Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Redeemed by reproduction? Exploring compulsory motherhood and abortion stigma
- 3 Suspending judgement: exploring contextual pedagogical approaches to facilitating ethical reflection on sexual and reproductive health and rights
- 4 Pastoral guidelines through a reproductive justice lens
- 5 Abortion in Malaysia: challenges and necessity
- 6 The power of religious voice in abortion law reform advocacy: interfaith approaches to abortion law reform in Malawi
- 7 Abortion and faith in Latin America: an interfaith perspective
- 8 Sri Lanka: abortion and Buddhism – a conversation with Dakshitha Wickremarathne
- 9 Reflections on faith-based abortion advocacy as the US faces a future without Roe: a conversation with Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg
- 10 Marking the absence of an embodied theology: an analysis of how people of faith talk about abortion in Northern Ireland
- 11 Seeds of hope in progressive Christian discourse on abortion in Northern Ireland
- 12 Faith Voices for Reproductive Justice in Northern Ireland
- 13 Conclusion
- Index
8 - Sri Lanka: abortion and Buddhism – a conversation with Dakshitha Wickremarathne
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Redeemed by reproduction? Exploring compulsory motherhood and abortion stigma
- 3 Suspending judgement: exploring contextual pedagogical approaches to facilitating ethical reflection on sexual and reproductive health and rights
- 4 Pastoral guidelines through a reproductive justice lens
- 5 Abortion in Malaysia: challenges and necessity
- 6 The power of religious voice in abortion law reform advocacy: interfaith approaches to abortion law reform in Malawi
- 7 Abortion and faith in Latin America: an interfaith perspective
- 8 Sri Lanka: abortion and Buddhism – a conversation with Dakshitha Wickremarathne
- 9 Reflections on faith-based abortion advocacy as the US faces a future without Roe: a conversation with Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg
- 10 Marking the absence of an embodied theology: an analysis of how people of faith talk about abortion in Northern Ireland
- 11 Seeds of hope in progressive Christian discourse on abortion in Northern Ireland
- 12 Faith Voices for Reproductive Justice in Northern Ireland
- 13 Conclusion
- Index
Summary
Sri Lanka is an island country in South Asia, with a population of 21.6 million. The main faith is Buddhism (70.2 per cent of the population), with other denominations of Hinduism (12.6 per cent), Islam (9.7 per cent) and Christianity (7.4 per cent) also prevalent. Economically, Sri Lanka is a lower-middle-income country. It has a well-developed free-to-access health system, with public hospitals and a strong primary care network. While there is a clear focus in government policy on reproductive health, it has an extremely strict abortion law, which stipulates that abortion is illegal unless the life of the mother is at risk (IPPF, 2019). Despite this restrictive law, clandestine abortion services have been reasonably accessible (Kumar, 2013). Post-abortion care is available within the health system, although the standard of this varies. Studies indicate that discrimination, such as verbal harassment by healthcare staff, was experienced and, in some instances, confidentiality was breached, by revealing the abortion status to family members, staff and other patients (Arambepola et al, 2014). Proposed reforms to extend the law in limited cases such as rape and foetal abnormality were criticised as unresponsive to the legitimate needs of women and transpersons (Wijesiriwardena et al, 2020).
In this conversation we sought to address three key questions: how the law impact access to abortion; how the socio-cultural context impacts policy making; and how Buddhism positions abortion. We begin with a consideration of history and the political context.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Reimagining Faith and AbortionA Global Perspective, pp. 111 - 129Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2024