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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, July 29, 2016
Jaffna University – when entitlement is rejected
Featured image courtesy Tamil Guardian
ANNEMARI DE SILVA on 07/28/2016
On the 16th of July, a clash happened between students at
Jaffna University over the inclusion of Sinhalese cultural spectacles in
the welcome event. Below is a brief of the events but a more in-depth
report of the goings-on can be found on DBS Jeyaraj’s blog.[i]
The background to this skirmish is a freshers’ welcome at the Science
Faculty (16 July). The organizing student committee of the Science
Students Union (SSU) had planned a march with traditional Tamil welcome
drums and music, garlanding and escorting the Dean and Academic Staff
from the Science Faculty gates for the event in the mathematics
department hall.
Last evening however, the Sinhalese students put in a request for
Kandyan dancers too to join the procession. The committee-meeting
considering the request went on for long, refusing to accept a
suggestion at the last minute. The matter then was passed on to the
University Students’ Union dominated by the arts/management students who
insisted it should be only the Tamil welcome form. [ii]
In his coverage, Jeyaraj expands that the Union agreed to include the
dances in next year’s procession, once preparations had been adequately
arranged.
It would be easy to look at this event at face value and call the
response disproportionate, or condemn the event and have faith in better
resolution ‘next time’, or perhaps even dismiss it as symptomatic of
over-politicized students. However, if we are supposed to work
constructively towards real reconciliation, plurality, and tolerance,
then the better approach is to understand the wider landscape of
cultural politics in the country, particularly at the University and in
the peninsula.
It was tragic irony that I heard about the fight at the same time that I
was researching and writing about Jaffna University being a place for
interethnic, interlingual mixing before the exodus of Sinhalese out of
the peninsula in the 1980s. Intellectuals like Regi Siriwardena and
Sucharitha Gamlath contributed regularly (the latter semi-permanently)
to the intellectual landscape in the North, while Northern scholars K.
Sivathambi and the older K Kailasapathy were deeply valued figures of
the Southern multilingual intellectual landscape. Jaffna and its
university have been important intellectual cultural hubs for Sri Lanka
as a whole and to hear of violence between students – the romanticized
future intellectuals – is thoroughly upsetting.
What is particularly disturbing about this sequence of events, though,
is the discussion about ‘violence’ in this instance. Specifically, the
condemnation of physical violence in this clash. I wholeheartedly agree
that violence is not the answer – but what is our definition of
violence? The problems at Jaffna University ended in physical violence
but it began in cultural violence.
It seems an innocent, progressive act to include a marker of Sinhalese
culture in the welcome ceremony at the University. In an area where
these Sinhalese students are a minority, and in an age of reconciliation
and mutual respect, there ought to be representations and inclusions of
the various cultures of our country. In sum, one ought to support the
inclusion of minority cultures in spaces where another community is the
majority… right?
Except of course that logic does not seem to apply as a general, structural approach by cultural authorities in the country.
A cursory glance at the mandates of the former Ministry (now Department)
of Culture demonstrates the weighted sponsorship and support available
for cultural projects associated with Sinhalese or Buddhist cultures. [iii] There is an entire section dedicated to the compilation of the Mahavamsa,
the chronicle of kings in Sri Lanka from a lineage associated with King
Vijaya, and extensive work on Sinhala dictionaries (Sinhala-English,
Sinhala-Sinhala, Sinhala for children). On the other hand, the ministry
is working on a trilingual dictionary that is still pending publication.
Contrast this with the fact that a full dictionary was independently
compiled by linguistic academics Gamlath and Sivathambi, ready for
publication as long ago as 2008. At the time, they could not find
adequate finances to publish the dictionary and the project was
stalled. [iv]
The Sri Lankan Tamil language has also been neglected systematically in
other ways. A big (and belated) step for inclusivity and development
happened at the 2016 Independence Day celebrations where the Tamil
version of the national anthem was finally sung alongside the Sinhala
one – the first time since 1949, counting over half a century of
exclusion from public events.[v] Then,
despite mandates for trilingual signage and communications in 2012, by
2014 there had been up to 218 problems with incorrect, even slanderous,
translations into Tamil, such as in town names, inscriptions, even
official documents.[vi]
These are, however, examples taken of exclusion from regions where
people of Tamil linguistic or ethnic origin are in a minority – what
then of areas where it is majority Tamil? Whether it’s parading a bo
sapling to celebrate Buddhism in occupied land;[vii] or
refusing to let fisher-families relocate to their ancestral lands,
while it is being sold off to a company even though the new Buddhist
monuments get to stay;[viii] or
Kandyan dancers opening the ceremony for a Buddhist temple in
Kilinochchi, where the inscription for the temple is only in Sinhala and
the anthem was only sung in Sinhala[ix] –
the cultural encounter in Tamil-majority areas has signified a systemic
violence that people are expected to absorb passively, accept, and not
react.
