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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Political signatures that stay and go away
Uditha Devapriya-2017-02-28
Politics
has as much to do with the past as with the present. That's a given.
Natural. Nothing out of the blue there. It also has to do, however, with
forgotten pasts and forgotten enmities, with people who come together
for the flimsiest and the most expedient reasons and with people who go
their own separate ways because of the ideals they espouse. Again,
nothing out of the blue there.
We do not remember those who live, we remember those who died. That is
why politicians who have long gone are remembered more fondly than those
who are among us. That is also why, when dead politicos and stars are
cherished by those who purport to stand what they stood for, there is
always some healthy scepticism which greets it. This week's column is
not about those dead politicos only, rather about their proverbial
descendants who believe (sincerely or otherwise, we cannot tell) they
are continuing what they stood for.
As a follower of Sri Lanka's post-independence history, if I were asked
to name the two most important political shifts which transpired after
1948, I would mention S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike's Swabasha revolution and
the entry of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) into our political
landscape. Between 1956 and 1971 and between 1971 and 1988, there were a
great many years, years in which loyalties changed, friendships soured,
and the constituent parties of an entire regime backtracked on the
national question. When Bandaranaike proposed the Banda-Chelva Pact, for
instance, the Old Left were in arms against it, if not loudly then
covertly, and when Dudley Senanayake proposed a similar agreement, the
SLFP and (again) the Old Left opposed it.
Political hodgepodge
The JVP was born out of this confusing political hodgepodge. As Gamini
Samaranayake points out in his book Sri Lankave Viplaveeya Vyaparaya
(2002), the 1971 insurrection proved for the first time that State
coercion could be used, brutally and violently, to set down a potential
revolution. It also proved that Sri Lanka's political landscape was not
adequate, that a new party questioning the Leftist credentials of an
increasingly armchair socialist government was needed. While this column
is not about whether the JVP was successful in pulling off its coup in
this respect, it is about another, more covert revolution that its
traditional ideological foe, the Old Left, indulged in, which I would
consider as the third most significant post-1948 political shift.
When the 1971 insurrection unfolded the bloodier, more violent side to
revolutionary politics, the constituent Left parties in Sirimavo
Bandaranaike's government were busy badmouthing the JVP. No less a
figure than Dr. Colvin R. de Silva implied that behind the party stood
the CIA, fresh from its imperialist projects in South-East Asia (most
prominently, Indonesia) and only too willing to unseat a democratically
elected government to placate the West's anti-Communist sympathies.
Echoed in that indictment was a feeling of hurt, a feeling that in doing
what it did the JVP had gone beyond the Old Left in its commitment to
the Marxist principles of justice, welfare, equality, and equity. How do
we know this? The fact that it was AFTER, and not BEFORE, the
insurrection that Sirima Bandaranaike's regime spearheaded its most
ambitious 'leftist' programmes (the Land Reforms Act being one of them).
In other words, the JVP had questioned the credibility of the Old Left,
and the Old Left (which was aging too fast) needed leverage to retain
that credibility. When they passed the Land Reforms Act, of course, they
would not know that five years later they would leave the government
and leave ground for J. R. Jayewardene and the United National Party
(UNP) to attack Sirima Bandaranaike and her cronyism.
Old Left
What happened to the Old Left after 1977, I have tried to chart in an
earlier column ('Whither the withering State?'). With the collapse of
the Soviet Union, it was forced to resort to the same donor agencies it
had earlier shirked. Prof. Susantha Goonatilake in his book
Recolonisation: Foreign Funded NGOs in Sri Lanka singles out the
Communist Party, the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), the Nava Sama
Samaja Party (NSSP), and the Sri Lanka Mahajana Party (SLMP) for
distorting the Left-Right dichotomy by letting go of their allegiance to
the Left. While I am not interested in Prof. Goonatilake's well
researched allegations against these parties, I am interested in the
political shift they brought about when they let go of their leftist
avatar.
It is pointless to write about the Old Left without bringing up the
SLFP. It was the SLFP that brought the LSSP and the CP to the mainstream
political process, in 1956 and in 1964. The rifts that would later tear
these parties apart were, if at all, minimal and not that discernible
back then. Nevertheless, they were there, insidiously if not subtly, and
the main rift was between the Govi-Sangha sympathies of the Philip
Gunawardena faction and the Kamkaru-Lawkika sympathies of the NM-Colvin
faction. The latter was more cosmopolitan, more secular, and less
rooted, while the former was so culturally sensitive that Prof. A.V.D.S.
Indraratne, speaking at the Philip Gunawardena oration in 2015, argued
that the man brought Marxism to the peasants, an unparalleled feat here.
