A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, November 23, 2019
National Anthem: A keystone in Sinhala politics
November 22, 2019, 9:34 pm
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa certainly scored big with his decision to
prohibit the hanging of photos of the President and Prime Minister at
government offices and premises. This was a colossal waste of public
funds, with key ministry personnel taking quick decisions on the framing
and size of these photos, and often a battle between departments to get
such a photo exhibit on their premises. There is nothing more than the
symbol of the State that needs to be displayed in these public offices,
as the purpose of all these ministries, departments, corporations and
other institutions is to serve the State and thus the people.
One hopes this decision of the President will also extend to the photos
of Ministers and Deputy Ministers that are also found on display and
ministries, departments and other State institutions, coming under the
addicts of such political display. This is certainly a good beginning
for one who promises the establishment of a meritocracy in a country
that is burdened with the total absence of merit in official decision
making and administrative performance.
Along with the ban on the photos of the President and Prime minister at
such cheap display, but at much cost to the public, there was also the
reduction in the back-up vehicles in the entourage of the President, and
hopefully of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and the Ministers who
will soon be forming the new Cabinet. Such trends in cutting down the
costs, hubbub and brouhaha of display politics is certainly in the right
direction, which has good meaning for those who expect meaningful
change in a national leadership and government that has come in after
the massive humbug of Yahapalanaya or Good Governance; where Maithripala
Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe were the key performers in a
naadagama of deceit.
There is certainly, much more to be done in the move to a meritocracy
and intelligent governance, which includes bringing down the role of the
astrologers and others giving directions and advice based on their
reading of the zodiac and its impact of people and society. This is a
dangerously growing trend moving society far away from the scientific
thinking that is at the core of this Digital Age. These are certainly
not easy tasks to achieve, but is a necessity in the search for a
meritocracy.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is accepted by the millions who ensured him
of the outstanding victory as the long awaited saviour of Sinhala
Buddhists in Sri Lanka. We are clearly moving in a direction where
Sinhala Buddhist dominance, and its continuing impactful influence in
Sri Lankan society and politics is not expected to be worn down by
rational thinking or social analyses that emerge from the core values of
Buddhist teachings. We are now in the Glorious Rise of Sinhala
Buddhism. Amidst such glory there is no time to recognize the fact that
the singing of "Namo Namo Matha" in Tamil was initiated by the first
Prime Minister of independent Ceylon – D. S. Senanayake, who is widely
known as the Father the Nation.
There is no room for such national paternity today, when we are
celebrating the glory of Sinhala Buddhist revival in the post-colonial
and post-LTTE and Tamil terror situation, to which has also been added
the Easter Sunday tragedy of ISIS terrorism. Raising the issue of Tamils
singing the National Anthem in their own language, brings out a barrage
on the importance of Sinhala dominance. The boundary lines of the North
and East are shown as proof that November 16 proved the necessity for
such dominance. The talk today on political realities is far away from
the Viyath or learned, scholarly and realistic thinking.
Just look at some examples on national anthem singing the world over –
not necessarily in a country with a 2000 year civilization. In South
Africa the national anthem is sung in five languages – Xhosa, Afrikaans,
Zulu, Sesotho and English. It was the land led by Nelson Mandela, after
that great fight for freedom. That is not impressive. South Africa
remains a land of tribalism is a ready response from non-Viyath
followers of Viyath punditry.
Why should Sri Lanka, with its great Sinhala civilization follow the
national anthem practice in another Commonwealth country? ‘0 Canada’ is
sung both in English and French because these are two official
languages, and it is also sung in 11 or more regional dialects of the
multi—cultural Canadian society. But why bother with such things, when
we have a Sinhala tradition that goes far beyond any Canadian history?
New Zealand has two national anthems –God Defend New Zealand and God
Save the Queen. It is common tossing the ‘God Defend’ in both English
and Maori – with the first verse in Maori. God Save the Queen is of
course only in English. Should this bother any Sri Lankans who are
against Tamil singing Nao Namo Maatha? Certainly not. New Zealand has
given a place to its aborigine Maoris; does it mean that our Veddahs too
must have their own version of our national anthem? Come on, this is
the land of the Sinhalese.
Why not look at Switzerland – with its referendum based democracy. The
‘Swiss Psalm’ was written in German and today it is sung in German,
French, Italian and Romanish. But why bother about such a Switzerland
tradition, which is a federal state. The Tamils singing our national
anthem could also lead the more federal thinking.
As the country continues to celebrate the Gotabaya Rajapaksa and
Pohottuva victory, with the new situation of the Elder Brother Prime
Minister moving to meritocratic governance with his younger brother
President, we must keep looking at new traditions that will be built for
the continuance of Sinhala civilization. We are moving in a new era of
politics in Sri Lanka; the one language national anthem is a keystone in
this political trend.