A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 19, 2013
We All Are Tamils, We All Are Sinhalese And We All Are Muslims
By Laksiri
Fernando -April 19, 2013 |
I am saying it should be the spirit. I am not
asking anyone to shed away or denounce their ethnicity or religion. We all love
the way we are and what we believe in or not believe in. In this small Island of
ours we should live like brothers and sisters with equal rights and also equal
responsibilities, without rancour or violence. Although I am not there bodily
now, my ‘spirit’ appears to be haunting this Island all the time, day and night.
I admit that it may be easy for a so-called Sinhalese like me to say it, but
difficult for a Tamil or even a Muslim to reckon with the idea given the past
and bitter experiences. Therefore, the ‘Sinhalese’ have a major responsibility
to give a helping hand to others.
One
may consider my call as a dubious way to divide their ‘national spirit.’ I
simply ask them to reconsider their position.
I
was just thirteen when I lost a dear friend Perumal during the riots of 1958. He
was not killed but left Moratuwa eternally not to see him again. It was just
thereafter I saw this article by E. W. Adikaram that “Communalist is a Lunatic.’
He asked the question ‘how do you know you are a Sinhalese or a Tamil?’ Then the
usual answer was ‘my father is or was a Sinhalese or Tamil.’ When asked how do
you know your father was a Sinhalese or Tamil, he reported that people used to
get uncertain. It can go on backwards and then no one is sure. His argument was
that, based on Buddhism, ethnic identity is an illusion.
But
I may put it mildly to say that ethnic identities are conventional. They are
relative truths but not absolutes. There are differences but those differences
are not reason to dominate, discriminate or contempt others based on history,
numerical strengths or theories. One may ask the question: how could you equate
75 per cent with 11 per cent, 15 per cent or 9 per cent? It is a matter of
quality and not quantity. It is a matter of equal opportunity and equal
recognition, but both should be in practice and not in theory alone.
When
I was at Peradeniya we had this famous Vasantha (Raja)
as a close friend but we never thought him as a Tamil. Neither did he treat us
differently. ‘Raja’ thing came to be known only later. Yet, no difference. Those
were the good old days, fast changing even at that time. I knew a person named
George in the science faculty who was considered to be a Tamil and after
graduation, came to know another person named Joe quite closely who was by all
‘attributes’ a Sinhalese. I was later amused to know that they were in fact
brothers. Werner Sollors gives numerous examples of this genre to show the
absurdity of rigid characterizations in his ‘Beyond Ethnicity’ and
‘Neither Black Nor White and Yet Both.’
In
early 1983, I was invited to a seminar somewhere in Batticaloa to speak on ‘Marx
and trade unions’ and accepted the invitation to know what was going on in that
part of the Island. Only thereafter I came to know that the invitation came from
the EPRLF. I stayed the night before in a Muslim house at Akkarapattu. The
mother of my friend came to serve me at dinner and we could watch TV along with
my friend’s sisters after dinner. They were only wearing their hijab. That
mother was exactly like my mother.
As
a way of an introduction, at the seminar, I said that I am a so-called Sinhalese
and in fact spoke in Sinhala which was translated. All of them smiled. I came to
know K Padmanabha, leader of the EPRLF thereafter and also Varadaraja Perumal. I
believe even Suresh Premachandran was there. It was unfortunate that they had to
take up arms and follow a violent path even for a while. The same goes for the
JVP activists.
Look
at Karuna Amman (Vinayagamoorthy Muralitharan) today. He appears a perfect
gentleman. This doesn’t absolve him from anything horrible he has done. It is
best that he genuinely confesses. He was a top notch leader for the Eelam
struggle and now a Minister in a so-called Sinhala Cabinet. This is a good
lesson for those who wanted to reinvent the wheel again or follow those who cry
for a separate struggle. I came to know Lawrence Thilakar in Geneva in late
1980s and he was a perfect gentleman under normal circumstances. No one could
say he was a terrorist. I believe it is largely the mistaken ideology and
mesmerized fanaticism that made him or anyone different. I am not sure, however,
whether this could be said about everyone. Some may be disposed to violence and
aggression largely by upbringing or ‘nature.’
The
same goes for the Bodu
Bala Sena (BBS) and its fire brand leader Rev. Galagoda
Aththe Gnanasara or anyone in the same organization. His violent
disposition does not good for a Buddhist monk. I don’t know anyone in that
organization to say whether they are ‘perfect gentlemen’ in their ordinary life
or not. They or anyone else, however, has no right whatsoever to denigrate other
religions and attack business enterprises of other communities just because they
are irritated with other people’s religious practices, Halal or Abaya. There is
a big difference between those who struggle to gain their rights, and those who
try to suppress other people’s rights. The following is what the Rock Edit XII
of Emperor Asoka said.
“One should not honour only one’s own religion and condemned the religions of others, but one should honour others’ religions for this or that reason. So doing, one helps one’s own religion to grow and renders service to the religions others too. In acting otherwise one digs the rave of one’s own religion and also does harm to other religions.”
Sri
Lanka undoubtedly is a beautiful and a blessed country in which all communities
and religions can live in peace and harmony. One of our predicaments might be
the space and even at present over 20 million people have to live in 65,610
square kilometres. Sustainable urban living might be the answer, leaving maximum
land for cultivation and environmental protection. Sustainable development is
necessary in its broadest sense of the term without neglecting the bridging of
income gaps vertically and horizontally. Poverty should be eradicated as the
number one priority of all ethnic communities.
King
Prithvi Narayan Shah (in 1848) equated Nepal to a ‘flower garden of thirty two
Jatis and four Varnas.’ Imagine the beauty of that thinking. Sri Lanka also can
be a beautiful ‘flower garden of three Jatis and four religions.’ This is not an
idiom from the West but from our own region.
With
all the prospects for progress and harmony, one might wonder why our people
tumble into destructive conflicts and violence again and again without learning
proper lessons from the past. A major blame undoubtedly should go to the
political leaders of all political parties and all communities. We, voters
ourselves should be blamed for electing them again and again without checking
their proper credentials. The following was what Martin Wickremasinghe, a
renowned literary figure in the country, said about this predicament in his
“Impetus for the Growth of a Multiracial Culture (972).”
“The exploitation of language, race and religion by politicians is partly due to their inability to identify themselves with the common people or the greater nation. There is a cultural unity among the common people in spite of differences of religion, language and race.”

