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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, July 26, 2013
The perpetual conflict: Part 3
Photo via blackjuly.info
Harendra Alwis- 26 Jul, 2013

The Politics of Identity
It seems all too obvious that the
regular cycles of violence that have emerged in our recent history since
1915 are distinctly communal in character. Indeed, every battle of
every war in our history has always been characterised as those between
communities on either side of cultural or religious divisions. However,
there are two problems with that conclusion. The first is that Sri Lanka
is – generally – and ethnically homogenous country consisting of an
ancient mix of North Indian, South Indian, Persian, Arabian and South
East Asian ethnic groups that have lost much of their distinct
differences. Vestiges of the diverse cultures that settled and mixed in
this tiny cosmopolitan island that lay in the path of the busiest trade
routes of the ancient world, can be found in the names of its peoples.
The fact that Sinhalese has always been natively spoken uniquely in Sri
Lanka bear testimony to the fact that we were never a distinct ethnic
group that migrated to this island en-mass, but that our unique identity
evolved as a result of the mixing of diverse cultures over hundreds – I
f not thousands – of years. Before the British built our modern road
network and motorised transportation made it possible for us to traverse
the length or breadth of this island in under a day, we only travelled
long distances to migrate and settle. Much like the Sri Lankan migrants
of today who settle in foreign lands adapt the native tongue of those
countries, those of our ancestors and their children who settled in
Tamil speaking areas becameTamil and those who settled in Sinhalese areas became Sinhalese.
That is why Sri Lankan Tamils share closer genetic ties with their
Sinhala brethren than they do with their Indian cousins. Those from
similar caste backgrounds inter-married and when Sinhalese kings could
not find suitable brides from among their clansmen, they brought married
Tamil princesses from South India.
Though the educated elites of a previous generation had used their
privileged status to entrench their power and influence rather than to
empower the masses, limited land ownership and the universal franchise
has shifted political power to the masses even though the middle class
still occupied the high seats of enterprise. But even as the politically
irrelevant English speaking elite controlled much of the economy, the
‘sarong jonnies’ that they had sidelined and patronised, had become the
power brokers in our fledgling democracy. Yet, the more our world
changed in the decades after the end of the colonial project, the more
it stayed the same. Reforms of the national language policy would give
the native languages – Sinhala, and later Tamil – the prominence they
deserved and empower the popular masses that had been disadvantaged by
their lack of English language proficiency. But even though British were
no longer our rulers, English was still the language of a different
kind of hegemonic empire. American power and trade that shaped the post
WW II world would not only retain but enhance the relevance of English
as the language that would link their empire: or the global village.
To the extent that we think in words, those who could speak and read
English would inevitably be transformed by that in ways that monolingual
Sinhala and Tamil speaker weren’t. On one hand, they were exposed to a
broader flow of information; and on the other, they would absorb western
liberal values and worldview. The masses who were the kingmakers in our
democracy, spoke only their mother tongue for the most part. That not
only shielded them from the liberal democratic values that are usually
associated with a vibrant democracy, but also limited their ability to
interact with and understand the diverse cultures and communities that
constituted the modern state of Sri Lanka. From those early years since
independence, these socio-political imbalances and the persistence of
feudal traditions of a sheltered and insecure society, stood in the way
of meaningful democratisation.
Even though we have coexisted in this land from time immemorial, most
Sinhalese and a large number of Tamils do not speak or understand each
other’s languages. Is that why the Sinhalese and Tamils went to war
against each other? Well, it’s not so clear that they did. Apart from
the riots of July 1983, Sinhalese and Tamils not only coexisted but
mingled with each other in the southern half of Sri Lanka largely on
peaceful and cooperative terms. The tales we still hear about Sinhalese
families sheltering their Tamil friends weren’t aberrations of reality –
those who did were merely acting on the natural impulses. Even through
the riots of 1915, a majority of Sinhalese and Muslims got along just
fine. Therefore, differences in language, culture and faith do not offer
straightforward answers to questions about the causes of conflict.
The cycles of violent conflicts in post independent Sri Lanka are
described in the language of identity politics, as “youth
insurrections”, “race riots” and “religious tension”. Yet we do not pay
attention to who was involved and who wasn’t, why did some choose to
fight while others chose not to? These are not easy questions to grapple
with, let alone answer. But if we are to try sincerely and earnestly,
we must pay attention to the details. First we must understand that the
greatest burden that the British left behind was the useful, but
nevertheless unnatural, idea of the modern state. In the many thousands
of years that a myriad nationalities and tribes had lived side by side
in the East, we never had state borders. Yet in the wake of
independence, the various constellations of nationalities that the
British had mixed and matched throughout the empire were hastily grouped
together and state boarders were drawn by novice barristers to contain
them; where no river or mountain existed to mediate the conflicts that
would eventually erupt among them. We must also acknowledge that the
words ‘class’ and ‘caste’ have not lost their socio political relevance
in Sri Lanka. They are often the ultimate arbitrator that determines the
suitability of not only presidents and MPs who seek office, but even of
principals, teachers, prelates and bishops.