Total Pageviews

Sunday, June 22, 2014

The making of a religion

Prologue
In the aftermath of the recent events in Aluthgama and Beruwala, there are those who wonder how such a situation could have arisen in the normally peace loving and generally well educated Sri Lankan community.  I for one, am not surprised. Not when otherwise rational thinking people take side with the argument that these events were the response of the Buddhist community faced with the threat of the spread of Islam. Not even when people who ought to know better suggest that it is the duty of a true Buddhist to suppress such movements to ensure the survival of Buddhism. Take this video for example, which have been shared enthusiastically by many as an attempt to explain the root cause of what happened.



On the contrary to all those who blame the religious extremists, I blame the concept of religion that has paved the way for extremists.  I find the fault in the very idea of a religion, which is, sadly, what Buddhism has become.

The making of a religion

A religion and a philosophy are fundamentally different. A religion is a collection of beliefs imposed on what could have otherwise been a rational mind. A philosophy does not entertain believers. It presents a collection of facts about a certain aspect of life and asserts a conclusion based on those facts. Those who study a philosophy have the freedom to either accept or reject that conclusion, employing logic and common sense to analyse the said facts. The longevity of a philosophy is based on how its conclusions stand against the test of reason, not how many believers it has.

A philosophy can be easily converted to a religion by replacing facts by beliefs and logic by fear. By replacing “I do not steal from others because I do not like being robbed” by “I do not steal because I believe that stealing is a sin and all sinners go to hell”. This fear, of hell or otherwise, is an essential ingredient of all religions. It is far easier to make someone fear the idea of stealing than to make them understand the reasons to prevent from stealing.

Harmless as it may appear at first sight, these beliefs and the associated fear is the first step in a process that may easily be led towards “I believe those who do not believe in my beliefs are sinners” to “My beliefs are superior so the world should only consists of those who believe the same”. I specifically said “led towards” because it does take leading. A philosophy can become a religion over thousands of years of small, seemingly innocuous changes that converts facts into beliefs. However, this last step of employing an indoctrinated mind to harm another human being in the name of religion does require cunning and self-centered leaders.

Therein lies the problem of religion. What does it take to be a religious or philosophical  leader? To become an authority in a philosophy requires a deep understanding of the said philosophy. To be accepted as a leading authority in a philosophy is to be acknowledged by ones’ peers as a person who has contributed to the development (not spreading) of the philosophy. But to become a religious leader, one only has to wear the right cloths and be capable of exploiting the weaknesses of human mind. Specifically, one only has to be capable of exploiting minds that were, from a very young age, trained to accept that religions transcend reason. That religious beliefs cannot be questioned. For someone with the right skills, it is not difficult to guide such a well trained collection of minds towards goals that would only further his or her survival, but not those of the minions. Religions are far more dangerous weapons than any nuclear bomb that was or will be ever made.

In that light, let me attempt to analyse the recent events in Sri Lanka. Richard Dawkins, a famous critique of religious beliefs and a man who is widely considered as the successor to Charles Darwin, in his book “God Delusion”, says that Buddhism stands apart from the religions of the 21st century as it is more a “way of life” than a religion. He mentions this while decimating the three most popular religions contemporary to Buddhism; Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Many Buddhists take pride in the fact that Buddhism is (or was) a philosophy and not a religion. This concept baffles many of my Iranian friends who ask me about “the fundemental belief” of Buddhism. Sadly, after confusing them by talking about how Buddhism is a philosophy, I then have to go on to confuse them even more by saying that the version of Buddhism practiced in Sri Lanka is indeed a religion and not a philosophy. Hundreds of years of evolution has resulted in a version of Buddhism that, in the one aspect that set it apart from the religions, is nothing but another pea in the pie.

However -  and perhaps because it was originally a philosophy - until recently, Buddhism the religion remained untarnished by religious wars that have so often plagued other religions. But when the time is ripe, leaders capable of exploiting the minions so created begin to emerge. They preach that Buddhism needs to be protected from the extreme elements of other religions. It is exactly this that makes Buddhism a religion - a belief that need to be protected from other beliefs - and not a philosophy based on facts and reason. Killing others to ensure the survival of my religion makes me no different from the so called “Jihad terrorists” who kill in the name of their god.

Sadly, this trivial yet momentous fact is lost in the minds of those who have been, from a young age, trained to not to question the beliefs that were imparted on them in the guise of a religion. Be it the layperson, the blue color worker or the well educated white color worker or the university graduate specifically trained to rational thinking, our minds are trained to shut down the rational thinking part of the brain when religion is involved. Instead, we rely on emotions, feelings that can be easily misguided by those who are in it not for our well being, but to further their own selfish goals.

We should not be surprised that such religious leaders have emerged in Sri Lanka to reap the rewards of religious indoctrination. It is for the above reasons that we should neither be surprised by the fact a vast majority of Sri Lankans are receptive to such manipulations by those who claim to be the saviors of religions. 

Let me reiterate. Religions are weapons, memes lurking in the depths of minds of its believers, waiting to be triggered by those who know the art.