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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, June 6, 2015
Husband Like Ranil & Sister Like Chandrika…?

A video circulates in social media networks, featuring Dr Dayan Jayatilleka(hereinafter referred to as ‘the speaker’), a strong supporter of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa,
delivering a speech in Sinhala at a pro-Rajapaksa public meeting. The
speaker, it appears, actively supports the ‘bring back Mahinda’
movement. The speaker asks several questions that echo rather macho and
derogatory views on two public figures, namely Ranil Wickremesinghe and Chandrika Bandaranaike.
In a rather cheap effort to amuse the gallery, the speaker asks the
audience as to whom they would choose between Mahinda Rajapaksa and Ranil Wickremesinghe for
a sibling or a paterfamilias. The answer from an audience composed of
diehard Rajapaksa supporters is not difficult to guess. The above
question is intertwined with the next one – whether the audience would
prefer a ‘husband’ (swami purushaya) such as Ranil. The only logical
inference is that the word ‘husband’ here implies a partner who is
cisgender male and heterosexual, and that the question is targeted at
cisgender heterosexual females in the audience, as the concept of equal
marriage as such is nowhere near the pro-Rajapaksa faction’s political
agenda.
Referring
to Mrs Chandrika Bandaranaike (CB), the speaker also asks the audience
if it would accept having a mother, a sister or a spouse like the former
president. This again passes for a derogatory inference, reminiscent
of Victor Ivan’s booklet of insults targeting CB, in which a great deal of effort is made to question CB’s morality and personal choices.
If someone indirectly, albeit
persistently evokes a political opponent’s personal choices, lifestyles
or associated rumours, does that not amount to overtly discriminatory
and essentially undiplomatic behaviour? In this case, the reference to
Ranil is homophobic, as evidenced in the question ‘would one want
someone like Ranil for a husband?’ Asked with an unmistakably cynical
smile on the speaker’s face, this question touches upon a popular
perception of Ranil’s sexuality, something that conservative segments of
the electorate perceives in a negative light and as worthy of insults.
If the speaker took issue with Ranil’s pro-Western credentials, the
2002-2004 peace process, or leadership skills, such issues can be raised
with concrete evidence and in a spirit of decent, sane political
engagement. When critiquing Ranil as a politician, there is absolutely
no need whatsoever to make any direct or indirect inference to Ranil’s
sexuality or personal life.Read More

