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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 20, 2019
Sri Lanka: Let A Million Vesak Lights Dispel The Forces Of Darkness
The proliferation of madrasas, as well as mosques, was also aided and abetted by President Jayewardene’s electorally cynical creation of religious affairs Ministries for Sri Lanka’s four religions.
by Rajan Philips-2019-05-19
- 9
Sri
Lanka is the fortuitous recipient, even beneficiary, of two
enlightenments. The first is bodhi - the Buddha’s awakening, or
enlightenment. It is also the much older of the two, divinely
pre-ordained to some, and spiritually and ritually cherished by millions
of Sri Lankans. The second, European enlightenment, came from the west
through colonial conquest and ironically with an admixture of
Christianity and secularism. ‘Everything came from elsewhere’ – to
paraphrase from Dr. Colvin R de Silva’s history lesson to Prime Minister
Mrs. Sirimavo Bandaranaike, delivered in parliament in 1975, following
the breakup of the United Front government.
The Prime Minister had trotted out the trite argument that the Marxist
ideology (of the LSSP) was alien to Sri Lanka’s culture and traditions.
As the past master of intellectual rebuttals Dr Colvin could not have
had an easier proposition to dispose of: Sri Lanka is an island, small
as islands go, intoned the Historian; people and ideas always came from
the outside; Hinduism and Buddhism of old came from India; much later
came Islam from west Asia, Christianity with western colonial rule and,
finally, modern Marxism itself.
In the spirit of enlightened synthesis, it is fair to ask how well, or
ill, have the two enlightenments intertwined through our modern history
to the point where we are today? The results are mixed, at best, or
worrisome, at worst, with perhaps greater reason for less pessimism
today than there was, say, in 1983. Vesak is the celebration of Sri
Lanka’s first enlightenment. The celebrations might be subdued this
year, but the lights of Vesak could not have been timelier than now to
soothe the frayed nerves of an agitated people.
The country seemed to be on track to normalcy after the Easter
tragedies, but the forces of darkness emerged out of nowhere last Sunday
and put the country back on edge and under curfew again. Violent mobs
targeted and attacked innocent Muslims in the Kurunegala, Chilaw and
Gampaha districts, in a pointless retaliation to the perishing of
innocent Christians on Easter Sunday.
Although order seems to have been restored somewhat, it was frustrating
to see the government failing yet again to anticipate and prevent the
outbreak of violence, and being slow and tepid in its response once
violence broke out. Compounding the government’s failure in crisis
management is its failure to manage its messaging. In fact, there is no
coordinated and credible government messaging at all. The huge void in
official information is being filled by others from well-meaning
religious leaders to over-zealous media speculators.
In a crisis situation, public pronouncements or information sharing by
non-officials, however well placed, well-meaning and even
ecclesiastical, can do more harm than give help. It is again a sign of
the lack of confidence in the government that everyone wants to go
public with whatever hearsay information they come across. The social
media offers unrestricted space to anyone to pose anything anyone wants.
And an inept government trying to control the social media creates more
cynicism than confidence among the people.
Frustrations with government failures are the lot of Sri Lanka’s
experience with the second enlightenment that arrived with Western
colonial rule. While Buddhism and its ethos permeate and inform much of
the culture and mores of Sri Lanka, its political society and
institutions have been defined and shaped for nearly two hundred years
by the enlightenment and institutions from the West. As many of us have
been repeatedly writing in recent weeks, the Easter tragedies brutally
exposed the fault lines of the political society and the failures of the
State institutions. We saw more of the same last week.
The President was again missing in action and out of the country. For
what earthly purpose no one knows. The Prime Minister took his own time
before bestirring himself to show some signs of control. Not only who is
to blame, as I asked last week, the question is also: Just who is in
charge? Not to be too harsh, it is difficult not to say that it looks as
if everyone is in charge except the government. In hindsight, the 19th
Amendment should have addressed the intended omission in the 1978
Constitution to provide for an Acting President while the President is
away. The President just takes off without asking anyone to act on his
behalf during his absence. That leaves the administration paralyzed in
two camps under the current divided government. The divisions and
paralyses are quite palpable, and it does also seem that the President
and the Prime Minister like to keep it that way. And without term
limits, if they could.
Vesak Intervention
Apart from harming innocent people and disrupting the social peace, mob
violence diverts the attention and resources of security agencies who
are still trying to identify the local actors behind the Easter attacks
and their international connects. New information keeps coming out about
connections between those arrested in Sri Lanka in connection with
Easter bombings and their networking in India. It is one thing to trace
and apprehend all the local actors, but quite a different task to trace
through all their external connections.
Those who are involved in the work of tracing the ISIS network in Sri
Lanka would rather be without having to be distracted by outbreak of mob
violence. And new recruits to the ISIS network cannot be prevented if
mobs are continually organized to attack innocent Muslims, their Mosques
and their businesses. Mob attacks are not at all the way to deal with
international terrorism. There is no question that without the attacks
on Muslims in 2014 (Aluthgama) and in 2018 (Kandy and Ampara), the ISIS
would not have been able to get agents in Sri Lanka to the extent it
seems to have been able to do. In the current situation, the government
cannot afford to allow mob attacks against the Muslims to recur time
after time and in different places.
Sri Lanka has long experience with communal mob violence. Five of them
in the last century and three so far for this century including the one
last week. The first was in 1915 and brought to surface the internal
conflicts of nascent nationalism in a plural society under colonial
rule. All the others came after independence and the first of them, in
1958, became remarkable among its other implications for the clinical
manner in which it was brought under control by Sir Oliver Goonetilleke,
as Governor General acting on the request of Prime Minister SWRD
Bandaranaike. Sir Oliver’s 1958 example has not been emulated in the
containment of the riots that came in quick succession after a lapse of
19 years: in 1977, 1981 and 1983. This was so despite Sri Lanka’s
transition in 1977/78 from the parliamentary of government to the
current presidential system. The pattern has continued into this century
in 2014, 2018 and 2019.
The deterioration in political crisis management has a lot to do with
the steep decline in police standards, which were very and were
impeccably observed in Sir Oliver’s time to what they have become now.
Since 1977, governments, police and security forces have shown a
consistent pattern of being slow to respond to mob violence, responding
only half-heatedly, and even acting at the behest of the attackers
rather than to protect the attacked. Two other changes since 1977 too
have lot to do with two aspects of the current Muslim question.
President Jayewardene’s idiosyncratic approach to expanding a private
education system to undermine the country’s public-school system could
be totally blamed for the anarchical proliferation of madrasas among the
Muslims and apparently against the warnings of all the moderate
Muslims.
The proliferation of madrasas, as well as mosques, was also aided and
abetted by President Jayewardene’s electorally cynical creation of
religious affairs Ministries for Sri Lanka’s four religions. No previous
government or Prime Minister had ever done that in Sri Lanka, and
President Jayewardene was able to do this because he made himself
Executive President, and he chose to do it in order to create secure
religious vote banks for himself and his successors in presidential
elections. JRJ’s well laid plan started breaking up in 1994 and is now
in total shreds. And there have been more riots, more killings and even
wars after 1977 than any time before in Sri Lanka’s modern history.
The Vesak intervention this weekend will hopefully quieten and
marginalize the dark forces who mobilized and executed last week’s mob
violence. It would be too much to expect a weekend of Vesak lights to
clean up all the accumulation of the country’s dark forces after 1977.
But they provide a breather after the tumults of the last month.
Hopefully too, they would also set the tone for greater respect and
tolerance for the many vectors of difference among all Sri Lankans.

