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, July 23, 2016
Jaffna University Sinhala-Tamil Student Conflict was Insane!
The immediate dispute seems
to be trivial compared to many issues underpinning various challenges
confronting the country or the university students on reconciliation. A
‘main’ challenge seems to be the language, and thus the communication
and the cultural barrier.
( July 23, 2016, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) When
you come to think of it, the Sinhala-Tamil student conflict at the
University of Jaffna last weekend was insane. This was all pretentiously
about welcoming new students to a faculty of undergraduate studies.
This said faculty is not about ‘performing arts,’ let alone physical
prowess, but about Science. But the conflict was ostensibly about ‘drum
and music’ (Thavil and Nathasvaram) and ‘cultural dancing’ (the Kandyan
type!). As the Vice Chancellor declared last year in the Faculty’s
Handbook,
“I consider that the new entrants of the Faculty of Science are very
fortunate to pursue their undergraduate programme in such a well
reputed faculty. Thousands of science graduates passed out through the
portal of the Faculty of Science during the last forty years and serving
the community and the country as eminent scholars, scientists,
administrators, teachers and software engineers.”
It was not obviously the Freshers who were involved in the brawl or
violence, but their ‘esteemed’ seniors. These are the people, according
to the Vice Chancellor, who are supposed to be the future “eminent scholars, scientists, administrators, teachers and software engineers.”
Most amusingly, when you look at the pictures of the brawl, one cannot
identify a Sinhalese from a Tamil. I am not condemning the violence in
that faculty or that university alone. This is the situation
unfortunately in many universities and the country at large for a
long-long period. This insanity of violent conflict is also not peculiar
to Sri Lanka alone, but common in many countries involved in perceived
and actual conflicts of many varieties.
Look at what Mohamed Bouhlel did on the Bastille Day in Nice, two days
before the Jaffna incident, on the 14th. He took his delivery truck and
rammed into innocent bystanders, killing 84 persons including 10
children. ‘Frustration-aggression theory’ should not justify insane
violence. There are democratic ways and means available particularly to
the educated youth to resolve their disputes, whatever the existing
defects. It is our own duty to improve them, if they are defective.
The Danger
Most alarming and dangerous in this particular incident in Jaffna is
that it transpires not only juvenile insanity like in many episodes of
university ragging or group violence, but much more with possible future
repercussions. This conflict was waged with stones and sticks (like in
the stone-age!) pretentiously on behalf of millions of ‘innocent and
peace loving people’ belonging to the two main human communities in the
country, the Sinhalese and the Tamils.
I was particularly impressed by Prof. S. Srisatkunarajah’s message to
the new students last year, as the Dean of the Faculty, addressing them
as ‘My Dear Students’ and emphasizing this humanness. He didn’t talk
about Tamils or Sinhalese. As he said, “We are human beings and our
thirst for knowledge is innate. In this respect, cultivation of
knowledge in basic and applied sciences is fundamental. The Faculty of
Science is committed to fulfill your desire and ready to mould you as a
competent graduate, excelling in learning and research, and capable of
making useful contributions to the development of the nation.”
I am not condemning one group against the other. Both groups should be
condemned equally, for being responsible for the unwarranted
confrontation and consequent violence. Both groups, on the other hand,
may be excused, if they genuinely repent, apologize and reconcile, given
fortunately the minor character of the incident. It is not the dispute
per se that should be condemned, but its modus operandi or the resort to
violence which has not at all resolved the dispute. Disputes are normal
part of life although when you come to think about most, they are
generated by created issues than real ones. Politicians of all sides are
the culprits behind these creations who thrive or try to thrive on
these conflicts, but most often fail themselves at the end.
This is the actual danger of the last weekend’s event. After the event,
the extremist politicians and the extremist media outlets/channels on
both sides seem to work overtime not to appease but to exacerbate the
conflict. They should be condemned more than the students.
Issues of Dispute
The immediate dispute seems to be trivial compared to many issues
underpinning various challenges confronting the country or the
university students on reconciliation. A ‘main’ challenge seems to be
the language, and thus the communication and the cultural barrier. Even
that cannot be a major one because they all study in the English medium.
