lanka confirms freedom of religion in its Constitution, Buddhism is given special status as State Religion.

We go towards the sacred place. It gleams in the morning sun. Vendors sell floral arrangements that will become offerings.



Inside, drummers announce a time of worship. 

Overhead gold ceilings gleam. Ornamentation rivals western cathedrals. 

Visitors crowd the Main Hall viewing images on the walls. 



Buddha presides in the Main Hall
Wall of Waves
As we leave, I notice a decorative wall. It’s pristine white with stylized holes to hold oil lamps. Delicate and beautiful, it’s known as the Wall of Waves.

Sadly in 1998, I learn that a truck bomb exploded at this exact sight. 

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) claimed responsibility. This Hindu group had been fighting a bloody 17 year civil war with the mostly Buddhist Government.

VIOLENCE
According to Wikipedia:
"On 25 January 1998, the LTTE exploded a massive truck bomb inside the Temple of the Tooth premises.    Three suicide LTTE Black Tigers drove an explosive laden truck along the King's street (Raja Veediya), firing at soldiers manning road blocks around the place, crashed through the entrance and detonated the bomb around 6:10 am, local time. Two explosions were heard. The truck contained 300–400 kg of high explosives. 16 people, including the 3 attackers and a 2-year old infant were killed in the incident.


Hindu Shrine
As we turn towards home, we stop at a Hindu roadside shrine. It’s festooned with golden figures. I don't know much about Hinduism and vow to learn more.  

I see some families enjoying the tranquil surroundings. I try to take a couple of non-intrusive pictures.

Seeing this Hindu shrine so close to Kandy, the Buddhist Center,  gets me to thinking...

Maybe it's possible for people of different religions and walks of life to live in harmony.  Tolerance could replace endless violence.   

After-all, fanaticism is always toxic even if presented in religious or ideological garb.  Hatred begets violence begets retribution begets more hatred begets more violence and so forth.

Mohandas Gandhi is quoted as saying, “An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind." There must be a better way.


In 1966 Martin Luther King wrote, "Only a refusal to hate or kill can put an end to the chain of violence in the world and lead us toward a community where men can live together without fear. 

"Our goal is to create a beloved community and this will require a qualitative change in our souls as well as a quantitative change in our lives."  

 Non-violence: The Only Road to Freedom

In a few days, I'm off to Hanoi, Vietnam. 

As a young man, I remember chanting on the National Mall in Washington, DC, "All we are saying is give peace a chance" as I protested the Vietnamese War.   

Now we are at peace with Vietnam though we are still capitalists and they are still communist. Why did we fight for so many years?  

Curiosity leads the way...