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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, March 1, 2017
February 1917 & January 2015: Fake Similarities – Reply To Prof. Kumar David
Prof. Romila Tharper once said that a serious historian should have the
sharp eye of a detective gathering even minute details related to the
phenomenon that she studies. Hence, she advises her research students
start with reading Agatha Christie. Of course no historian can collect
every necessary markers as she may miss many due to multiple reasons
that are beyond her control. Hence lacunas may exist, but the next
generation of historians may build on that collecting newly unearthed
materials thus filling the gaps in the writings of their predecessors.
Leon Trotsky writes the following on the task of the historians.
“[H]istory ought first of all to tell what happened and how. That,
however, is little enough. From the very telling it ought to become
clear why it happened thus and not otherwise. Events can neither be
regarded as a series of adventures, nor strung on the thread of a
preconceived moral. They must obey their own laws. The discovery of
these laws is the author’s task” (History of Russian Revolution). The
presence of gaps may be understandable and such defects should be
clearly separated from distortions, made wittingly or unwittingly, in
history-writings. Distortions may happen due to total disregards of the
facts that were intentionally placed under the carpet or in the
back-burner. The historians subjective bias may creep in in their work
generating partial histories. Hence, Trotsky warned that “the subjective
tone .. is not permissible in a work of history”. It is interesting to
note that the second kind of distortions may happen when reading
history. We more often read history not to understand what had actually
happened in the past but to legitimize and to understand the present. It
is in itself not a crime. Nonetheless, in the process, we may see in
many instances people tend to read the past in order to justify the
present thus very often distorting the history. The classical example
for this second kind of distortion is Prof. Kumar David’s article on the Russian Revolution in Colombo Telegraph (February
26). The argument put forward by Dr. Vickramabahu Karunaratne, the
General Secretary, NSSP is basically similar. Both are trying to show
that what happened in Sri Lanka on January 8, 2015 was similar to what
happened in February 1917 in Russia. Hence Russian event is
reinterpreted. Prof. David writes: “If you scale down from the
world-historical to the national, then January 8 is our February. Two
things are common; a despised autocracy was dismantled and secondly huge
aspirations for a better future were unfurled”. Just accept for the
moment the absurd idea that the Rajapaksa regime was similar to the rule
of Tsar Nicholas 2. Then Prof David laments: “They reached their
October; but we are still stuck in the mud sans a bourgeois democratic
yahapalanaya.” What does it imply? January 8, 2015 had the potential and
the capacity that would produce Sri Lankan October, placing the state
political power in the hands of the Sri Lankan version of Bolshevik
Party. Destroying all the hopes of Prof. David and the renegades
associated with him, the proverbial pigs of the well-known English adage
stubbornly refuse to grow wings, to look like giant bumblebees in order
to fly towards Prof. David’s projected optimistic future.
The Professor of Electrical Engineering has misinterpreted history by
telling us similar events took place in February 1917 and in January
2015. Why? The existing regimes fell and new regimes were formed. For
his formal logic A = A. Does it mean that cheese and chalks are similar
because the color of the both is white? In his own words this is what
had happened in February 1917; “A Provincial Government of grandees and
liberals was formed with Prince Gregory Lvov as prime minister. Far more
important for posterity was that on the 27 February the popular
councils of the city united to form the Petrograd Soviet of Workers and
Soldiers deputies. A state of Dual Power (two parallel state powers in
one country) came into being”. Ha ha! February 1917 not only force Tsar
Nicholas 2 to abdicate but also led workers to form their own power
structure, Soviets. Here, I have no intention to engage in a discussion
on Lenin’s astonishment to see this “unexpected” developments.