Sinhala and Tamil (also Muslim) students have been studying ‘together’
in this faculty now for over five years. I wonder whether there had been
any ‘love affairs’ (I mean between men and women) leading to
inter-marriages!
As reported by some, if the request to include Kandyan dancing in the
welcome procession was made at the last minute, then the Sinhalese
students should have understood the reluctance or the refusal, and
satisfied with its inclusion on the stage after the arrival of the new
students at the auditorium. If the introduction of ‘Thavil and
Nathasvaram’ were a new item of the welcome ceremony this year, then it
is also natural for the Sinhala students to be weary that their ‘Dance’
was not included. Perhaps this new inclusion was part of a ‘cultural
assertion’ of the Tamil students, having seen the ‘cultural intrusion’
of the Sinhalese at Wesak and Poson ceremonies, let alone the
‘Sinhala-Tamil New Year’ in the Sinhala style.
There seems to have been some interesting cultural competition going on
between the two groups in recent times. This is where the ‘science’
students have gone ‘unscientific.’ But three years back, in 2013, they
even had a ‘Couple-Dance’ welcome party for the new students (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ugSG43KPYww),
nothing to do with the traditional Tamil or the Sinhala culture! But
who started the ‘aggression’ first is a typical chicken and egg
question. It is unfortunate, because, culture particularly in the Sri
Lankan context is considered a uniting factor compared to the language.
Perhaps the Sinhala students or others are not fully aware of the
Mission of the University of Jaffna. The Statement says the Mission is:
“To produce intellectual, professionally competent and capable
graduates to meet the emerging needs of the national and international
community, with a special emphasis on the social, economic and cultural needs of Northern Sri Lanka”. (My emphasis).
Broader Context
The evolution of the University of Jaffna is clearly discernible in two
or three stages. The first one was during (our senior friend) late
Professor K. Kailasapathy’s time, as the Vice Chancellor, and the origin
as a Campus of the (one) University of Sri Lanka in 1974. He was a
great scholar with ideals, values and humanism. During this period, the
university was a multicultural center with immense respect for the
Jaffna culture from the Sinhalese and the Muslims alike.
Then came the second stage in 1979, where independent universities were
reinstated back in the country and the University of Jaffna was formed
under the Universities Act (1978) with relative autonomy. This was the
aftermath of violence against the Tamil community in 1977, not to speak
of the Vaddukodai resolution, and as a result the reconstitution of the
university had a clear imprint of Tamil nationalism. Apart from the
mission statement quoted above, even the crest of the university had
‘Nanthi’ (the bull), the symbol in the flag of the Jaffna Kingdom at its
center. This is not unusual as many other universities in the South
having the ‘lion’ (i.e. Peradeniya) or Buddhist symbols in their crests.
Perhaps it was a third stage that was intended after the end of the war
in 2009, by sending Sinhala students back to the University of Jaffna,
rather haphazardly and without much planning or creating necessary
conducive conditions. On the other hand, there has been much goodwill,
as far as I know, from the academic staff, particularly in the Faculty
of Science to invite Sinhala students. However, this is apparently not
the case in other faculties or among the non-academic staff. In this
context, having 60 percent of Sinhala students in the faculty is
undoubtedly overbearing and an invitation for trouble.
There are Tamil students in other universities in the South, but as far
as I am aware, there has been no much resentment when Tamil cultural
events are held. The main reason being that the holding of these events
perhaps have not been raised as a matter of pure right. In major
ceremonies, however, Tamil or Muslim cultural events are also not
accommodated. As Ven. Galkande Dhammananda Thero has rightly explained “in any university, due prominence is always given to the respective university’s cultural background” (Sri Lanka Guardian, 21 July).
This also shows that even the ‘rights’ should be claimed or raised in a
responsible manner or otherwise those can lead to unnecessary
conflicts. Cultural rights by nature are sensitive issues. This should
not mean that ‘multiculturalism’ should not prevail at the University of
Jaffna or any other university. But ensuring multiculturalism,
particularly after a long drawn out war, is a process and all sectors
should act with utmost responsibility in this process. What should be
condemned forthright of the Jaffna University incident is not the
dispute (however humorous!), but the violence and the confrontation.