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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, August 23, 2018
The tempest in your tea cup
BY VINDHYA BUTHPITIYA-20 AUGUST 2018
A 1896 print advertisement for Ceylon Tea and India Tea.
Photo credit: periodpaper.com
Photo credit: periodpaper.com
Ceylon
tea might be distilled down to a popular image, a vision even, of
vividly-attired Tamil women. Their nimble fingers sift through the
parrot-green flush, effortlessly sweeping two-leaves-and-a-bud into
wicker baskets to the rattle and shimmer of gold-and-glass bangles.
Their faces are bright with toothy smiles, foreheads blessed with
crimson kumkuma.
Since the introduction of tea cultivation to the Subcontinent in the
second half of the 19th century, visual renditions of women tea pluckers
have circulated as widely as the leaves they tirelessly picked.
Imprinted on ornate tins of Orange Pekoe to be steeped in bone china tea
pots in polite London parlours, or in hand-coloured postcards exchanged
between friends divided by oceans, these images have infused tea with a
particular enchantment: a feminised mystique.
What is striking, however, is the persistence of such colonial imagery
in marketing tropes across Southasia even today. The case in Sri Lanka
is no different. Photographs of these women continue to feature in
advertising not only for tea, but for luxury tourism and hospitality
ventures which seek to market that imperial nostalgia for the strange
terrains and peoples of faraway colonies. These invite tourists to
relive the opulence of the Raj, as if centuries of conquest might be
something one might casually revive. This reminds us of the enduring
global inequalities between former rulers and subjects, and long
histories of wealth drain. What is disconcerting, moreover, is how the
picturesque commodification of colonial nostalgia – in both language and
aesthetic – undermines the violence of Sri Lanka’s colonial encounter,
and the sustained exploitation of estate communities on the island.
The line room experience
In June 2018, a post on a social-media account expressed disgust at an
‘experience’ offered by Sri Lanka’s famed Jetwing Hotels at its Warwick
Gardens property in Nuwara Eliya District – one which, like many
hospitality ventures based in Sri Lanka’s hill country, promotes
“colonial luxury”. ‘Meena Amma’s Line Room Experience’ was presented as
one designed to immerse guests “into the lives of Sri Lanka’s iconic tea
pluckers” by way of two refurbished ‘line rooms’ – colonial-era
accommodation for tea-estate workers that are known for their
inhospitable living conditions. Jetwing’s line rooms, the website noted,
“feature an attached bathroom with hot and cold water, as well as a
living space adorned with a vintage rocking chair to relax in view of
the misty mountains”. The “authentic local living” experience would
permit guests to partake in the “simple pleasures” of the meals and
“traditional activities characteristic of their lifestyle”. Priced at
USD 97 per night (LKR 15,500), a stay in Meena Amma’s line room amounts
to more than 20 days of a Sri Lankan tea plantation labourer’s daily
wages at LKR 730 (USD 4.50) a day.
The post picked up traction, and its contents and concerns were widely
shared on Facebook and Twitter. Many were outraged at how centuries of
subjugation of the largely Indian-origin plantation community was being
white-washed for the pleasure of tourists, ignoring the inhumane living
and working conditions many plantation workers are subjected to even
today. Such an initiative was particularly disappointing given Jetwing’s
commitment to various community and environment projects.
Jetwing’s response to the outrage – the company’s chairman Hiran Cooray
called it “a sensationalist view that completely ignores facts” – was
patronising and defensive in its rationalisation. Its purported
intention to “uplift” the plantation community (“the investments we have
made in people,” the chairman notes) conveniently ignored the fact that
the property is in fact located in their estate where the resident tea
pickers are expected to satiate the curiosity of the “fascinated”
tourists. Jetwing claims to show Meena Amma – a former tea plucker and
“a loyal employee of Jetwing for 12 years” – as a positive exemplar of a
worker with agency. It claims not to romanticise the lives of this
community and acknowledges that their lives have “historically been very
difficult”. But the difficulties are, in fact, not just historical and
continue today. Few critics of Jetwing really expected the company to
fix Sri Lankan’s plantation industry or ‘uplift’ every tea picker in the
island. Their concern was directed at its obliviousness to history, and
casual commodification using tropes that ignore the ongoing
exploitation.