The rift was accentuated with the entry of the NGO sector. It explains,
to a considerable extent, why those who followed these factions went
their own, separate ways: why Philip Gunawardena's son formed a
nationalist movement (the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna) that did more for
Mahinda Rajapaksa's resurgence in 2004 than some of the constituent
parties which deserted him later on. Gunawardena was an old warhorse,
whose eventual shift away from Leftist politics signified a shift in the
LSSP to parliamentary politics (under N. M. Perera).
Colvin's cosmopolitanism
His legacy, in other words, was not to continue after 1977, at least in
terms of its ability to shape and nurture the SLFP. That was a task
largely left to those who followed Colvin's cosmopolitanism, who emerged
from the university system and other institutions as intellectuals and
political activists. They were responsible for the usurpation of the
Left movement in the country. Such usurpations call for protesters and
successors, those who seek to separate the turncoats from the movement.
These were to be found with Rohana Wijeweera and the JVP.
Meanwhile the Old Left floundered. They were treading on manifestly
unfamiliar territory, branded and hated by both sides of the political
divide: by Tamil extremists because they were not pushing hard enough
for a federalised Sri Lanka, and by Sinhala extremists because they were
perceived (not unfairly, one can add) of pandering to extreme variants
of Tamil separatism. That is why they needed a figurehead to affirm
their legitimacy, because as Prof. Liyanage Amarakeerthi rather
austerely pointed out in his critique of nationalist literature
(Unlearning what Gunadasa Amarasekara taught us with a sense of
gratitude), the NGO sector could never (hope to) reach the "monolingual
masses."
In the end, they got that figurehead. They got Vijaya Kumaratunga.
Vijaya was not a politician. He was a star and a very good one at that.
He felt the pulse of the people because he WAS the people. Most
importantly, he was not reviled by the Sinhala nationalists because he
pandered to the myths and ideals they evoked whenever they saw him
onscreen. Unlike that other giant of the cinema who crossed over to
politics, Gamini Fonseka, Vijaya didn't mind being a populist. In the
end, Fonseka became the Deputy Speaker of Parliament, staying away from
the stains that politics besmirches those who take to it. A similar fate
could or could not have met Vijaya. We do not know. We do know,
however, that he was the man the Old Left wanted.
Sinhala chauvinism
He was not the nationalist those who praise him cut him out to be. He
was opposed to the war and to the racialism it was kowtowing to. He was
for a united Sri Lanka at a time when 'united' was synonymous with
'unitary' and not 'diversity' (that is, in political parlance). He was
opposed more than anything else to Sinhala chauvinism and was thus
allied with MIRJE, the ICES, the Marga Institute, and all those other
outfits which were preaching the gospel of devolution. Speaking in a
television interview, I believe right after he visited Jaffna (the only
politician from the South who did so until then), he made his stance
clear: what was being fought was a Jathivadi Yuddaya, which could end
only if power was devolved to the periphery.
Now economically this made sense in the eighties, but whether or not it
makes sense today (with the mess our economy has got into), we know that
Vijaya, by saying this, was transforming the party founded by his
father-in-law from a nationalist outfit to a federalist outfit,
transforming 1956 to 1988 (the year he was killed and his death
legitimised the federal-speak the Old Left had solidified). As a
moderate nationalist, I neither subscribe to nor oppose federalism, but I
am aware that what Vijaya did, which the political historian has been
afraid to touch, was bring about the third most potent political shift
this country saw after 1948. I cannot emphasize on this enough.
Fortunately or unfortunately (I can't tell which), the same Left that
had floundered before Vijaya's arrival floundered after his death. The
United Socialist Alliance (USA), which had him as its articulator and
figurehead, included the LSSP, CP, NSSP, PLOTE, EPRLF, and SLMP. Of
these, the PLOTE and EPRLF would be bloodily eliminated by the LTTE,
while the NSSP and LSSP would separate and the CP would pass away into a
void. These were constituent parties, and they did their part, but
without Vijaya they were nothing. In other words, Vijaya was all of
them, but they were not Vijaya. The moment he died, he empowered the
outfits that had sponsored his party and the ideology they propagated.
As had been the case before, those other parties merely became the
instruments of these outfits.
Terrible time
The late eighties was a terrible time, so terrible that those who did
not live through it have no authority to speak of the carnage it
unveiled. The dichotomies that had cut out one political movement from
the other dissolved, to the extent that the Old Left, the traditional
foe of the UNP, covertly affirmed the Indo-Lanka Accord: the same Accord
that J. R. Jayewardene was bullied into signing. Jayewardene was,
whether or not you agree with his economic policies, a mild nationalist,
quite differently to the breed of culturally castrated ideologues in
the LSSP and CP. Not surprisingly, when the government of the day used
brutal force against those who protested the Accord (the JVP included),
the Old Left stayed quiet. I am not alone in saying this: a perusal of
Prof. Susantha's book (referred to above) would confirm my indictment.
