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, February 2, 2013
Fate Or Fait Accompli ?
Khayyam
was a brilliant mathematician, a philosopher and a poet. Khayyam comes out as a
fatalist – as well as a hedonist and an agnostic- at least in Fitzgerald’s
translation, and it is in Fitzgerald’s translation that Khayyam’s fame has
endured. Other translators such as Swami Govinda Thirtha have recognised the
spirituality in Khayyam’s poetry and there is much more to his poetry than
fatalism even in Fitzgerald.
For
instance, Khayyam was conscious of the evanescence of earthly glory, an idea
that he conveyed in the following verse.
They say the Lion and the Lizard keep
The courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep;
And Bahram, that great Hunter – the Wild Ass
Stamps over his Head, but cannot break his sleep.The ‘moving finger’ verse from Khayyam reads:The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,
Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line,
Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it.
In
this verse Khayyam speaks of the inevitability of fate, and the inability of man
to change it. He repeated this idea in another of his famous verses.
‘Tis all a Chequer-board of Nights and Days
Where Destiny with Men for Pieces plays:
Hither and thither moves, and mates, and slays,
And one by one back in the Closet lays.
It
is quite unlikely that the new appointee would have intended to say that the
post had been thrust upon him by Providence and that he had no choice but to
accept it. If Providence, indeed, had a hand in his appointment, then what role
did Fate play in the ousting of its previous occupant?
In
this connection the story of the Jurist Abu Haniffa comes to mind. Abu Haniffa
was the founder of aschool of Islamic Jurisprudence and was known for his
independent views which did not go down well with the Caliph of his day. The
Caliph offered to make Abu Haniffa his Chief Judge in the hope that he could
control Abu Haniffa. Rather than accepting the offer as one that Providence had
sent him, Abu Haniffa refused because he did not wish to compromise his
independence.
Servants
of the people
In
his welcome speech, the current occupant had assured that he would serve the
people as their servant and that justice would not be a cloistered virtue under
his dispensation. Judges are servants of the people like those elected to
parliament are.
The
veteran British MP Tony Benn once referred to a member of parliament as an
employee of the people having about 60,000 people as his employers. Tony Benn
was making a point about the accountability of members of parliament and their
relationship to their electors.
He
did not consider himself superior to his voters and believed in the sovereignty
of the people rather than in the sovereignty of parliament. To him, the
sovereignty of the people represented “a higher order of sovereignty because the
people can lend power to Parliament for a period and then take it back again.”
To emphasise his point he continued: “I think it is always worth remembering
that Parliament is a derivative of popular sovereignty and not its
superior.”
Justice
is not a cloistered virtue
The
phrase ‘cloistered virtue’ was first employed by Lord
Atkin in a leading case involving contempt of court. He said:
“Justice is not a cloistered virtue; she must suffer the scrutiny and
respectful, even outspoken criticism, comments by ordinary men.”
It
is right that justice should suffer the scrutiny of right thinking men but it is
equally important that there is no interference with the judiciary and that
judges do not give in to interference, especially from those in power. Power
must be exercised to serve justice but judges must not court power but act as a
check on it.
Speaking
of the independence of the judiciary, Winston
Churchill said that it provides
“the
guarantee of freedom and the equal rule of law… It must, therefore, be the first
concern of the citizens of a free country to preserve and maintain the
independence of the courts of justice, however inconvenient that independence
may be, on occasion, to the government of the day.”
Detachment
is a necessary and unavoidable condition of the judges’ existence because of the
nature of their work. Again, it was Churchill who said: “A form of life and
conduct far more severe and restricted than that of ordinary people is required
from judges and, though unwritten, has been most strictly observed. They are at
once privileged and restricted. They have to present a continuous aspect of
dignity and conduct.”
Judges
do not have to be divorced from reality or lose touch with the people but judges
cannot be guided by the opinion of the public or their representatives. As was
said in a South African case, there would be no need for constitutional
adjudication if public opinion were to be decisive. “The protection of rights
could then be left to Parliament, which has a mandate from the public, and is
answerable to the public for the way its mandate is exercised … The very reason
for establishing the new legal order … was to protect the rights of minorities
and others who cannot protect their rights adequately through the democratic
process. Those who are entitled to claim this protection include the social
outcasts and marginalised people of our society. It is only if there is a
willingness to protect the worst and weakest among us that all of us can be
secure that our own rights will be protected.”
Justice as fair trial
Judges
dispense justice. It is not for nothing that the place where justice is
dispensed is referred to as ‘a temple of justice’.
Justice
is much more than mere ruminations about philosophical and ethical questions on
right and wrong. The English common lawyers formulated justice as fair
trial. Lord
Denning identified the essential principles of a fair trial, and
declared that the first of those principles is the requirement that a judge
should be absolutely independent of government.
An
entire chapter of the Dhammapada is devoted to explaining the essence of
justice. For instance, it says that:
Not
by passing arbitrary judgments does a man become just; a wise man is he who
investigates both right and wrong.
He
who does not judge others arbitrarily, but passes judgment impartially according
to the truth, that sagacious man is a guardian of law and is called just.
Conclusion
One
needs to ponder the intervention of Fate and Providence in the administration of
justice. Fate seems to have played a cruel joke in the ousting of the
previous Chief
Justice, creating a fait accompli for Providence to elevate
the present occupant to that prized position. In so doing did these forces allow
themselves to deviate from the just path laid by the Dhamma?