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, October 31, 2015
''This is a moment we cannot afford to lose'' -Mangala
Speech for the Commemoration of the 25th Anniversary of the Muslims of the Northern Province
Lanka-e-News
-30.Oct.2015, 4.50PM) I would like to thank the Sri Lanka Muslim
Congress for organizing this commemoration of the 25th Anniversary of
the Expulsion of Muslims from the North. At this historic juncture, when
Sri Lanka is grappling with its past and creating a constitutional
framework for true peace, this tragic episode in our history, and the
anguish that persists to this day, needs to be remembered and addressed.
I would like to particularly thank Minister Rauff Hakeem for his vision
and leadership in organizing this event - it is a privilege to be
invited here to speak a few words. The SLMC has a long and chequered
history of advocating on behalf their community’s rights. Both the late
Mr. Ashraff and Minister Hakeem have boldly voiced the grievances and
concerns of the Muslim community in Cabinet, in Parliament, in the press
and in their travels abroad. The SLMC’s fact-finding and reporting
efforts during the Aluthgama Pogrom and surrounding attacks were
particularly bold.
The history and suffering of Sri Lanka’s Northern Muslims is a microcosm
of our post-Independence history. In October 1990 the LTTE gave 75,000
Muslims under forty-eight hours to leave their ancestral homes across
the North and take nothing more than their clothes and 500 rupees to
live in IDP camps – where an estimated 80 percent remain 25 years
later.
They had peacefully lived, farmed and traded with their Tamil brethren
for centuries. In fact, some Muslims initially helped the LTTE and many
more were sympathetic to their cause. The bonds between the communities
were close. Therefore, the LTTE’s sudden order came as a surprise to
many. It was a crime that shocked the conscience of the entire country.
The LTTE’s justification echoed the age-old line of majorities towards
minorities: they, the majority, had been lenient, generous and
considerate, while the minorities have been treacherous and ungrateful.
In this case, the Tigers alleged that the Muslims’ specific crime was
colluding with the state and the Indian Peacekeeping Forces.
But underlying the arguments about Muslims being a fifth column and a
security threat to the LTTE was something more pernicious. It was a
belief that the power of numerical majority was a justification for
violating the rights of individuals and minority groups.
The North of Sri Lanka was as much home for its Muslim population as it
was for its Tamil population. Both communities had as much claim as the
other to live there and these claims were not contested. The two
communities had lived together for centuries in peace.
But the LTTE believed that the Tamil population’s numerical majority
gave it the right to expel the entire Muslim population. It was not just
the LTTE, few Tamils criticized the LTTE while many justified their
actions; even today Muslims returning to their homes face majoritarian
resistance from Tamil bureaucrats.
The story is of course many-sided. Numerous Tamils weeped when their
Muslim neighbors left, hiding valuables on their behalf and helping them
in what little way they could. But as a whole, the majority community,
failed to stand in solidarity and protect the rights of the minority
community in their midst.
The expulsion occurred because the LTTE was unable to accept a society
based on equality and freedom; they were unable to accept that North was
multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and multi-religious. They were unable to
celebrate diversity. They were even unable to have the basic decency to
give the community they exiled a few extra days or weeks to leave and to
take their heirlooms and title deeds with them.
The racism and majoritarianism undergirding the LTTE’s expulsion of
Muslims from the North is not something isolated to the Tamil community.
It prevails to this day among all communities in our society. Just as
the LTTE was unable to accept a multi-ethnic North, extremists in the
South are unable to celebrate our country’s diversity - much the less
accept that Tamils, Muslims, Burghers and Malays are as much a part of
Sri Lanka as the Sinhalese.
Especially since the end of the war, which should have ushered
introspection, magnanimity and healing, majoritarianism in the South
raised its ugly head. The government indulged in an orgy of triumphalism
based on equating Sri Lanka’s identity with the Sinhala-Buddhist
community, and relegated the minority communities to the place of
unwanted guests.
They ignored the grievances of those in the North and the South and
trampled on their rights. The Aluthgama Pogrom and the hundreds of
smaller attacks surrounding it were a clear signal to minorities that
they were not only second-class citizens but that the state had
abdicated from discharging its basic responsibilities towards them,
including safeguarding their person and property.
