Burmese Buddhist Monks Love
Muslim-Hating Trump
03.13.16 Daily Beast
Has the Donald ever heard of the Rohingyas? Unlikely. But the
persecuted Muslims of Myanmar certainly have heard of
him.
YANGON — He has been called a “xenophobic
fascist,” compared
to Adolf
Hitler, and
accused of stoking Islamophobia across
America, but U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald J. Trump
is finding admirers in an unlikely corner of the world, among
Myanmar’s extremist Buddhist monks.
“As long as the Quran exists there will be
terrorists, and like Trump we are trying to protect our country and
our religion from the threat of Islam,” said U Parmaukkha, a monk
and a senior member of a controversial ultra-nationalist
organization known by its Burmese initials Ma Ba Tha.
U Parmaukkha was speaking in an interview at his
Magwe Pariyatti Monastery, which is situated along a dusty road on
the outskirts of Yangon (Rangoon). There are no glittering pagodas
or Buddhist statues greeting visitors. Instead, the front entrance
is adorned with a lurid banner depicting atrocities allegedly
perpetrated against Buddhists by Muslims across Myanmar
(Burma).
Trump’s anti-Muslim
rhetoric—including a
proposal for a “total and complete
shutdown of Muslims entering the United States”—is resonating among
hardline Buddhist nationalists who have increasingly sought to
portray Muslims as an existential threat to the country’s Buddhist
majority. They, like Trump, have tapped into a deep vein of anger
and bigotry under the guise of protecting their respective
countries from the threat of Islamic extremists.
While Trump has defended himself against accusations
of Islamophobia, he came out in support of surveillance of “certain
mosques” and a database tracking Muslims living in America. The GOP
frontrunner’s first TV campaign ad also spotlights his call for a
ban on Muslims entering the United States, citing the threat of
“radical Islamic terrorism.”
Such positions have endeared Trump to Burmese
hardliners such as Win Ko Ko Latt, the 34-year-old chairman of the
Myanmar National Network—a youth group with links to the Ma Ba Tha
that regularly hosts anti-Muslim events.
“I like Donald Trump because he understands the
danger posed by Muslims,” Latt said in an interview during a recent
visit to the Magwe monastery. “It shows that our struggle is a
global one and that Islam isn’t just a threat to Myanmar but to the
entire world.”
Just as Muslims and Islam have played an outsized
role in the 2016 race for the White House in the wake of last
year’s terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, Islamophobia
has cast a shadow over politics in Myanmar as the country
transitions toward democracy after five decades of oppressive
military rule.
Formally known in English as the Association for the
Protection of Race and Religion, Ma Ba Tha and its predecessor, the
“969” movement, have been accused of stirring up anti-Muslim
sentiment. Prominent monks associated with the groups have been
linked to a wave of violence against the country’s Muslim minority
in 2012 that left hundreds dead and displaced more than a
quarter-million others.
They include Ashin Wirathu, who has been dubbed,
ironically, “the
Burmese bin Laden” and spent several
years in jail for inciting deadly anti-Muslim riots in 2003. Last
year, Wirathu called the UN’s special envoy on human rights a
“whore” and a “bitch” after she criticized the Ma Ba Tha-drafted
legislation restricting interfaith marriage and religious
conversions.
Ma Ba Tha is believed to be aligned with the
military government, and its leaders have openly campaigned against
Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD), which swept
Myanmar’s landmark November elections. The group’s influence is
believed to have played a role in the NLD’s decision not to field a
single Muslim among its 1,151 regional and national
candidates.
While Trump is far from being a household name in
Myanmar, his positions have drawn comparison to Wirathu. A popular
satire column in The Myanmar
Times last month launched a contest
series—“Who said it: Trump or Wirathu?”—which asked readers to
guess the author of inflammatory remarks. (First quote was “There
are people that shouldn’t be in our country. They flow in like
water.” That was Trump.)
Widespread discrimination against Muslims, who form
an estimated four percent of Myanmar’s 52 million people, has been
particularly hard on the country’s long-persecuted Rohingya ethnic
minority. Deprived of citizenship and voting rights—and largely
confined to squalid displacement camps in the aftermath of the 2012
violence—Rohingya Muslims face restrictions on freedom of movement,
access to proper medical care and education.
Myanmar’s hardline nationalists, including the Ma Ba
Tha, have framed the Rohingya issue as a security threat,
suggesting that the Rohingya are not citizens of Myanmar but rather
illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.
“Most of these people are illegal so it is important
to stop the new government from granting them citizenship, which
would be a great danger to our country,” said Myanmar National
Network’s Latt.
There is little insight about Trump’s foreign policy
priorities for Myanmar or his views on the plight of the Rohingya
(the campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment).
Still, his comments about Muslims have raised alarm bells among
some Rohingya in refugee camps —where news travels quickly through
word of mouth and on social media.
Sitting outside of a thatched bamboo hut that now
serves as his home at the Ohn Taw Gyi camp on the outskirts of
Myanmar’s provincial capital Sittwe, 22-year-old Myo Tun said he
has heard about Trump’s views through social media and is worried
that a Trump presidency would translate to lessened international
pressure on Myanmar’s government to address the plight of the
Rohingya.
“Our situation is getting worse each day and it is
hard to see change coming from political leaders in this country,”
said Myo Tun, who had hoped to study political science at Sittwe
University before a Buddhist mob torched his village in 2012.
“[Trump] talks about Muslims the same way as some of our government
officials. This is something that makes me nervous because the
international community is our only hope.”