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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, July 26, 2013
The making of ‘The Brothers Shaikh’
Photo courtesy Manchester Evening News

Kannan Arunasalam -26 Jul, 2013
When the journalist Peter Savodnik asked me to collaborate with him on making The Brothers Shaikh, I said no. I was scared. This was my home. I knew that if I crossed some invisible line, there would be repercussions.
But then I changed my mind.
What convinced me was that The Brothers Shaikh was
a story ordinary Sri Lankans could relate to. The story is not
complicated by terrorism, or how the war ended or about emerging
conflicts. It’s about a gang of men who committed the crimes of murder
and rape against two individuals. Not because of their politics, their
ethnicity or their religion, but simply out of rage and lust and a sense
of power over the weak.
For me, Sri Lanka is a complicated, beautiful country. The government in
Colombo wants the world to believe that everything is normal and that
anything abnormal is the fault of outsiders conspiring against it.
According to this line of thinking, there is no violence against women
or Islamophobia; there have never been any serious human-rights abuses.
These are, we’re told, fictions created by Western governments meant to
destabilise the country.
I believe that Sri Lankans are decent and honest people who would be
appalled at the behaviour of these men. About crimes committed against a
couple who only really wanted to enjoy the beauty of their tropical
island and the warm welcome of their people. Something I fell in love
with when I made Sri Lanka my home 8 years ago.
But there is one thing in common between these crimes and the news
reports about Sri Lanka that have filled the pages of media this week
because of the anniversary of Black July: the idea thatyou can get away with it.
The film touches on many of the themes at the heart of Sri Lanka’s
identity crisis. I was fascinated by these themes, these ugly
manifestations of our past and our fragmented politics and culture. I
thought that if we could delve deeply into stories like that of Khuram
Shaikh and his brother’s quest to see that Khuram’s killers are brought
to justice, then we could begin to make sense of things, to understand
how we arrived here — and, more importantly, to start building a better
country.
The Brothers Shaikh, produced and reported by Peter Savodnik, directed and filmed by Kannan Arunasalam and Ed Perkins. The film was first posted on The New Yorker on 26 July 2013.
Editors note: The
New Yorker video’s resolution is very low, making is blurred on large
screens and Apple Retina displays. The producers have promised to
release a high-definition version soon.