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 1, 2013
In Retrospect: Burning of Jaffna library and the genocide thread
Every nation,
every ethnicity or grouping of people with a common identity has its own
cultural icons that distinguish its values, aspirations and history.
Most important, though, was its’ significance as a centre of knowledge
and learning, with 95,000 books, the personal collections of many
revered scholars, centuries-old newspapers and ancient palm leaf
manuscripts that were invaluable records in the contested history of Sri
Lanka.
On this day 32 years ago, the Jaffna library, and its priceless
contents, were a smouldering wreck, gutted by a fire deliberately lit by
raging Sinhalese mobs helped by police and encouraged by the Sinhalese
Government, which openly supported the regular pogroms that killed
thousands of Tamils and destroyed their businesses and homes.
Those manuscripts that define ancient Jaffna culture and those records
from the lives of the famous Tamil scholars were lost forever.
As Tamil people commemorated another tragic day in their modern history
this week, it is worth recording the link between the state-run
persecution of Tamils today and this 1981 travesty; a travesty not just
against Tamils but against a civilised world that places inestimable
value on knowledge and education.
What happened then, and what is still happening now in Sri Lanka, is a genocide, plain and simple. No ifs, not buts.
When those mobs torched the 48-year-old Jaffna library building
on May 31, 1981, it was a highly symbolic attack upon Tamil culture,
one meant to send a message that Tamil knowledge and learning, which was
so widely-recognised and respected in the world, was being snuffed out,
killed off, reduced to ashes, a black, grey nothingness that would
never again blossom.
No people or government encourages and participates in the destruction
of such important symbols of culture for isolated reasons. This was
pre-meditated, part of a genocidal plan that, in modern terms, can be
traced back to the departure of the British in 1947 and the arrival into
power of a Sinhalese chauvinist movement, hell-bent on ignoring a
constitution supposedly meant to protect the Tamils and other
minorities’ rights, but which was nothing more than a green light for
genocide.
Of course, the world today prefers to keep discussion on Sri Lanka
confined to a relatively-recent human rights issue, but, as has been
said many times, keeping within this framework might suit duplicitous
world powers motivated by strategic interests in south Asia but it does
nothing to get to the heart of the problem.
The world’s powers could easily connect the dots of genocide by looking
straight into the torture chambers, the jails, the rapes, the
Israeli-like land thefts and building of new Sinhalese settlements, the
permanent Sinhalese militarisation of the north and east, the
destruction of Hindu temples and replacement with Buddhist shrines, and
the re-naming in Sinhala of Tamil streets and villages.
Instead, by using only a human rights’ framework, they are able to avert
their eyes and talk limply about the need to inquire into atrocities on
both sides of a civil war and, of course, maintain engagement with a
Government accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity because,
they say, it can lead to reconciliation in the country.
It is, of course, a load of codswallop. As the South African truth and
reconciliation commission showed in the 1990s, there can be no
reconciliation without proper truth-seeking and justice to those who
have suffered for generations through institutionalised oppression....
and certainly not while the oppression continues.
This engagement of countries, such as Australia and the UK, with the Sri
Lankan Government is doing nothing more than giving a brutal regime
elbow-room to carry on with its’ genocide and ethnic-cleansing programs.
As the Jaffna University academic, Guruperan Kumaravadivel, observed recently,
without the history of Tamil oppression and the on-going structural
genocide, the story of the Tamils has little meaning. People need to
look at the disenfranchisement and oppression from which the Tamil
Tigers emerged to understand the situation, then and today.
As he said, the language of terror paints absolutist pictures that remove the possibility of context and history.
The language of reconciliation also hides the stark reality of a
genocide that is revealed in so many ways today. It’s there in the
scars on the back of a Melbourne Tamil man tortured only last month with
heated metal rods in a Sri Lankan police station; in the deaths of at
least 34 journalists who have sought to uncover the truth of this
ruthless Rajapaksa regime.
It’s also there in the growing numbers of Tamils undertaking
life-threatening boat journeys to Australia as they flee the unrelenting
terror in their lives; and sadly, it’s there in the jailings, beatings
and torture of Tamil asylum-seekers cruelly returned under the illegal,
inhumane policies of the Australian and UK governments.
On this day of commemoration, let us not forget the common thread that
links all these despicable, undeniable human rights abuses and the
smouldering ruins of the Jaffna library 32 years ago today; a thread
called genocide.
Image courtesy of Myra Veres | http://myraveres.wix.com
Trevor Grant is
a former chief cricket writer at The Age, and now works with the
Boycott Sri Lanka Cricket Campaign and the Refugee Action Collective.