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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 31, 2015
Being A New Sri Lanka – Part 2
By Sanjayan Rajasingham -January 31, 2015
Stay aware
I’ve often heard the refrain “I’m not interested in politics”. If
“politics” here means the latest political gossip – what X’s son did,
who Y snubbed, etc – I’m not too interested either! However, if it means
how our rulers use the power we have given them, we need to think
again. Their power is public power, and they hold it for us. If we don’t keep an eye on them, they will probably abuse it.
Start small on this one. If you aren’t a newspaper person, read an
article on the front page of a newspaper each day, or if that’s too
much, one on the front page of a Sunday paper. Another option is to
follow a certain column (though here you are at the mercy of what the
columnist thinks is important). Either way, try and do one thing a week
to keep in touch with what’s going on. Along with this, talk to others
about what you read. Even if the papers are anathema to them, they will
listen (at least briefly) because it’s coming from you.
There are several important things going on these days. Check out
100days.lk and see if promises are being kept. Find out about the
budget, and ask if it’s just another election gimmick. Check out the
reinstatement ofShirani Bandaranayake and ask if you think it was right. These are the “political” events that we need to know something about.
Protest!
Go for public protests and rallies. This
will require time, some inconvenience, and a willingness to accept a
minimal level of risk. It is because of this that they are important.
Quite apart from whether the protest succeeds or not, there is something
about engaging in public protest, about publicly demanding change, that
can be transformative. It builds confidence. It makes us more likely to
resist when we are wronged. It deals a blow to the play-it-safe
mentality which is lethal to a democratic ethos. In short, it builds
civic character.Read More