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dc.contributor.authorJayasinghe, Apoorwa Sharadishashi
dc.contributor.authorJayawickrama, AV Sathini Jayathma
dc.contributor.authorKumari, MR Pramudi Paboda
dc.date.accessioned2021-12-30T09:59:26Z
dc.date.available2021-12-30T09:59:26Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.identifier.urihttp://ir.kdu.ac.lk/handle/345/5290
dc.description.abstractThis paper primarily examines the Easter Sunday bombings plotted and executed by a group of Sri Lankan Muslims and the impact of post-war conditions in Sri Lanka towards the Muslims in the country. Aimed at Christians and tourists, a string of bomb blasts was orchestrated killing hundreds of people in Sri Lanka as they gathered for Easter Sunday Mass. It is a controversial fact that the post-war violence, organized Islamophobia among overall non-Muslim communities and the Sinhalese in particular, has increased their fears and distrust towards Sri Lankan Muslims in general and state enterprises of Muslim political leaders who supported the successive Sri Lankan ruling class from independence through the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009. Although having meant an isolation of the community from the two main ethnic communities, the concessions that the Muslim community had won, has actively helped them to be proactive in their religious practices and thus paved the way for exclusive social and political choices. However, prior to the Easter Sunday attack there were still many motionless conflicts between Muslims and non- Muslims in the country. After the Easter Sunday bomb attack, these tensions heightened and spread through whole of Sri Lanka.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectEaster Sundayen_US
dc.subjectBombingsen_US
dc.subjectConflictsen_US
dc.subjectNon-Muslimsen_US
dc.title2019 Easter Sunday Attack in Sri Lankaen_US
dc.typeArticle Full Texten_US
dc.identifier.journalFDSS IR Student Research Forum, 2021en_US
dc.identifier.pgnos95-104en_US


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