Arugam Bay is not Gaza: a reply to Tisaranee Gunasekara

Tuesday, 19 November 2024 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Israeli tourists holidaying in southern Sri Lanka – and a somewhat pre-modern group catering to their religious needs – cannot and should not be held responsible for potential terror attacks on them stemming from Israel’s continuing war in Gaza and Lebanon

Gunasekara suggests that the ‘threat’ from the Arugam Bay Chabad stems from the wider movement’s extremist political ideology, as evidenced (by implication) in Israeli soldiers recently establishing a similar prayer house in Beit Hanoun, Gaza. And while I agree with her that any right-wing, ‘Greater Israel’-directed ideology poses a potentially serious political problem wherever it exists, I’m not convinced that is what’s at stake with the Arugam Bay Chabad

 

By Mark Salter

Tisaranee Gunasekara’s usually excellent writings are informed by a strong moral compass. In her recent examination of the Arugam Bay controversy (Daily FT, 6 Nov. 2024 –https://www.ft.lk/columns/Chabad-House-in-Arugam-Bay-Bringing-Gaza-home/4-768877) however, that compass wobbles to the point of fracture.

Some preliminaries. Her account of the often gruesome atrocities meted out by the Israeli IDF to civilians in Gaza, and now Lebanon, is both accurate and sobering. And in this context it’s also good to see that she highlights opposition to the Israeli war both from within Israel itself, the Jewish American community – and, as she could have added, global Jewry. Thus, opposition to the war is not the issue in focus here. Rather, the key questions raised by her article relate solidly to Sri Lanka-directed realities and concerns.

Gunasekara argues that the Chabad House established in Arugam Bay some while back should simply be closed down, thereby (I infer from her article) simultaneously removing both a terrorist threat for, and what she views as a moral stain on the country. 

Perspective

First a little perspective. As she says, the Chabad movement’s Hasidic origins are in 18th century Russia, and later Poland. What she glides over here, however, is the fact that today, Chabad houses of prayer exist in over 100 countries and cities around the world – Colombo included, a fact she curiously fails to mention. I say ‘curiously’ because if you’re looking for evidence of a Chabad centre’s local impact, the one in Colombo is a good example. It is well attended for services by Jews from all over the world – as I can attest personally – most here on holiday but many resident, Sri Lankan converts to Judaism included. Discernible impact on life in its city centre surroundings? Close to zero.

Yes, discrete exterior security is there to protect visitors – something that bitter experience has taught Jews to ensure. But there’s absolutely no suggestion of a place that does anything to threaten or provoke anything or anyone. And in a similar vein, I don’t think it would be naïve to suggest that in principle, similar considerations apply to the Arugam Bay Chabad. 

Like many national groups on holiday Israelis can be a parochial bunch. For Brits abroad in search of fish and chips, Sky Sports and a pint of lager replace with youthful, dreadlocked Tel Avivers with surfing boards – and a wish to attend Shabbat prayers wherever they are in the world. As the Colombo House website puts it, they are there to ‘serve as a place for Jewish travelers searching for a warm and welcoming community, as well as assist with kosher food and other religious needs’. All in all, a pretty reasonable-sounding mission statement.

Gunasekara suggests that the ‘threat’ from the Arugam Bay Chabad stems from the wider movement’s extremist political ideology, as evidenced (by implication) in Israeli soldiers recently establishing a similar prayer house in Beit Hanoun, Gaza. And while I agree with her that any right-wing, ‘Greater Israel’-directed ideology poses a potentially serious political problem wherever it exists, I’m not convinced that is what’s at stake with the Arugam Bay Chabad.

Terror attack in prospect

From what we know now – the picture is doubtless still unfolding – the US State Department’s decision some weeks back to issue a travel advisory for Arugam Bay and surroundings stemmed from a specific piece of intelligence. That intelligence was that the Iranians had given an agent – probably an Afghan national – two assignments: planning and carrying out the assassination of Donald Trump before this month’s US presidential elections; and organising the mass shooting of Israeli tourists in Sri Lanka. In the latter case, the shootings were supposed to have taken place to coincide with the anniversary of the Hamas massacre of Israelis last 7 October. 

All of which poses the following question: are the residents of the Chabad House in Arugam to be blamed, or otherwise held responsible for such a planned attack? Underlying Gunasekara’s article seems to be the unspoken assumption that yes, they – and their ideology – are indeed to blame. There are two key problems with this view. First, as with Palestinians in Gaza, blaming Jewish victims for potential attacks on them – an updated version of the age-old Christian canard that Jewish sufferings are divine retribution for the murder of Jesus – is not a defensible line of argument. Israeli tourists holidaying in southern Sri Lanka – and a somewhat pre-modern group catering to their religious needs – cannot and should not be held responsible for potential terror attacks on them stemming from Israel’s continuing war in Gaza and Lebanon.

Religious freedom – for all?

The second relates to freedom of religion. Surely Jews, no less than Buddhists, Muslims and Hindus have a right to practice their religion in this country free from fear? Gunasekara’s response is to suggest that ‘the constitution guarantees that right to Lankan citizens and not to tourists’. While it’s true that the Sri Lankan constitution doesn’t include Judaism in its list of recognised religions (it probably should), the implication suggested by Gunasekara is an alarming one: on the face of it, religious freedom – but only for citizens – looks like an updated version of a religious apartheid. And if the constitution really is as she says, surely it’s high time to revisit its definition of fundamental rights – not use its restrictive approach as an argument for religious exclusion?

So while I’m not a lawyer, I sincerely hope the officials she accuses of constitutional ignorance go ahead and give permission for a ‘non-Christian prayer house’ – an extraordinary description of a Jewish place of worship, but never mind – to be registered in Arugam Bay. That way, they would be demonstrating that Sri Lanka really is a country where fundamental religious freedoms are guaranteed for all, citizens or otherwise.

An underlying issue this debate highlights is the relative invisibility of Jews, and Jewish life in Sri Lanka. Even during the British colonial era the number of Jews living in the country was never more than a small community, serviced by a now defunct synagogue in Colombo. A few, such as Leonard Wolff, rose to prominence, though not (in his case) on the basis of their identity. Today the figure remains small, even if tourists ensure the numbers are larger now than for some time.

I am regularly struck by this ‘non-presence’, for example when following the news from Israel/Palestine. Whereas in my home country, the UK, Jewish and/or Israeli perspectives, including Jewish Israel-critical voices – as well, of course, as every shade of pro-Palestinian opinion – are regularly featured in news coverage of the conflict, in Sri Lanka the picture is – perhaps inevitably – more monochrome. Jewish voices are conspicuous largely by their absence. Indeed in some quarters, demonisation of all things Israeli – or is it Jewish, I some-times wonder? – has reached a point that induced me to think hard before going public with this article. 

To underscore the point, Jewish friends in Colombo have recently been asked by the police if they want school-time protection for their children. In other words, threats are out there for Jews: and not necessarily because they attend services run by latter-day Hasidic missionaries. There, perhaps, is something for the ever-thoughtful Gunasekara to ponder.

(The author is a writer, researcher and consultant. His latest book, From Independence to Aragalya: A Modern History of Sri Lanka will be published by Hurst, London in Autumn 2025.)

 

 

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