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, March 1, 2014
A case for the racism paradigm
By Izeth Hussain-February 28, 2014, 8:53 pm
What
are ethnic problems about? Almost invariably they are about
discrimination. Sometimes ethnic groups claim the right to establish a
separate state on the principle of self-determination and that is the
source of some ethnic problems. But for the most part even they are
willing to forego the claim to a separate state if they are given fair
and equal treatment – that is, if they are not subjected to
discrimination.
So, discrimination is of the very essence of ethnic problems. But there
is a curious lacuna in the terminology used in ethnic discourse. In the
act of discrimination x is the subject who discriminates against y who
is the object of discrimination. What is the term to designate x? There
is no such term as "ethnicist" unlike the term "racist" in the discourse
of racism. Therefore ethnic discourse neatly elides away what is at the
very core of ethnic problems: discrimination. That suits the purposes
of majoritarian racists.
Also revealing is the discourse on national identity. From 1989 to 1994 I
participated in several seminars on national identity, and I even
presented papers at a couple of them. At that time the widespread
assumption in the intellectual community was that the answer to the
ethnic problem was to work out an authentic Sri Lankan national identity
transcending our ethnic and other identities. Maybe, but how was that
to be done? As far as I can recall that question was hardly ever
addressed. I myself came to the notion that developing a transcendent
national identity would be possible only if the minorities are given
fair and equal treatment – that is if they are not discriminated
against. They would then develop a sense of togetherness, of belonging,
of being not just in Sri Lanka but of Sri Lanka. A scholar researching
all that dreary material on national identity would probably find that
it was only I, a minority member, who stressed the importance of the
problem of discrimination in connection with national identity. The
majority members ignored that problem. That was possible and convenient
within the confines of ethnic discourse. On the other hand, the
discourse of racism would bring the problem of discrimination to the
forefront.
It is a curious fact that the term ‘racism’ has come into vogue in Sri
Lanka in recent years, and it looks like it is in the process of
replacing the earlier ubiquitous ‘communalism’. But, what is meant by
‘racism’ is not properly understood, certainly not in the way that it is
very widely understood in the West. It seems to me important to bring
about a proper understanding of what is meant by ‘racism’ because the
paradigm of racism can enable us to handle our ethnic problems much more
effectively than in the past, benefiting greatly from the vast
experience gathered in the West in countering racism. The way we have
handled our ethnic problems up to now has been – to put it in one
precise eloquent word – idiotic.
I will not attempt to define ‘racism’ because all such political terms –
for instance democracy, Fascism, terrorism and so on – can have over a
hundred definitions and yet none of them will be definitive in the sense
that it commands universal assent. Instead, I will provide some
pointers to show how the term is understood today. The core idea is that
some ethnic groups are inherently, intrinsically, essentially,
enduringly, almost unchangeably inferior to others. At this point I must
make a clarification. Traditionally, in the West, racism was understood
to mean that some races were genetically and unchangeably inferior to
others. But it came to be established that there is no such thing as a
pure race, and besides it has proved impossible to establish that the
inferiority of an ethnic group has been genetically determined.
Therefore, ‘race’ has come to be replaced by ‘culture’ in the
sociological sense, and we now have paradoxically racism without race.
The important point, however, is that under modern racism some ethnic
groups are seen as essentially inferior to others.
I must now explain what is meant by ‘essentialism’ as it is the key
concept in race theory. This is what Pierre Andre Taguieff, one of the
foremost theorists of race, has to say about it, in my literal
translation: "Mode of thought which consists in attributing to all
members of a group, and tendentiously to them alone, certain
characteristics, explaining these by the nature or essence of the group,
(by its natural dispositions) rather than by situational factors".
Certain consequences follow from the above definition; one is what has
been called ‘synechdocic substitution’, by which is meant the
application to the whole of what is true only of the part. For instance,
I am an orthodox Sunni Muslim and I am proud of being so, in which way I
am a typical SL Muslim, but at the same time I am thoroughly
Westernised and some would say an intellectual, in which ways I am not a
typical SL Muslim. But the racist would say that the Westernisation is
bogus and being an intellectual intolerable pretentiousness and that in
essence I remain a trader, cunning, unscrupulous, and all out for gain.
