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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 28, 2016
Chandrika Kumaratunga's point
Fragments.
Posted by Uditha Devapriya -Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Politicians are wont to speak frankly on issues that ail them,
particularly with regard to issues they feel should be prioritised in
the interests of the country. Sure, there’s no such thing as a clean
motive when it comes to them, but it is true that once in a while, they
tend to slip up the truth, though conveniently hiding part of it under
ideology-garb. Can’t help. With politicians, here and elsewhere, this is
as timeless a truism as it’s going to get.
Former president (and present head of a government-mandated office to
promote inter-ethnic reconciliation) Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga
was noticeably irked when she delivered a speech recently. She commented
on the trend of some schools in the country to restrict admissions to
students of a particular race or religion, and had earned the ire of
these schools on social media. She made some points and tried to
clarify.
Firstly, she named names. She pointed at Buddhist schools. “Students in
them don’t even get to hobnob with Tamils and Muslims. Is it any wonder
that this country breeds wars, when we have a set of educational
institutions that breed racialism?” She recounted an anecdote from her
term in office, when she’d visited one of these schools and found out
that not a single student was outside the Sinhala Buddhist community.
She admitted a Muslim student, but that act was opposed when the student
had to face harassment at the hands of his “friends” (not surprisingly,
he had to leave).
And so she offered her bomb: “We need to enforce a minimum quota of
minorities in these schools.” She didn’t drop it. She didn’t need to.
That was enough. From that point on, therefore, she became a target on
social media.
One can question (validly) why she picked on Buddhist schools in
particular, but to her credit she argued that the situation was just as
despicable in Muslim and Tamil schools. The reaction she got was
predictable and respectful of historical realities: “These schools have
existed for over 100 years, they were founded at a time when
non-Christians were rubbished, and they served a function which
continues even today.” Put briefly, the argument is that this country
has enough and more space for schools dedicated to “missionary
activity”, but very few dedicated to the faith followed by the majority.
There’s nothing wrong in identity-assertion. Human beings are not, and
will never be, lotus-eaters who fell from the sky. Even those who brand
themselves as identity-less, who renounce faith and embrace a nebulous
cosmopolitanism, are marked out well by their cultural, hereditary
roots. To demarcate an entire educational institute as “racist” is to
miss the point, and to miss some pertinent historical facts.
The point is that these schools were not started with the intention of
preserving race and racialism. They were there purely because the
Buddhists of this country couldn’t find a proper set of schools that
suited their religious requirements. Neither the Catholic Church nor the
Church of England could resist sidelining them, and in the end what
happened was the creation of a Sinhala Buddhist consciousness that
matured and was stunted in later decades. In other words, this
consciousness wasn’t birthed by a need to exclude, but by a need to
assert. Which is why, from their inception, such schools welcomed and
embraced students of other communities.
This doesn’t marginalise what the former president said. But it does
raise a problem. A pertinent one. If we’re so insistent on increasing
the minority quota, as she suggested, why do we choose to go quiet over
other educational institutions that privilege some and discriminate
others? No, I am not talking about Muslim and Tamil schools. I’m talking
about schools that are assisted only partially by the state, which are
handled and managed by religious denominations. If Kumaratunga thinks
that only Buddhist schools indulge in such crass selectivity with
respect to admissions, she is wrong. And selectively so.
And to be fair, the claim that Buddhist schools make – that very few
leading schools exist which cater (exclusively and specifically) to the
needs of the Sinhala Buddhist community – is correct. Compare the number
of (leading) schools which cater to the Christians, contrast with the
number that exists for the Buddhists, the Muslims, and the Hindus, take
into account ethno-religious “proportions”, and you’ll see what I’m
talking about. Isn’t it an injustice, then, to claim that such schools
should not exist, that they should be branded as racist by those who
themselves sanctioned, by omission or commission, selectivity back in
their day?
Of course, the former president hasn’t, to the best of my knowledge,
argued for completely doing away with privileging an identity. She has
asked for increasing the minority quota (to about five or 10 percent).
She has also demanded (implicitly) for other schools to follow, though
she specifically didn’t mention the Christian ones. She should.
So what’s the solution? Promoting an amorphous identity-less identity in
our curriculum? Hardly. As I’ve written elsewhere, in our education
discourse what’s privileged is secularism, not multiculturalism. Utterly
crass. To remove religion and culture from our syllabus on the pretext
that both subjects inject and promote majoritarianism and
minoritarianism is to call for a reality that doesn’t exist. Not because
it’s untenable, but because it’s useless: identities aren’t just
created by school, they’re created outside it. Racists aren’t birthed by
the syllabus, but by their social conditioning. Change and reform that,
and you’ll see peace and harmony eventually.
I think Kumaratunga’s proposal was misinterpreted on social media.
“Increase the quota,” she said. “She’s asking us to change our history!”
howled commentators. To be fair by them, Kumaratunga wasn’t (and isn’t)
exactly perceived as a supporter of Sinhala Buddhist nationalism. But
that’s beside the point.
She made a suggestion. Like all suggestions, it was open to debate.
Doesn’t mean we should go on a tangent and trash her. And doesn’t mean
we shouldn’t be wary of how that suggestion can be interpreted and
abused in favour of those who continue, for worse I should think, to
grind an axe with the Sinhala Buddhists of this country.
The education discourse in this country, as I’ve implied before, is
shaped by identity. To do away with it isn’t the answer. But to
accommodate the “other”, to get rid of this conception that views
minorities as the “other”, and to affirm an identity that’s neither
amorphous nor hostile, is the solution. I’m not sure whether increasing
the quota is a panacea, because de-segregation without the attendant and
necessary changes in mindsets among our people would be useless.
Put simply, the lady has a point. But that paints just half the picture.
Going on a tangent and losing temper isn’t the answer. The answer is to
confront the issue, examine history, and be fair to all. Picking on
Buddhist schools while sidelining others will NOT help reconciliation.
Purely and simply.
We need to work fast, hence. We need to change ourselves. By ourselves.
Uditha Devapriya is a freelance writer who can be reached at udakdev1@gmail.co