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, June 27, 2014
Wijeweera’s legacy
Lewwegoda Walawwa in
Bandarawela, where JVP founder leader Rohana Wijeweera was arrested
before being put to a violent death in 1989, will be handed over to the
National Youth Services Council (NYSC), Minister of Youth Affairs and
Skills Development Dullas Alahapperuma has said in Badulla recently.
Wijeweera was responsible for staging two abortive uprisings where
thousands of young lives were destroyed, as is common knowledge, and
whatever he owned should be vested with the youth.
By a strange quirk of fate a self-styled revolutionary leader who
claimed to champion the cause of the proletariat and spilled a great
deal of blood in a bid to overthrow the capitalist system happened to be
arrested while hiding in an aristocratic mansion in cooler climes.
Interestingly, even those who conduct grand ceremonies to commemorate
Wijeweera year in year out let their leader’s ancestral house
in Kottegoda go to rack and ruin. It has collapsed according to our
information. (Why the JVP did not consider conserving it as a museum is
the question.)
Minister Alahapperuma’s statement has brought back horrific memories of
savagery we witnessed in the late 1980s. Thankfully, the JVP has
metamorphosed into a democratic party over the years and is currently
led by a parliamentarian and former minister! It is not likely to repeat
its past mistakes—at least we hope so. But, the root causes of youth
unrest which fuelled its two insurrections are far from eliminated in
spite of much-advertised claims by successive governments to address
them. Most political leaders and policymakers haven’t even leafed
through the Presidential Commission on Youth report
which contains a host of valuable recommendations if how they are
mishandling issues affecting the youth is any indication. State
universities are a case in point. They became hotbeds of JVP terrorism
owing to undergrads’ frustration which Wijeweera et al tapped effectively to give their anarchical project a turbo boost.
Today, Minister of Higher Education S. B. Dissanayake claims to have rid
most of the universities of JVP activists and some leadership training
is given to university entrants as part of a government strategy to
inoculate them against radical politics. But, the undergrads’ problems
have gone unsolved and their resentment finds expression in aggressive
protests. Some faculties remain closed for months on end and none of
their grievances are redressed by university authorities unless they
take to the streets.
Unemployment is also a source of worry for the educated youth without
political connections. Wijeweera’s JVP, it may be recalled, preyed on
the unemployed or underemployed men and women. It coined an attractive
slogan to attract the resentful youth desperate for jobs: Kellanta Garment, Kollanta Pavement—‘Garment
factories for girls, pavement-hawking for boys’. The state sector
recruitment has become the preserve of a cabal and plum jobs are
reserved for political lackeys. Merit has long ceased to be the
criterion for employment in the public service.
The LTTE and the JVP succeeded in recruiting a large number of youth and
brainwashing them into unleashing mindless violence mainly because they
were disillusioned with the main political parties which offered no
solutions to their problems and they were left with no democratic
alternatives. Prabhakaran and Wijeweera may be pushing up daisies, but
there has been no discernible change on the political front. Corruption,
abuse of power, cronyism, nepotism, political violence and a culture of
impunity continue to characterise national politics. The democratic
Opposition is lying supine and the government is bulldozing its way
through.
The handover of Wijeweera’s mansion to the NYSC, we repeat, is a step in the right direction. Let Lewwegoda Walawwa serve
as a reminder to the present-day politicians that they have failed to
address the issues that gave rise to the JVP’s bloody revolts.