What might be true of a part is thus being applied to the whole. All
this points to another characteristic of the racist: the propensity to
think in terms of stereotypes.
One of the most important characteristics of racism is irrationality,
which for some reason is not given central importance in race theory. It
is not an exclusive defining characteristic because non-racists can be
irrational, but it is an integral part of racism that should be given
central importance because of its terrifying destructive and
self-destructive potential. I have pointed out in an earlier article
that it is arguable that Hitler lost the Second World War because of his
racist belief that the Soviet Union would very quickly cave in to a
German invasion. The reason why racism and irrationality go integrally
together requires investigation. I have in mind some brilliant thinking
by Bertrand Russell, not on racism but on irrationality, which cannot be
covered in this article because it includes some complex philosophical
arguments. So, I will merely quote the following from his 1935 essay,
The Ancestry of Fascism: "Rationalism and anti-rationalism have existed
side by side since the beginning of Greek civiisation, and each, when it
has seemed likely to become completely dominant, has always led, by
reaction, to a new outburst of its opposite".
In concluding this exposition of what is meant by racism I must make an
important clarification. Ethno-centric prejudice is not the same thing
as racism. One of the great anthropologists of the last century, Claude
Levi-Strauss, wrote that there is not a single ethnic group, even those
lost in the depths of the Matto Grosso jungle, which does not believe
that its way of life incarnates all the best of which human life is
capable. Suspicion and a jaundiced view of the Other may be practically
ubiquitous all over the world. But if that is racism, it would not be
particularly objectionable because it would be seen simply as part of
the human condition. But, it is seen in the contemporary world as deeply
objectionable, indeed as a disease that is containable and corrigible,
if not entirely ineradicable,
Racism, therefore, is not just a matter of perceiving the Other
negatively. Perception has to lead to action that is inimical to the
legitimate interests of the Other. Perceiving the Other as essentially
inferior, or as too alien to allow positive rapport with him or as
threatening and dangerous, could lead to his being discriminated
against, his being excluded in various ways, and even his being
subjected to genocide. Perception is, of course, important because that
is what could lead to negative action.
The above is in broad outline what I have in mind by the paradigm of
racism, which I hold will lead to far more effective action on our
so-called ethnic problems than has been the case hitherto. We can learn a
great deal from the West about action to counter racism, a field in
which they have much expertise after 1945. We urgently need legislation
against hate speech. We need an Equal Opportunities Bill, which in fact
was mooted in the late ’nineties by Prof. G. L. Peiris but was
shamefully allowed to lapse by CBK. We need the equivalents of the
West’s Race Relations Boards. And so on.
I believe that what we need, above all, is to bring about a widespread
awareness that it is racism that has been wrecking our ethnic relations
over many decades, racism on both sides of the ethnic fence, with the
Muslims relentlessly bootlicking the Sinhalese power-elite. We need the
equivalents of RAT (Racism Awareness Training) programmes that are in
use in some Western countries, because most Sri Lankans I believe are
not even aware of their own racism. We need to be made aware that it is
the essentialising habit of mind that is at the core of racism that
underlies our unconscionably protracted ethnic imbroglio: the Sinhalese
believe that the Tamils are essentially separatist and will use
devolution only to strike out for Eelam, while the Tamils believe that
the Sinhalese will never give them fair and equal treatment because of
an essential and unchangeable Mahawamsa mind-set.
I will conclude this article by looking at our ethnic imbroglio through
another perspective: that of tribalism and universalism. We cannot
transcend tribalism and racism through counter-tribalism and
counter-racism. We can do that only through universalism. In Sri Lanka
the four great world religions are flourishing, which by definition as
world religions transcend tribalism and racism. Furthermore, the wider
ecumenism establishing common ground between the four great world
religions has been much in vogue in recent decades. But, the world
religions can also be used only for the affirmation of group bonds and
no more than that. The example of Islam in Sri Lanka is very striking. I
believe that of all the great world religions Islam is the most
universalist with a deep in-built abhorrence of tribalism and racism.
But, in recent decades we have seen our Muslims use Islam for the
affirmation of group bonds to what looks like a pathological extent. We
cannot attain universalism through our religions. Is it – a heretical
thought that will drive some Sri Lankans to fury – that we can attain
universalism only through Westernisation?
Izethhussain@gmail.com