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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, July 21, 2017
Piercing through the cultural garb
Samaraweera
isn’t prone to the kind of Puritanism most of us are - suggested that we
rethink our policy on selling liquor on Poya Days.
By ignoring the elephant in the room, we are ignoring what can be the biggest menace this country has encountered.
- More than 60 people dieeach day from alcoholism,amounting to more than20,000 every year.
- These deaths weren’t due tothe liver only, since alcoholis linked to heart disease, epilepsy, and stomach ulcers.
- It would help divert drinkersfrom hard brew to softer, lessharmful beverages, which inturn would be supplementedby the relaxation of the issueof licences to taverns and bars.
- It would relax the onslaughtof drinkers on the day beforePoya, which is a blessing indisguise.Censorshi
- p, even in itsmildest form, does the exactopposite of what it intends to do.
It’s not easy to come across a politician you have mixed feelings about, who says something you at least partly agree with.
And yet, three
weeks ago, that’s exactly what happened with Mangala Samaraweera, the
Foreign Minister turned Finance Minister, who has maintained a colourful
profile for the past three decades.
What he said had nothing to do with his office, although it did reflect on the country’s finances. Samaraweera, who isn’t prone to the kind of Puritanism most of us are, suggested that we rethink our policy on selling liquor on Poya Days.
What he said had nothing to do with his office, although it did reflect on the country’s finances. Samaraweera, who isn’t prone to the kind of Puritanism most of us are, suggested that we rethink our policy on selling liquor on Poya Days.
Because of the
backlash this was bound to provoke, he inserted a caveat: “This is my
personal opinion.” He was stating the obvious there: Opinions are
nothing but personal.
Now we don’t
have a record to be proud about when it comes to alcohol consumption.
The statistics aren’t pretty. We have one of the highest incidences of
cirrhosis in the world. That’s roughly 55 for every 100,000 people, in a
list topped by Moldova, which, by the way, is a nation of vodka
drinkers.
More than 60 people die each day from alcoholism, amounting to more than 20,000 every year. These deaths weren’t due to the liver only, since alcohol is linked to heart disease, epilepsy, and stomach ulcers. Above everything else, most of those who take to it tend to consume either hard or illicit brew. Which is why Mr. Samaraweera’s suggestion makes sense.
More than 60 people die each day from alcoholism, amounting to more than 20,000 every year. These deaths weren’t due to the liver only, since alcohol is linked to heart disease, epilepsy, and stomach ulcers. Above everything else, most of those who take to it tend to consume either hard or illicit brew. Which is why Mr. Samaraweera’s suggestion makes sense.
The campaign against liquor and tobacco, when rooted in cultural dynamics, loses its character and sizzles away
His proposal is twofold, actually. Firstly, it would help divert
drinkers from hard brew to softer, less harmful beverages, which in turn
would be supplemented by the relaxation of the issue of licences to
taverns and bars.
Secondly, it
would relax the onslaught of drinkers on the day before Poya, which is a
blessing in disguise: the incentive for them now is to rally around the
taverns knowing they would be shut the following day.
With this
proposal in action, the drinkers will continue to drink, yes, but not
with such ferocity. It’s not quite the same argument that exists for
marijuana (since certain commentators are drawing parallels between
the two): the issue there is about preventing illicit consumption of a
completely illegal substance, while the issue here is curtailing the
consumption of harmful and black-market variants of a legal substance,
essentially whiskey versus kasippu.
We are not the
most virtuous nation in the world. It’s difficult to define virtuous,
since it’s a rather fluid term, but if the way it’s tossed around these
days is anything to go by, we are not virtuous by any stretch of the
imagination. We talk of Ape Kama (Our Way) without realising that it
can’t be rooted in or framed by that simplistic good/bad dichotomy our
society has been forced to run on. So no, we are not a nation of angels,
or for that matter devils. We are a nation of people, and people are,
as we ought to know, imperfect. So, when we react hostilely towards Mr.
Samaraweera and his argument, we are merely displaying our feelings of
anxiety and inferiority.
