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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, June 6, 2014
Feed Our Children: They Are Our Future
“Kodithu kodithu varumai kodithu athilum kodithu ilamayil varumai”
Poverty is cruel but it is even more cruel to be poor when young.
(June 06, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian) According
to Dr Pujitha Wickremasinghe, senior lecturer in paediatrics at The
Faculty of Medicine, Colombo University over 1.2 mn children attend
school without breakfast as The Island reported two days ago. This is a
sad indictment on the collective national psyche that 30 percent of our
children are attending school without breakfast.
Although a cliché, children are our future. Unless and until we turn our
focus towards their well-being we have failed as a nation. Children in
Colombo suburbs get up at 5.00am to be ready for the school van saddled
with bags of books as though they are climbing Everest with perhaps a
kimbula bunis or a bite of sandwich to say the least.
These children have to sit through hours at school until they reach
home. Unlike during our childhood, their mothers are compelled to work
full-time to meet the mortgage on their homes and it is not easy to make
sure their children are provided with the necessary balanced meals.
Parents try their best and if they resort to fast food to feed them one
cannot call them ignorant. They have no choice.
So it is incumbent on the school authorities and on the government to
make sure our future leaders are provided with basic nutrients to
develop themselves in their formative years at least up to the age of
12.
When one looks back on the insurgencies so far, it gathered momentum in
the seventies onwards when politics and privatisation in the island
veered towards strengthening those in power both in politics and
commerce to the detriment of the ordinary masses. The causes were
clearly unemployment, poverty and hunger and not national pride as our
politicians would have us believe..
Perhaps the mostly affected are the upcountry Tamil children. Their
plight sealed by the colonial powers was worsened by the Sri Lankan
politicians who are still keeping them in bondage; they work along with
their parents in tea and rubber plantations, their diet would place
their counterparts in Africa as well-fed.
Then we hear of the startling news milk imports are levied 25 percent
tax which would raise the price of powdered milk. The government which
subsidises meals for politicians in parliament canteens and staff in
government institutions is unable to give a free glass of milk and some
bunis to all children in state schools.
It is a crying shame the government and school authorities fail to
realise a child’s development begins in its formative years. It is not
without this realisation that our parents poured the horribly tasting
Seven Seas oil (there were no tablets in our days) down our throat every
night after dinner and gave us Virol on top of the simple balanced
meals consisting of various pulses, meat, fish and vegetables which
varied from day to day.
Even after a hearty breakfast this writer was forever hungry since our
first lesson at school was PT. So I asked my mother she could give me a
chit to enable me to have the delicious bunis provided free. She would
not hear of it and I thought this was child cruelty. I had to wait
another two hours before lunch. Once a month Nestle would give us iced
Nestomalt drink as part of its advertising campaign together with a deck
of playing cards. I would stand in the queue at least twice and get a
second helping.
UK is bringing in legislation that by September all the children would
be provided with free school meals. The UK government is furiously
debating this issue as of national importance and priority over and
above other bills being debated. This is a country which provides child
benefit and tax credit so children do not go without food, clothing and
shelter already.
What do we have in Sri Lanka? Parents begging with their children,
children breaking stones instead of attending schools, children cleaning
gardens to earn a few bucks to help their parents.
The next time you see politicians with their convoys following to plush
restaurants gather your children and pelt them with stones en masse.
With hungry children in their thousands they cannot apprehend only a
few. Form a children’s brigade on par with trade unions and storm
Diyawanna and proceed to UNICEF. Do a sit in and do not move until the
weasels inside see pot bellies and emaciated children holding placards
to demand their due from the national coffers which is being plundered
by the fat cats as they emerge with their bloated bellies burping and
guffawing.

