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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, November 29, 2019
Sri Lanka: Pathetic Plight Of Muslim Politics
Muslims, because of the leadership, have become a political outcast at the moment. Instead of standing on a proud pedestal of dedicated service to the nation and country and demanding justice and fair play, a dishonest and disloyal leadership is now forced to beg for mercy and special favours. What a pathetic state of affairs!
When the 15-member caretaker cabinet was announced soon after President
Nandasena Gotabaya Rajapaksa assumed office, the Muslim community must
have noted that it was the first time since cabinet government was
introduced in this country in 1947 that a Muslim name was absent from
the list of ministers.
Although it is not a constitutional requirement that every cabinet
should reflect the pluralist makeup of the society, it became almost an
unwritten conventional norm for Prime Ministers to reflect that reality
in their respective cabinets.
For instance, there was absolutely no need for the Sirimavo Government
of 1970s to seek support from the Tamils. Yet, and apparently on the
advice of a Muslim minister, she brought in through the back door a
Tamil, Chellia Kumarasooriyar, into the cabinet to maintain that
plurality. That conventional wisdom was broken for the first time by the
new President.
What made the President to do this? Ali Sabri, one of the President’s
confidants and Attorney, requested his community not to paint the
President’s action with a communal brush, and he promised that Muslims
would be made happy within a period of six months. Be that as it may,
the real reason for the ministerial miss should be sought not in the
President’s prerogative per se but in the pathetic plight of Muslim
politics itself.
The unpatriotic behavioural arrogance and misappropriation of powers by
certain Muslim ministers and Governors under Yahapalanaya for example,
became so atrociously public that they provoked almost an island-wide
anti-Muslim paranoia amongst members of other communities, and led
Buddhist priests to call for the dismissal of those personalities.
Rev. Athuraliye’s Rathana Thera went on a hunger strike in front of the
Maligawa specifically with that request. That drama and the subsequent
resignation en masse of all Muslim ministers, their deputies and
governors, and their shameless resumption of duties on the pretext that
they were requested to do so by the Mahanayakes are all now archival.
Given this shameful political background, no president, even if he were
to be a Muslim, would have dared to include a Muslim in his handpicked
cabinet. The question to be asked and answered therefore, is, how did
the Muslim community arrive at this sorry state of affairs?
In several previous contributions to Daily FT, I addressed the issue of
Muslim leadership and called for the dissolution of Muslim political
parties, such as SLMC and ACMC. While the leadership (both secular and
religious) lacks long-term vision and political sagacity on the one
hand, and remains incorrigibly selfish, corrupt and nepotistic on the
other, Muslim political parties have become breeding grounds for
imported religious ideologies and domestic factional frictions.
These parties have not only disunited the community, but also, at least
in the eyes of the Buddhist majority, act as a fifth column to Arab
regimes. Some thoughtless and stupid actions of one or two leaders have
thrown doubts in the public mind whether the Muslims are actually a
community in or of Sri Lanka. This is unfortunate.
For centuries, Muslims lived in Sri Lanka as a thoroughly integrated
community and without any open hostility towards the Sinhalese and
Tamils. Can any historian point out an incident of Sinhalese-Muslim open
riot before 2015, and Tamil-Muslim open riot until LTTE came into the
scene in 1980s? There might have been some sporadic fracas in certain
localities, but they were put down no sooner than started primarily
through the interference of local leaders from the affected sides.
Unlike members of the other two communities, a large percentage of
Muslims are bilingual, quite many are trilingual and a few even
quadrilingual with some fluency in Arabic or Malay. In addition to this
communicative advantage, being a community of mainly traders and pedlars
until very recently, and settled in almost every province and district
of the country, Muslims have a unique and deep understanding of the
culture and lifestyle of the other two communities.
These are invaluable social assets for a Muslim leadership that could
utilise them and lead the community as peace makers, especially at a
time when there is such a widening social and communication gap between
fellow communities.
Such a role was played by previous Muslim leaders by aligning themselves
with the national parties. Instead, by creating independent Muslim
parties, their leaders not only enriched themselves and their cronies at
the expense of the community, but dangerously added to an already
boiling cauldron of ethno-nationalism.
Muslims, because of this leadership, have become a political outcast at
the moment. Instead of standing on a proud pedestal of dedicated service
to the nation and country and demanding justice and fair play, a
dishonest and disloyal leadership is now forced to beg for mercy and
special favours. What a pathetic state of affairs!
It is time the community wakes up, understands the gravity of the
situation and starts working to create a fresh but patriotic, youthful
and visionary leadership, which is prepared to join hands with a new
generation of Sinhalese and Tamil political activists who are aspiring
to build a united, democratic and prosperous Sri Lanka.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has promised a lot and is currently
delivering on the easier part of his promise package. However, the
gloomy state of the domestic economy with an equally gloomy economic
environment globally is going to make it harder for him to translate his
entire package into action.
The neoliberal economic paradise is increasingly becoming a mirage for
the vast majority all over the world, including Sri Lanka. Yet, the
Gota-mania that is sweeping through the Buddhist Sinhala sector may help
the Rajapaksa juggernaut to roll over the next General Election, and
win the right to govern. As things become more difficult, that
Government would require a strong and effective opposition to keep it
clean and accountable to the people who would bestow that right.
The Muslim community has changed a lot, amidst all recent setbacks, in
the sense that it now possesses a critical mass of intelligentsia and a
growing class of professionals, who can think and act rationally and in
the broader interest of the nation first and community second without,
being bound by strings of religious orthodoxy and moneyed powers.
Happily, this intelligentsia and professional class also include among
them Muslim women, a component that did not exist in the past. It is
this gender mixed group that has to wipe out the past shame and work
hard to produce a new leadership. This is the challenge of the century.
(The writer is attached to the School of Business and Governance, Murdoch University, Western Australia.)