Pandemic and Prelates

Life in Lockdown Land – 8

Tuesday, 28 April 2020 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa meeting the Maha Sangha on 24 Friday

 

 

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has met the Maha Sangha on 24 April and explained measures taken by the Government to control the spread of COVID-19. 

The official communique issued by the Presidential Secretariat is reproduced in the box. 

It calls attention to the following. 

  • The country must face the pandemic with courage. 
  • Buddhists of the land must observe the religiously hallowed, culturally significant Vesak day by mainly using the electronic media. 
  • The President would be remembered as a leader who saved the country twice. 
  • The President would regularly huddle with and seek the advice of the Maha Sangha on the third Friday of every month. 

The President had stressed the “necessity of a strong Parliament to fulfil the aspirations of the people” who had given him a “landslide victory”. He had said that he had no Constitutional powers to reconvene the old Parliament. It was not essential to convene the new Parliament. 

The Maha Sangha had in one unanimous voice opined that the “country should not be put in jeopardy by reconvening the old Parliament.” One and all, the assembled Maha Sangha had endorsed his decision “not to convene the dissolved Legislature”.

I can see the logic of the representatives of the Maha Sangha who agreed with the President on the futility of reconvening the old Parliament. 

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is not a politician. He is a motivational leader. His mandate of 16 November 2019 makes him the messenger of the constituency that was represented by the Maha Sangha who attended the presidential conclave on Friday.  

Essence of leadership is the impact a person has on the thinking and behaviour of others. The President had his audience in thrall. 

From the oft-repeated exhortations of prelates such as Venerable Medagoda Abyatissa Thero, Venerable Wendaruwe Upali Thero and Venerable Ellawawela Medhananda Thero, we can confidently surmise that each of them has their own precise contours of their respective ‘Nirvanas’. 

There is a tendency amongst some of us who read and study Buddhism in English to emphasise on the rational and humanistic qualities of Buddhism. Indeed, the Buddha taught us, that the three basic realities of the universe are that everything is constantly changing, nothing has any enduring essence, and nothing is completely satisfying.  

Suffering emerged, because people failed to appreciate the conundrum of existence. The one big question that Buddha tried to address was what was the meaning of life? Then he proceeded to ask how we could get out of suffering?’

But on the other hand, if you really know the truth about yourself and about the world, there is nothing that will prevent you from discovering your own idea of ‘nirvana’. 

The Buddha focused on the bad life on earth. He sought to escape it. But if these venerable prelates have also found ways and means for a good life here and now, who am I to question such eminent wisdom?

Suffering without end in a futile round of births and rebirths was the fate of mortals.  But, if you are in the game of thrones, mortality hardly crosses your mind. It all depends on where you look for ‘nirvana’.  

The Opposition wants the Parliament convened. The President says he cannot. The pandemic is not concerned with either. 

When we speak of great leaders we tend to speak in terms of GDP. That is a mistake. 

As Kishore Mahbubani points out in a guest column in the last issue of the Economist, great leaders such as Deng Xiaoping and Lee Kwan Yew planted the seeds of knowledge and the idea of internationalism and good order in their societies. The people of those Asian nations are not seduced by profound platitudes. They have adapted strategies based on pure sciences and epidemiological modelling to arrive at policy responses to COVID-19. 

Those nations are driven by a sense of pragmatism and a willingness to learn from others and adopt best practices that work irrespective of their origin and creators.  

There are no shortcuts out of a pandemic. It will not end for anybody until it ends for everybody.

The virus will remain with us until we develop a vaccine or find an effective cure to treat the infected. The other remedy is to allow it to progress through the population killing some and making those who survive to develop immunity. Neither can be done before a deadline. 

The President lost no time in calling out the cavalry. My daughter who lives next door begins her lockdown day with praise for the President who took timely action. In this neighbourhood I am in the unpatriotic minority. 

The President with his military mind reacted instinctively. Many other countries did the same because it happens to be the logical thing to do. One country after other overwhelmed by the magnitude of the plague called in the armed forces to help in responding to the pandemic. 

The enormity of the task, the implications of life and death struggles make fine materiel for blurb writers to project narratives of war and battle. The crisis no doubt called for extraordinary measures, war like efforts, pitched battle type commitment and as the unfortunate events in the Navy camp show the higher call for sacrifice. 