I don’t think
Mangala Samaraweera’s proposal, even if it sees the light of day after
all those necessary amendments, debates, and enactments
When we raise hell over issues labelled and condemned as taboo, we
aren’t being culturally sensitive. We are merely substituting one
defence mechanism for another. If we are against drinking, we react
against it with so much anger that we leave no space for debate, or even
discussion. I don’t think that constitutes virtue, rather duplicity.
The reason’s obvious enough: when we react against proposals to relax
drinking laws, we salivate over what we feel to be their culturally
insensitive character without realising that they are trying to solve
the very problem(s) bemoaned by us.
As a Sri Lankan
and one, who is ideologically opposed to the politics that Mr.
Samaraweera and his party stands for, I nevertheless support his
position on this matter, because it makes sense.
And not just
economically. That problem is real, substantive, material. It’s not
conditioned by ideology or theology, it exists and persists and is very
much alive everywhere. Which is why, I should think, we ought to reflect
on the Utopia we try to build in our society.
Starting with
this: The campaign against liquor and tobacco, when rooted in cultural
dynamics, loses its character and sizzles away. This is true today and
will be true tomorrow.
So let’s go through those numbers again. 55 for every 100,000 people, 60 deaths a day, 20,000 deaths a year, and that while regulation after restriction, enacted in the name of cultural correctness, diverts the heaviest drinker from arrack to the more dangerous kasippu
Censorship, even in its mildest form, does the exact opposite of what it
intends to do. When Handagama’s Aksharaya was (unduly) banned, for
instance, those who hadn’t even heard of it read of the themes it
explored. Whether or not it was a great work of art (it was “art”
alright, etched in black and white rather theatrically) is beside the
point. The fact is that by forcibly repressing something arbitrarily
deemed as obscene, the authorities succeeded in disseminating it even
further. The same could be said of every other act of censorship
throughout history, including Lawrence’s Chatterley and Pasternak’s
Zhivago. Both were, to be sure, overrated works of art (in particular,
Zhivago). But it wouldn’t have taken a ban to get us to realise that.
What those bans ended up doing was the complete opposite of what the
censors intended. The argument against prohibition isn’t just moral,
therefore: it’s also logical.
Logic would
dictate that when a reservoir is full, the sluice gates should be
opened. Logic would dictate that when a work of art is subverting the
so-called cultural mores of a given society, banning it would spur more
interest among the general population of that society.
Logic would
dictate that when our people are dying from cirrhosis, stomach ulcers,
and other diseases provoked by alcohol, the solution (given that
alcoholics, like horses, can be only temporarily forced away from a
habit) would be to cut down on its consumption by encouraging them to
opt for less harmful beverages.
Logic, ladies
and gentlemen. Not necessarily cast in stone or in black-and-white, but
firm and unyielding all the same. The debate over tobacco and
alcoholism, going by that, has been watered down to a simplistic
dichotomy between Our Way and Their Way, simplistic because even those
without as much as an inkling of what Our Way is confuse between the two
and think they are veritable guardians of culture. They are not,
because in repressing or promoting the repression of habits they
consider as alien, they manage to ignore the real, substantive aspect to
this issue.
I don’t think
Mangala Samaraweera’s proposal, even if it sees the light of day after
all those necessary amendments, debates, and enactments, and assuming
our people pierce through the cultural garb that clouds our judgment
with respect to it, will be the be-all and end-all solution. I don’t
know for certain whether it will. All I know, and all anyone can ever
know, is that Mr. Samaraweera’s statement, notwithstanding the invective
it will attracts, merits further discussion.
So let’s go
through those numbers again. 55 for every 100,000 people, 60 deaths a
day, 20,000 deaths a year, and that while regulation after restriction,
enacted in the name of cultural correctness, diverts the heaviest
drinker from arrack to the more dangerous kasippu.
By ignoring the elephant in the room, we are ignoring what can be the biggest menace this country has encountered.
Conceding to
that cultural garb, in the form of what we think to be the Fifth Precept
(if one is a Buddhist, that is), would hence mean conceding to the
continuation of that problem.
That’s not my opinion. That’s the opinion of those who value reason over rhetoric.
That’s not my opinion. That’s the opinion of those who value reason over rhetoric.