The Prague Post - Cheap alms bowls imports hit Sri Lanka makers, monks

EUR -
AED 4.299797
AFN 74.931614
ALL 96.031574
AMD 440.479809
AOA 1073.632019
ARS 1630.923879
AUD 1.658735
AWG 2.110384
AZN 1.991069
BAM 1.957572
BBD 2.356632
BDT 143.793374
BHD 0.441991
BIF 3477.543108
BMD 1.17081
BND 1.491605
BOB 8.084868
BRL 5.951814
BSD 1.170009
BTN 108.01968
BWP 15.698335
BYN 3.415189
BYR 22947.867085
BZD 2.353219
CAD 1.622572
CDF 2692.862132
CHF 0.922241
CLF 0.026918
CLP 1062.884195
CNY 8.028711
CNH 7.989575
COP 4321.376075
CRC 544.269303
CUC 1.17081
CUP 31.026453
CVE 110.364877
CZK 24.380949
DJF 208.360551
DKK 7.472634
DOP 70.751913
DZD 154.895116
EGP 62.392677
ERN 17.562143
ETB 182.71729
FJD 2.590357
FKP 0.884233
GBP 0.868934
GEL 3.137852
GGP 0.884233
GHS 12.881943
GIP 0.884233
GMD 86.055927
GNF 10266.290664
GTQ 8.9511
GYD 244.79212
HKD 9.170184
HNL 31.075122
HRK 7.538722
HTG 153.391609
HUF 375.716879
IDR 19879.175267
ILS 3.601691
IMP 0.884233
INR 108.120574
IQD 1532.787123
IRR 1540639.010301
ISK 143.799546
JEP 0.884233
JMD 184.186683
JOD 0.830104
JPY 185.184012
KES 151.490849
KGS 102.387268
KHR 4687.98221
KMF 499.935712
KPW 1053.715591
KRW 1726.657212
KWD 0.361886
KYD 0.975028
KZT 559.409525
LAK 25810.034579
LBP 104795.918983
LKR 368.813765
LRD 215.285633
LSL 19.207782
LTL 3.457096
LVL 0.708211
LYD 7.42572
MAD 10.885551
MDL 20.148115
MGA 4861.150068
MKD 61.686862
MMK 2458.707556
MNT 4181.642855
MOP 9.439759
MRU 46.500081
MUR 54.747097
MVR 18.089
MWK 2028.840729
MXN 20.374509
MYR 4.655158
MZN 74.873654
NAD 19.207782
NGN 1611.209698
NIO 43.057679
NOK 11.152207
NPR 172.834243
NZD 2.00562
OMR 0.450179
PAB 1.169999
PEN 4.008608
PGK 5.137649
PHP 69.525596
PKR 326.427607
PLN 4.253036
PYG 7589.868588
QAR 4.266561
RON 5.094543
RSD 117.344404
RUB 92.024048
RWF 1712.955071
SAR 4.39342
SBD 9.423358
SCR 16.267549
SDG 703.656832
SEK 10.78531
SGD 1.490218
SLE 28.805163
SOS 668.685149
SRD 43.838662
STD 24233.39373
STN 24.521144
SVC 10.238265
SYP 129.432241
SZL 19.203476
THB 37.319602
TJS 11.121242
TMT 4.109542
TND 3.416892
TRY 52.087256
TTD 7.935843
TWD 37.133975
TZS 3047.034824
UAH 50.705169
UGX 4328.714002
USD 1.17081
UYU 47.533016
UZS 14309.950047
VES 554.33992
VND 30830.342348
VUV 139.819173
WST 3.244211
XAF 656.514677
XAG 0.015136
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.164171
XCG 2.108745
XDR 0.818368
XOF 656.551158
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.296731
ZAR 19.094782
ZMK 10538.709692
ZMW 22.377104
ZWL 377.000196
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.14

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5000

    15.25

    -3.28%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    94.66

    +0.69%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.31

    +1.11%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    55.84

    -0.95%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.29

    -0.27%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.52

    +0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    23.83

    -1.8%

  • AZN

    -2.0200

    200.81

    -1.01%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.36

    -0.75%

  • BCC

    0.9600

    74.71

    +1.28%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    58.8

    +0.15%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.69

    -0.32%

  • BP

    -0.2400

    47.24

    -0.51%

Cheap alms bowls imports hit Sri Lanka makers, monks
Cheap alms bowls imports hit Sri Lanka makers, monks / Photo: Ishara S. KODIKARA - AFP

Cheap alms bowls imports hit Sri Lanka makers, monks

The alms bowl is a symbol of monks, yet in Sri Lanka artisans are struggling as cheap substitutes flood the market, igniting a debate over Buddhist tradition and quality.

Text size:

The village of Panvila has long been associated with craftsmen who produce the humble "paathra", the special bowl that forms part of the eight essentials donated to monks and which is used to ask for food.

Thenuwara Badalge Sarath, 65, says he is the only blacksmith left in a village that once supplied much of the country.

"When I learnt the craft from my father, there were more than 10 families in the neighbourhood who made these bowls," Sarath told AFP, while hammering a piece of scrap metal into a holy utensil.

"Today, I am the only one keeping up the tradition. My son died recently in a road accident, and there is no one to carry on this line of work after I am gone," said the fourth-generation craftsman.

He spends about a week producing a batch of five to six bowls from discarded steel barrels. He sells each for 600 rupees ($2), but competition from cheap imports is tough.

"There are aluminium bowls that come from abroad. They are cheaper and lighter -- we can't compete," Sarath said at his village smithy, near the southern tourist resort of Hikkaduwa.

- Karma drives demand -

The Buddhist-majority nation of some 22 million people has just over 42,000 monks, but the demand for bowls is disproportionately high because of the positive karma attached to offering them to temples.

Kirinde Assagi, a leading Buddhist monk, said the alms bowl forms part of the eight items for a monk to lead an ascetic life and spread the teachings of Buddha, along with two robes, a razor, a straining cloth, a needle and thread, and a belt.

"The bowl is his livelihood. When a monk goes out begging with his bowl, he gets sustenance", Assagi said.

"Because gifting 'ata pirikara' to monks brings enormous good karma, devotees clamour to donate this," said the monk, in reference to the eight-item package.

At his Gangaramaya temple in the capital Colombo there were nine such packages donated within an hour one weekend.

- 'Mountain' of discarded pots -

Assagi says most of the bowls however are of poor quality, made out of aluminium and unfit to serve food in.

In a storeroom at the back of his temple, there is a huge pile of bowls that monks say are not suitable even for offering food to household pets.

"I will show you a mountain of begging bowls that we have discarded. We make holes at the bottom and repurpose them for potted plants."

Monks in Thailand, Myanmar, and Laos traditionally seek alms every morning, underscoring their simple life and demonstrating that their livelihood depends on others.

But the influx of cheap bowls is impacting the dawn ritual.

"We see the practice of monks begging slowly dying off as the quality of the bowls goes down," he said.

The Gangaramaya temple in Colombo has campaigned to improve the quality of utensils offered to monks and revive the ritual of seeking alms.

Assagi said the Thai royal family has in recent years gifted more than 27,000 high qualitiy stainless steel bowls to Sri Lankan monks, most of whom are followers of the Siam sect of Buddhism practised in that nation.

Unlike the financially well-off Gangaramaya, smaller temples are known to sell their excess bowls back to the market in a move that undermines traditional craftsmen such as Sarath.

"When the bowls go back to the shop from a temple, we find it difficult to sell our produce," Sarath said.

He is trying to convince devotees that there is less merit in offering bowls that are being regifted.

A.Novak--TPP