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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, November 24, 2013
Whither Justice? The Proposal For A South African Style TRC In Sri Lanka
As a preliminary observation, however, it is important to note that contemporarySri Lanka and post-apartheid South Africa have
vastly different political and social contexts. The South African TRC
(SA TRC) model and amnesties were worked out after a formal transfer of
power from the regime responsible for the vast majority of crimes under
apartheid to the leaders of the liberation struggle. Moreover the
dominant religious belief system in South Africa—where Christian rituals
of repentance and forgiveness have significant theological resonance—is
fundamentally different to the religious beliefs of the majority of
Tamil, Sinhala and Muslim victims.
Nevertheless, the SA TRC continues to possess an enduring appeal for
Colombo based—as opposed to North and East based—civil society NGOs.
Very few, if any, conversations on reconciliation and transitional
justice within Colombo civil society networks conclude without
references to the SA TRC as the paradigmatic case of the ideal
transitional justice model. The Sri Lankan government has also sought to
draw parallels between its own attitude to post-conflict justice
reflected in the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission, and the
SA TRC.
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I
will call him Jayaseelan because I can’t recall his name (Preposterous
but bear with me). Jayaseelan is a Tamil speaking Vadda who is an
ex-LTTE fighter. Sometime after 2009, Sunday Divaina had done a
story on Jayaseelan. It had captured a retrospective inner conflict
going on within the man. Jayaseelan confessed to asking himself the
question, “I am a Vadda. Why did I fight for a separate Tamil state?”
However, that was not what made the story stick in my mind. Jayaseelan
had a grandfather who, while recounting the history of their community
in the area, had let drop, almost casually, that they were Bandara
Vannia’s[i] people.
Memories Of The Wanni; The Vaddas And The Vanniyas
Sharing the Wanni like they did the Vaddas and Vanniyas intermingled in
interesting ways. They married each other, transformed into each other,
and became “ruler” and the “ruled over” to each other in unidirectional
ways with the Vanniyas ruling over bands of Vaddas. They even came to
resemble each other in ways that caused certain 19th century British administrators to suspect a relationship[ii] (S. Fowler, Diary of 3rd May 1887).
In Sinhala consciousness of living memory the term “wanniya” (closed vowel) is a geographic term inalienably bound-up with “wanaya” and “wanantharaya” (meaning forest). “Wanni wanantharaya”, “wanni mukalana”, “hadda wanniya”, “heethala wanniya”
are colloquial Sinhalese usages carrying strong subliminal associations
of the Vadda. The Vaddas are of course carriers of the name “wanniyalettho”, the present Vadi chieftain being “Uruwarige Wanniyalettho”.
For Sri Lanka, the period between the 13th and 17th centuries
was a time of resurgence and recovery. In-migrations were orchestrated
from Bengal and diverse parts of South India. There were irrigation
works to restore and de populated regions to reclaim. “The involvement
of the Sinhala-dominated states in this process of in-migration is
demonstrated in several sources.”- (Roberts: 2004,
p72). South India, the source of most of these in-migrations was a land
which had a well established Vanniya tradition. The earliest references
to the Vanniya in South India predate Lankan references and go back to
the 11th century inscriptions of the Colas. The earliest South Indian mention is the word “vanniya parru” occurring in the “inscription No. 556 of 1919, which appears to belong to the time of Rajaraja I (985-1014)”.-(Indrapala, 1970[iii]). “Vanniya-parru” means vanniya holding (ibid) and seems to find a corresponding echo in the Sinhalese term “vanni peruven” found in “Vanni Bandara Vitti Potak: Rate Attange Niti kandaya”.
This manuscript, (Or 6606-182) in the Hugh Nevill Collection contains
the Sinhalese folk historical tradition about the arrival of first
immigrant group in the wanni region of Lanka and says that these seven “malavara”
chieftains came from Kumara-valiyen (princely clan) ); Bndara-valiyen
(from the families of dignitaries); and from Vanni-Peruven (Vanni class
of Vanni land).-(D.G.B 1996[iv]).

