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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, October 8, 2012
Still Counting The Dead
Friday,
5 October 2012
Posted
by About Roma Tearne
We, my family & I, left our home many years ago when the war
was still simmering out of sight. In those days there were only riots to
contend with. Some broken glass windows on a bus, verbal abuse, a stone or two
been thrown. Then, suddenly I saw some Singhalese youths set fire to a Tamil
man. My father saw this too and also the writing on the wall. And so with the
violence a hair’s breath away, we left.
What happened next is familiar history and, depending on which
side you were on, the story differs. The Singhalese majority had their version
while the Tamils, some of them, hounded for years, took matters into their own
hands. Who amongst us can blame them? Which of us can take the moral high ground
over what happened next? For of course what happened next was civil war.
The newly formed Tamil Tigers, beaten and hounded,
psychologically and economically (their university careers and job prospects
becoming non existent), took what they believed to be the only course of action
by pitting violence against violence. Was it any surprise that grim death
followed? That the chief casualty was innocence itself? Or that the great dark
heart of revenge and bitterness took a strangle hold on the entire country’s
psyche? Around the world today all Sri Lankan’s have a ‘view’ on the subject of
the war even if they don’t voice it. Often this view is painfully at odds with
the views of their fellow countrymen. No other civil war has managed to create
such an astonishing cacophony of discordant voices and Frances Harrison is
already finding this out.
Having spent time witnessing
and interviewing victims and relatives of the dead along with decent Singhalese
who have helped Tamils in their hour of need, Harrison has raised a clear voice
reporting on the violence that took place on both sides of the divide. We know
that both Tamil Tigers and Singhalese hard liners are at fault. That after the
British left, long before any war started, each successive majority government
persecuted innocent Tamils for decades. From this seething crater of injustice
came the Tamil Tigers who, living by the sword, using their own people as cannon
fodder, walked into the trap of becoming the aggressor. Losing what little
sympathy they had from the International community they were labelled the
terrorists they had become. Violence had cut its inevitable path to
hell.
And now the war is over. All
the Tamil Tigers are dead. And it isn’t easy to be critical of the dead. Still,
in spite of this difficulty Harrison manages to take a balanced view. But it
isn’t easy, the Tamil people are sensitive and some do not take kindly to what
she has to say. For while understanding what led them along this terrible road,
the truth remains that no sane person can support any further desire for
violence. The Tamil diaspora, their dignity twice violated, their homeland
littered with land mines, their children maimed and killed, now, more than ever,
need help to move away from anger. As do, interestingly enough, the disgraced
Singhalese elite. The sad truth is that all this hatred, violence and grief, has
worked its way through the skin of the country and into its blood stream,
heading straight for the heart and head of the nation.
Thousands of corpses lie in mass graves created by the
Singhalese military while the child soldiers, recruited by the Tigers, add to
their numbers. Thus far the diaspora on both sides seems unwilling to engage
with these shocking issues. Touch on them at your peril. For who will admit the
great wrong done by so few to so many? Can the Singhalese elite stop using the
anthem of ‘They-Were-All-Terrorists-So-We-Killed-Them’, and look at
what theystarted all those years ago when the British left? Can the Tiger
supporter abandon the crossed gun flag for another less aggressive symbol?
In order for a healing process to begin all white vans should be
clamped, all weapons, both real and psychological, must be laid down. While
memory, that most gracious of human qualities, needs inviting in with a flight
of angels called up to sing the dead to rest. Frances Harrison’s book Still
Counting The Dead is the first of those angels. Ignoring her words would be
an act of monumental foolishness on the part of the Sri Lankan community, for
she is one of the few messengers we have.
Memories of injustice do not simply go away. Take a look at the
beautiful filmNostalgia For The Light, about Chile’s disappeared and you
will see the infinite extent of human remembrences and its refusal to be denied.
Effort is what is needed. The effort of admission. Reading Still Counting The
Dead is a start.