A brief history of displacement
Sri Lanka’s Indian-origin Tamil community, also known as Up-country
Tamils, was brought to the island by British colonial administrators as
indentured labour from rural India in the 19th century to carry out the
gruelling tasks the locals were unwilling to take on. Large swathes of
Sri Lanka’s infrastructure and plantation economy were built on their
backs. Isolated from neighbouring villages in the hills in the Central
and Sabaragamuva provinces, the group was marginalised by barriers of
caste, ethnicity and language. In the plantations, they were subject to a
strict regimen of strenuous labour in inhuman conditions. The
barrack-style 10-by-12-feet line rooms housed entire families that were
engaged in strenuous tasks aimed at carving out plantations from the
hilly terrain. Following Sri Lanka’s Independence from Britain in 1948,
the fate of the community, which had lived on the island’s tea estates
for generations, became ensnared in the political changes.
Immediately after Independence, the majority of the Indian-origin Tamil
community were disenfranchised by the Ceylon Citizenship Act (1948) and
the Indian and Pakistani Residents (Citizenship) Act (1949). At the
time, they constituted about 11 percent of the population, whose impact
on elections was feared by many, in the prevailing atmosphere of the
Sinhala nationalist sentiment. Under the 1948 act, citizenship was
contingent on one’s father being born in Ceylon, which many
Indian-origin Tamils were unable to prove due to the circulatory nature
of early migration and lack of documentary proof. Only about 5000
Indian-origin Tamil individuals qualified for citizenship under these
laws, making around 700,000 from the community stateless. The 1949 act
relaxed earlier provisions, facilitating the citizenship of 100,000
more, based on criteria like uninterrupted residence, marriage and
income.
But citizenship would remain difficult for some time. Persistent
lobbying by political parties such as the Ceylon Workers’ Congress and a
number of pacts with India (Nehru-Kotelawala Pact, 1954; Srima-Shastri
Pact, 1964; and Sirimavo-Gandhi Pact, 1974) saw the repatriation of many
Indian-origin Tamils who wanted Indian citizenship and resulted in
securing Sri Lankan citizenship for others in the community. However, as
late as 1982, some 86,000 Indian-origin Tamils were still without
citizenship and were in the process of applying for it. It was only in
2003, following the passage of the Grant of Citizenship to Persons of
Indian Origin Act, that Indian-origin Tamils living in Sri Lanka were
finally guaranteed citizenship.
Specimens of empire
Comprising around four percent of the Sri Lankan population, Up-country
Tamils are among the most marginalised ethnic groups in the country.
Problems in government registrations, such as the arbitrary assignation
of ethnic categories to children – due to the lack of land ownership,
low literacy and ongoing contentions about the group’s ethnic
categorisation – have resulted in difficulty in accessing basic state
services and entitlements. Sometimes, some members of the same family
are registered as Sri Lankan Tamils and others as Indian Tamils. As the
main labour constituent of the Up-country tea estates, the community is
also entangled in unequal and exploitative economic practices, which
have continued despite some reforms, as the tea industry continues to
rely on undignified, dehumanising labour practices. For the community,
what was once a legal issue of recognising ethnic identity has today
transformed into a struggle against socio-economic marginalisation.
But it isn’t just the estate workers’ labour that
is exploited for private profit in the country and beyond; it is also
the image of this community that is commoditised and fetishised. Images
of tea pluckers – always female, even though this is not necessarily the
case in practice – have become a trope that are often a part of
marketing campaigns of tourism and hospitality industry of Sri Lanka.
The potency of these exotic specimens of empire are such that wealthy
travellers will pay to partake in a costly ‘pluck your own tea’ visits,
which permits them, for about USD 25 (more than five days of a
plantation worker wages), to dress up and pose for photographs as they
mime the estate labour for an hour or two. Residents of plantations are
compelled by plantations to present themselves and the more quaint,
palatable aspects of their lives for the consumption of curious
tourists. Jetwing’s ‘line-room experience’, which created the
social-media uproar, was one of such schemes. These forms of tea tourism
that coexist with the incredible hardship faced by estate workers are
not unusual or new. In fact, such particularly crass recreation of the
living conditions of Sri Lankan tea plantation workers, for the pleasure
of those who can afford it, serves as an especially jarring
manifestation of a deeply flawed global and local economy.
What is overlooked in these marketing campaigns are the long hours of
back-breaking labour that do not amount to a fair living wage. They
ignore the plantation owners’ demand for a daily minimum of 15 kilos of
pluckings, which these women must carry on their backs as they navigate
rocky paths to hilltops. In contrast to the luxurious replicas of
workers’ quarters that places like Jetwing offer – with “contemporary
amenities”, “attached toilets” or “hot water” – the workers return home
to line rooms that have barely changed since the colonial period. They
have poor access to running water and sanitation, and the homes
sometimes house three generations of the same family even today.
