Appropriating a space for violence: State Buddhism in southern Thailand

Type Journal Article - Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Title Appropriating a space for violence: State Buddhism in southern Thailand
Author(s)
Volume 40
Issue 01
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2009
Page numbers 33-57
URL http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=3280420&fileId=S00224634090​00034
Abstract
In southern Thailand, monasteries once served as focal points for different communal identities to negotiate shared space and, with it, shared identities. However, since martial law was declared in 2004, Muslims in southern Thailand do not frequent monasteries. Instead, soldiers and police occupy monastery buildings and protect the perimeters from attacks. In addition, there are now military monks, soldiers who are simultaneously ordained monks, who work to protect the monasteries. This article argues that the Thai State's militarisation of monasteries and the role of Buddhist monks fuel a religious dimension to the ongoing civil war in southern Thailand.

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