History does not paint a pretty picture of these parties, which is why
Prof. Susantha's book merits more than a passing reference.
He points out how sections of the Old Left were involved in paramilitary
groups which were affiliated to the government and were involved in
extra-judicial killings. We have it from Rohana Wijeweera himself that
the NSSP was allegedly being trained by Tamil militants ("The Sunday
Times", 13 November 1988). That is not the only allegation that Prof.
Susantha alludes to, but owing to spatial constraints I will not list
the others out. Suffice it to say, then, that while the "Spent Left" (I
am tired of calling it "Old") was superficially opposed to the
government, it was not opposed to the brutal force and propaganda which
were deployed to implement the Indo-Lanka Accord.
What happened next? The personal rivalries and familial tensions that
ran riot in the SLFP were echoed in Chandrika Kumaratunga's decision to
quit it and join her husband's party, the SLMP. The SLMP was housed by
the likes of Ossie Abeygunasekera, who'd later join the UNP. It was a
party that was doomed to pass into the political wilderness unless
Kumaratunga returned with her stalwarts to the SLFP. That is of course
what happened, and what transformed the party that had earlier stood for
the Pancha Maha Balavegaya into a federalist outpost. It is this, and
not just Vijaya Kumaratunga's entry into our political landscape, that
compels me to write that his entry left behind a political signature
which has since remained as potent as it was when it first emerged.
Ideological shapers
To put what happened next pithily, the likes of Ossie Abeyagoonasekera,
Felix Perera, and later Rajitha Senaratne and Dilan Perera became the
ideological shapers of the SLFP, when after 1994 Kumaratunga turned it
into the biggest champion of devolution and federalism, more so than the
UNP (whether under J. R. Jayewardene or Ranil Wickremesinghe). Not for
no reason was the Old Left referred to as a set of three-wheeler
parties, and like all three-wheeler parties, when the Pied Pipers in the
SLFP led the way, they followed even though the economic policies their
government authored were against their Marxist principles. All they
could do, in this context, was to keep shut, warn the people against
voting for the UNP, and refuse to co-sign the SLFP's "centrist"
policies. Small wonder, then, that they have since become insignificant.
And unpopular.
So has all this been for the better? I would say yes. If those who have
not lived through the Bheeshanaya have no right to comment on the
brutality it unleashed, those who have not lived through 1983 have no
moral right to trivialize the aspirations of the ethnic minority. The
eighties was a different time altogether, certainly bloodier than today
and indicative of how far a State could go to crush dissent. The year
1983 had what those who wanted a separate state wanted: a covertly
organised attempt by the government to target their community. The scars
it caused still haven't been healed, which is why the entry of the SLMP
was needed to placate the marginalized ones.
That does not, however, make up for the politics that the Old Left stood
for. It was composed of what Dayan Jayatilleka once referred to as
Mulsidagath Aragalakarayo (culturally uprooted revolutionaries). This in
itself is not a bad thing, but it is a bad thing when considering what
they indulged in later years.
Pulse of the people
They did not feel the pulse of the people or for that matter the
people's mandate. They were content in subverting the democratic process
to achieve their aims. They were not just concerned about changing the
mindsets of our politicians, but those politicians themselves. In other
words, they were keen on dismantling the legitimacy of a government to
promote their crass, minoritarian objectives. Fortunately for us, they
did not succeed. They could not, both because the people knew who they
were and because of the likes of Nalin de Silva, Gunadasa Amarasekara,
S.L. Gunasekera, and (closer to the present) Gevindu Cumaratunga.
Vijaya Kumaratunga left us 29 years ago. He was killed by the JVP, which
entered the democratic process and Parliament thanks to his widow. They
cohabited for a brief time with the Old Left, then left knowing quite
well that the government was kowtowing to mild separatism. Whether or
not they knew Mahinda Rajapaksa the populist, they were correct in
supporting the man in 2004, along with the descendants of the Old Left
who were not culturally uprooted (I am talking about Dinesh Gunawardena
here, though there were and are others).
So to wrap up: Vijaya was a humanist, a great man, and a refined
populist, but it is my belief that those who used him failed abysmally
to retain the popularity they enjoyed when he was alive. His death was a
death knell for them. Predictably, they ended up being the parvenus
they always were.
And you know what? I for one am not complaining.
udakdev1@gmail.com