In fact, it is this scourge of majoritarianism that is at the very
centre of our post-Independence failure to build a peaceful and
prosperous Sri Lanka that is united and undivided both on the map and in
its citizens’ hearts and minds. Each and every ethnic, religious, class
and caste group discriminates and oppresses in areas where they form a
majority whether it be in the North, South, East or West.
At this critical moment in Sri Lanka’s history the lessons of the
expulsion have much to teach us. Since Independence we have failed to
establish a society where all citizens feel equal and free and, as a
result, instead of peace, conflict has prevailed.
The end of the war presented a historic opportunity for all our
communities and leaders to demonstrate true leadership by breaking away
from the past and beginning the task of building a truly united Sri
Lanka. Just as Muslims and Tamils lived together as brothers and
sisters in the North for centuries; prior to Independence in 1948, Sri
Lanka had many centuries of ethnic amity and peace.
Of course, there were disturbances, like the 1915 riots, but they were
isolated and rare. Even before the colonial era, Sri Lanka enjoyed a
highly syncretic culture – there is evidence that Buddhism was widely
practiced by the Tamils of Jaffna, Tamil was spoken by the kings of
Kandy and there are some indications that the language of court was
Tamil; Muslims generally speak both Sinhalese and Tamil and thus it
could be argued that they are the most Sri Lankan of all the ethnic
groups. They were also functionaries at the Dalada Maligawa and
participated in the Kandy Esala Perahera. The religious and cultural
practices of Sri Lanka’s many communities indicate a high degree of
tolerance and borrowing.
We need to understand why that amity broke down, and why it broke down to the extent that war and violence followed.
The challenge for us today is to learn from our past failures, remedy
mistakes and move forward. This is a rare opportunity we cannot miss.
Speaking in Parliament last Friday I said, “Sri Lanka has yet another
window of opportunity to come to terms with its past and move on.
Extremists in the North and in the South have been defeated in the
recent elections, two of the most liberal minded leaders since
independence are leading the country and the two main parties, for the
first time in history, have formed a national unity government. This is a
moment we cannot afford to lose.”
But it will not be an easy or a pleasant process: we will have to look
critically at our own faults and strive hard to hear the voices of
others. It will require courage and commitment. But I am confident it
can be done.
The TNA recently announced that it would be leading its own community in
a process of introspection. The SLMC, welcoming this statement,
indicated that it would do so as well. The National Government
comprising of both the United National Party and the Sri Lanka Freedom
Party have committed themselves to guiding the entire country in this
difficult process of dealing with the past.
As for the Government of Sri Lanka – as you are aware- we are now
beginning to lay the foundations for peace and reconciliation through
truth-seeking, accountability, reparations and non-recurrence. Already
the Office of National Unity and Reconciliation, the Ministry of
Resettlement and other government agencies are taking steps to assist in
this process, and just yesterday I met with civil society, including
representatives of the Muslim community, to discuss the consultations
process necessary to design the mechanisms to implement this process.
Muslims will be an integral part of the truth, justice, reparations and
non-recurrence process. Muslims’ grievances and concerns will be a part
of the consultations, design and operationalization of the domestic
mechanisms; including the Commission for Truth, Justice, Reconciliation
and Non-recurrence, the Judicial Mechanism, the Office of Missing
Persons and the Office of Reparations. Together with the Ministries and
government agencies, these mechanisms, will provide much needed relief
to the daily struggle of the thousands of Muslims who remain in IDP
camps, are struggling to return to their homes or are dealing with the
losses of loved ones.
These mechanisms will not only address the suffering and grievances of
members of the Muslim community, they will also address the grievances
and concerns of members of the Sinhala and Tamil communities and the
concerns of other minority groups.
At this historic moment, let us not be afraid to engage in meaningful
dialogue aimed at finding solutions to problems as opposed to pointing
fingers, heaping blame and scoring political points at the expense of
future generations. Let us design, define and create our future by our
hopes and aspirations, and not be held back by the fears and prejudices
of the past. Let us not be afraid to dream.
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by (2015-10-30 11:46:58)
by (2015-10-30 11:46:58)