Sri Lanka's Muslims split over ideological differences

Zahina Rishad

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  • Aug 14, 2009
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    Colombo - Ramadan, the month of fasting meant to bring Muslims closer to God, is being marked in Sri Lanka by an ideological rift dividing the faithful. With the end of the Tamil separatist insurgency in May, the country's Muslims no longer face persecution from rebels who terrorized them in recent decades. But the Islamic community is now beset by internal divisions over a rivalry between two sects to define the customs and faith of 8 per cent of the country's 20 million population. Kattandkudy is a predominantly Muslim town on the eastern coast with a population of less than 50,000 where Tamil rebels massacred 147 people in a mosque in 1990 during evening prayers. Today, it has become the focus of a conflict between puritanical 'Thawheed' followers and sri Lanka's more passive, traditional Islam.
    That rivalry has also spilled over to other parts of the country, leading to violence immediately before Ramadan when two Thawheed followers were killed and 40 others were injured inside a mosque in the western coastal town of Beruwala, 40 kilometres south of Colombo. 'We want to see that Islam is practiced in the correct manner,' said Mohammed Buhari, a Thawheed follower from the eastern district of Batticaloa. 'It is clear that some of them are not following the religion in the correct manner.' 'We have no ulterior motives, but only want to make sure that the religion is not distorted,' he said According to Muslim scholars, Thawheed members follow the Wahabi school, named after Muhammed ibn Abd al-Wahab, who lived in the 1700s and is described as the first modern Islamic fundamentalist. Wahabism's rapid growth in Sri Lanka began in the 1970s when Saudi Arabian charities started funding madrasa religious schools and mosques mainly in the eastern part of the country, one of the hotbeds of Tamil rebel activity. The emergence of the Thawheed group is causing concern not only among moderate Muslims but also for the Sri Lankan government. Recently, a South India-based religious leader, Kovai Ayoob, was ordered to leave the country after the Thawheed group invited him to preach because more traditional Muslims lodged a complaint that he could create disharmony. But the bigger concern to the government has come from allegations that some of the Thawheed group members have armed themselves.


    The government in July offered an amnesty for Muslim militants to surrender their weapons, but it drew a poor response. The traditional followers accused the Thawheed group of intimidating their members as well as carrying out attacks, which the sect denies. 'The allegations that our groups are armed are baseless as it has not been proved that our members have created any violence,' said Moulavi MC Zahran, the propaganda secretary of the Thawheed group in Kattankudy. But Deputy Inspector General of Police Edison Gunatillake said a moderate cleric was allegedly abducted by the Thawheed group and subsequently released, prompting the police to question members of the sect. One of the allegations against the Thawheed group is that it is foreign-funded, partly from Saudi Arabia. A Riyaz Sally, a trustee of a Colombo mosque, voiced concern about the Thawheed group. 'They are widening the gap between the Muslim community,' Sally said.


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    http://www.monstersandcritics.com/n...ms-split-over-ideological-differences-Feature
     
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