These living conditions are especially burdensome and unsafe for women
and children, exacerbating their vulnerability to sexual abuse and
violence. A 2014 report published by the Institute of Policy Studies of
Sri Lanka (IPS) revealed that 66 percent of line houses, comprising over
half of the accommodation occupied by estate workers, consist of one
bed room, contributing not only to frequent illness, but also to
domestic violence and sexual abuse exacerbated by high levels of
alcoholism. The potency of the line room as an embodiment of a loathsome
space and its ethnicised, discriminatory connotations continue to
manifest in colloquial slurs against members of the Indian-origin Tamil
community even today.
For the most part, the families do not have legal entitlement to these
basic lodgings. Their ability to continue to live in the estate is
contingent on at least one family member continuing to work there, even
though they have been living there for generations. Those who are unable
to meet this condition are relegated to the rather permanent ‘temporary
shelters’, which are even less habitable than the line rooms. As they
do not own their land and property but live in plantation
accommodations, which are not necessarily visited by state-welfare
officers, many are denied welfare services. Poor access to healthcare
and emergency medical services has resulted in high rates of maternal
and infant mortality, and child malnutrition. One in three babies born
in the estates have a low birth weight and a third of women of
reproductive age are malnourished.
Trade unions and activists since Independence have played a significant
role in advocating for improvements in the wages, and living and working
conditions of plantation labourers in Sri Lanka. Notable among these
are the Institute for Social Development (ISD) in Kandy and the Red Flag
Women’s Movement Sri Lanka, an independent women’s wing of the Ceylon
Plantation Workers Union. The ISD in particular has long worked for the
UTZ certification – an Amsterdam-based agricultural certification aimed
at standardising sustainable farming and better labour practices – of
tea estates, aside from founding The Tea Plantation Workers’ Museum and
Archive in 2007. With this initiative, a few line rooms in Gampola,
Kandy, were transformed into a museum that aims to preserve the
community’s social and cultural history. There have been some
improvements in the wage levels, too. In October 2016, after weeks of
negotiations, tea-estate owners and trade unions agreed to a minimum
daily wage of LKR 730 (USD 4.50), up from the previous rate of LKR 620
(USD 3.87) per day. The government has also pledged to provide some land
and housing to plantation workers.
Still, enduring structural inequalities – poor access to education,
underemployment, poverty and personal debt – have limited the
opportunities for the members of this community. For some, urban
informal labour and migrant work in West Asia has afforded considerable
mobility. But for the vast majority of estate sector residents, line
rooms continue to be a part of their lives. Many from the community who
live in the hill country were also impacted by landslides in the past
few years. Large groups from these areas have been compelled to live in
tents with minimal access to water and sanitation for many months with
little to no support from the estate management or the state to relocate
and rebuild new houses.
Continued complicity
In a 1900 guide to the tea industry, Golden Tips: A Description of Ceylon and its Great Tea Industry,
Henry W Cave writes, “Freedom they will always enjoy under British
rule; but a just and almost paternal control, and a hand almost sparing
in the direction of philanthropy are best suited to their needs.” He
adds, “injudicious benevolence towards the Tamil coolie renders him
useless for any purpose.” This paternalistic ethos still exists among
the management of plantations even today, along with ethnic, casteist
and classist bias against Indian-origin Tamil plantation workers.
Reading Jetwing Hotels’ chairman’s response to the criticism of their
‘line rooms’ – his claim that the estate workers do their work
“lovingly” and “are benefiting equally from the guests who stay at the
line rooms” – the hospitality industry’s attitude to the workers doesn’t
appear much different. Given this, the tourism industry’s packaging and
presenting of the most disadvantaged and vulnerable among us as
curiosities is callous and wilfully oblivious to their continued
exploitation, making them complicit in this, too.
Seven decades after Independence, the past and present-day contribution
of Sri Lanka’s Indian-origin Tamil in building and sustaining an
industry, which has become synonymous with the country remains
unacknowledged and inadequately recompensed. Estate residents continue
to live in some of the harshest living and working conditions, and
suffer from a range of socio-economic problems, from underemployment and
malnutrition to alcoholism and sexual violence. Yet, in the words and
pictures of companies like Jetwing, which seek to sell picturesque
colonial nostalgia, they remain pinned to the emerald hillsides of the
island’s mountains like jewel-toned Lepidoptera, exotic specimens of an
old empire preserved by the new. They invite us to forget the tempest in
each cup of tea.
~Vindhya Buthpitiya
is a PhD candidate in Visual Anthropology researching the relationship
between popular photography and articulations of Tamil identity and
citizenship in post-war Sri Lanka. She has held numerous consultancy
positions in social and policy research within the public, private and
non-governmental sectors in Sri Lanka, with a focus on postwar
reconciliation and development, and community-environment relationships.