So what, then, is the real significance of adding a Sinhalese cultural
display to a parade of ‘welcoming’ in an area where Sinhalese are a
minority? Does it signify inclusion and mutual respect or rather
entitlement to space and freedom of expression? The ethnic conflict and
current political struggle are undeniably about the ownership of space:
spaces to belong, be autonomous, express freely, move freely. The
struggle did not begin as one for exclusionary ownership and we still
have potential to work towards plurality in public spaces. There are
many civil society groups and independent organizations that provide
alternative institutional approaches to encouraging diversity and
innovation in cultural production. To name a few that I know of
scattered across the country, there is the Vibhavi Academy of Fine Arts
and Trikone Cultural Centre in Colombo, the Theatre Action Group in
Batticaloa and Jaffna, and the Sri Lanka Archive of Contemporary Art,
Architecture and Design in Jaffna. There must be plenty more that have
yet evaded my research. The point is that these diverse groups
demonstrate our nation’s desire and ability to carve an inclusive,
innovative cultural future in Sri Lanka.
Perhaps the events at Jaffna University could have been handled better
by all parties involved. Yet the events remain as they are, as does the
wider landscape of Jaffna, still pockmarked with cultural symbols the
locals did not ask for. Steps need to be taken to ensure the cultural
rights and integrity of all communities. I believe, as many people on
this topic do, that acts of violence such as the clash at Jaffna
University are instigated by the few and that those willing to work
towards a peaceable future are the many. Yet, as long as we examine
these sparks of trouble at face value and do not understand and work to
repair a very broken structure of inclusion in our country, we will
always be at the edge of our seats, wondering when structural violence
will ignite the physical kind.
[i] D.B.S Jeyaraj, “Jaffna Varsity Violence: What Really Happened and Why!,” Dbsjeyaraj.com, July 26, 2016, http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/47492.
[ii] “Jaffna
University Science Faculty Closed Following Ethnic Clash | Colombo
Telegraph,” accessed July 21, 2016,
https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/jaffna-university-science-faculty-closed-following-ethnic-clash/.
[iii] “Department
of Cultural Affairs,” accessed July 21, 2016,
http://www.cultural.gov.lk/web/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=68&Itemid=73&lang=en.
[iv] “BBC
Sinhala – ශ්රී ලංකා – Sucharitha Gamlath: The Exodus of a Colossus,”
accessed July 21, 2016,
http://www.bbc.com/sinhala/mobile/sri_lanka/2013/04/130401_sucharitha_tribute.shtml.
[v] B. B. C. News, “Sri Lankan Anthem Sung in Tamil for First Time since 1949,” BBC News, accessed July 21, 2016, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35495567.
[vi] “Trilingual Bus Signboards,” Groundviews,
March 22, 2012,
http://groundviews.org/2012/03/22/trilingual-bus-signboards/; LBO, “Sri
Lanka Probes ‘dog’ Translation Slur on Public Signs – Lanka Business
Online,” accessed July 21, 2016,
http://www.lankabusinessonline.com/sri-lanka-probes-dog-translation-slur-on-public-signs/;
B. B. C. News, “Sri Lanka Apology for Translation Blunders,” BBC News, accessed July 21, 2016, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-26052894.
[vii] TamilNet,
“Colombo Exploits Buddhism to Consecrate Genocide,” accessed July 21,
2016, https://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?catid=79&artid=33537.
[viii] “Fishermen in the North Are Unsettled and Unhappy,” accessed July 21, 2016, http://www.sundaytimes.lk/111211/News/nws_26.html.
[ix] “Gotabaya
Opens Buddhist Vihara in Kilinochchi – MoD,” accessed July 21, 2016,
http://www.tamilguardian.com/article.asp?articleid=5943.