The dangerous rise of Buddhist extremism: ‘Attaining nirvana can wait’
The Audio Long Read
The Guardian
4.2 • 2.5K Ratings
🗓️ 16 January 2026
⏱️ 39 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is The Guardian. |
| 0:09.2 | Welcome to The Guardian long read, showcasing the best long-form journalism covering culture, politics and new thinking. |
| 0:15.9 | For the text version of this and all our long reads, go to the Guardian.com forward slash long read. |
| 0:24.6 | The dangerous rise of Buddhist extremism. |
| 0:28.2 | Attaining Nirvana Can Wait by Sonia Follero, read by Danita Gohel. |
| 0:49.3 | In the summer of 2023, I arrived in Durham Shala, an Indian town celebrated as the home of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader. The place hadn't changed much since my last visit almost two decades ago. |
| 0:58.1 | The roads were still a patchwork of uneven asphalt and dirt, |
| 1:01.4 | and Tibetan monks in maroon robes filled the streets. |
| 1:04.0 | Despite the relentless hum of traffic, |
| 1:06.6 | Tharam Shala had a rare stillness. |
| 1:09.8 | The hills seemed to absorb the noise. |
| 1:15.0 | Prayer flags flickered in the breeze, each rustle a reminder of something enduring. |
| 1:20.8 | But beneath the surface, the Buddhism practice across Asia has shifted. |
| 1:29.0 | While still widely followed as a peaceful, non-violent philosophy, it has been weaponised, in some quarters, in the service of nationalism and in support of governments embracing a global trend toward majoritarianism |
| 1:35.1 | and autocracy. |
| 1:40.1 | In countries such as Sri Lanka and Myanmar, where the conservative Theravada strain predominates, |
| 1:46.2 | monks have emerged as central figures in movements that promote sectarian hatred, |
| 1:51.2 | abandoning the teachings of the Buddha in favour of a more common and earthly goal, political power. |
| 1:58.3 | My journey to Dharamshala and across other parts of the Buddhist world was driven by a need |
| 2:03.1 | to understand how this transformation had occurred. The question wasn't just what had happened to |
| 2:09.9 | Buddhism in these places, but what Buddhism had been before the transformation. One principle, |
| 2:15.8 | above all, has come to define Buddhism in the eyes of the world, the foundational precept of Ahimsa, or non-harming. |
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