This is not unprecedented. Whenever a major disaster strikes, the armed forces become the first choice of emergency response.

We did it with common consent and not by enacting legislation.  That does not mean that governance can dispense with process. That is an invitation to chaos and worse – corruption. 

Most other countries with functioning legislatures have rushed through laws that provide cover for armed forces to support civilian authorities in carrying out non-military functions on larger scales with precision and order.

But that is what the Army is for. They have performed what is expected of them. As a part of the nation’s defence arm, they are in a state of constant alert. 

In contact tracing, Army intelligence would have performed far better than their civilian counterparts. But the depiction of the intelligence operatives as relentless crusaders in search of villains infected with the virus was a colossal blunder. 

The debacle at Bandaranayake Mawatha and its environs is a classic example of propaganda overkill. Infected are traced to cure them, rehabilitate them and prevent the spread.  By making the operation of contact tracing into some type of a cloak and dagger game, we unwittingly erected a barricade between good citizens and errant citizens. 

We are fighting a pandemic. It is a global catastrophe. To beat or come close to beating the coronavirus we must understand how it spreads stealthily, silently through asymptomatic carriers. It is about modern science. It calls for enlightened minds that can withstand the challenge. Minds petrified in parochial prejudice is not the solution. 

While must arrest the virus, we must also prepare ourselves to carve our niche in the new post ‘COVID-19’ world order. The pandemic has irretrievably demolished the fragile order of paper money and sovereign debt underpinned by sovereign folly and sovereign plunder of the poor. The geopolitical contours of the emerging world order will have no place for insular nationalism.


 

No decision should be taken outside the Constitution, emphasise Maha Sangha

  • Country should learn to be courageous during a disaster
  • Measures to celebrate Vesak using electronic media
  • Govt. requested to assist to develop unutilised lands belonging to temples
  • Maha Sangha says President will be remembered as a leader who saved the country twice
  • President invites Maha Sangha for a meeting on third Friday of every month

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa enlightened the Maha Sangha on the measures taken by the Government to control the spread of COVID-19 and their progress during a meeting held at the Presidential Secretariat on Friday.

The President explained about the control of the spread, quarantine process, reliefs granted to people and future measures to revive the national economy.

The support rendered by every segment of the society including health, security and the entire State mechanism in the face of current challenges is enormous, President said.

The President stressing the necessity of a strong Parliament to fulfil the aspirations of the people bestowed on him with the landslide victory said that there are no Constitutional powers to reconvene the old Parliament but to convene a new one.

The President said that he expected to meet the Maha Sangha regularly on the third Friday of every month and expressed his anticipation of blessings and guidance of Maha Sangha as he stated in front of Ruwanweli Seya and during the assumption of office.

Nayaka Theros of all three Chapters said that they approved of the conduct of the President and the Government.

Stating that the country should not be put in jeopardy by reconvening the old Parliament the Maha Sangha unanimously agreed with the decision not to convene the dissolved Legislature.

Ven. Niyangoda Vijithasiri Thero said the previous Parliament should take the responsibility for the current financial crisis in the country.

Ven. Thrikunamale Ananda Thero, the Maha Nayaka of the Amarapura Sri Dharmarakshitha Chapter said that when looking at the initiatives taken by the President to prevent the spread of coronavirus as well as for the future, it was clear that there was a new vision being implemented in the country.

Ven. Prof. Medagoda Abayathissa Thero was of the view that the measures implemented by the President to prevent the spread of the coronavirus could be an example for other countries in the world. The young generation of the country and other various groups have invented many new products. 

“This is a golden opportunity for a better future,” the Thero further said. He also said that the Maha Sangha of the country would always support the steps being taken by the President.

Ven. Prof. Indugare Dhammarathana Thero presented a set of proposals comprising 12 points to make the Motherland secure.

Ven. Dr. Diviyagala Yasassi Thero and Ven. Prof. TubulleSeelakkanada Thero pointed out the importance of creating an environment to celebrate the Vesak festival using electronic media while remaining at homes. It was decided to appoint a committee in this regard.

Maha Nayaka of the Asgiriya Chapter Most Ven. Wendaruwe Upali Thero said that the steps taken by the President to feed the hungry including the beggars were commendable.

The Maha Nayaka Theros and Anu Nayaka Theros representing the Tri-Nikayas and Maha Sangha participated in this meeting. 

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