EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH
THE ANONYMOUS MAN BEHIND THE NEW SRI LANKA CENTRE IN LONDON
By Tilak S. Fernando
On the eve of the third
consecutive session of the The Sri Lanka Centre opening doors on 10th
March at the Ealing Town Hall Tilak S. Fernando spoke exclusively to
the 'brains behind' this enormous project. Following are the excerpts
of the interview.
Q. You inaugurated the Sri Lanka Centre event at Alexandra Palace
and then went to Porchester Hall. You say this is a temporary measure
until you find a permanent home, but why are you holding the Centre
at posh places at such high expense?
A. Most Sri Lankan events are held in cheap, and often nasty-looking,
halls. The decision to hold the Sri Lanka Centre events in nicer venues
was to help to raise the profile of the Centre and also to boost the
morale of our people.
Q. The Sri Lanka Centre must be costing you a fortune. Why have
you embarked on such a venture?
A. The Sri Lankans are the only community in the UK which does not have
a community centre. Even poorer countries have set up centres for their
people. We did have a centre in the late Sixties and early Seventies,
but it was a students' centre, and it was sold off by the government
at a ridiculously low price.
Q. Why do you think that a Sri Lanka Centre is so vitally important
?
A. It is the lack of a Sri Lankan centre that has prevented the development
of a national consciousness among our people. We do not think of ourselves
as Sri Lankans. Instead, we are highly fragmentised since we are organised
only as members of one or other old boys' organisation, or as members
of some profession or as members of some political party. The Sri Lanka
Centre enables us to come together as Sri Lankans: to feel part of a
nation.
Q. How is it that such a Centre has not been thought of by others?
A. Other people also may have thought of such a centre, but nothing
has materialised. I, myself, have been trying with a number of others
to set up such a centre for more than six years, but there was not enough
real support.
Q. Why have you decide to set it up yourself rather than in association
with others?
A. Many organisations collapse because some people get into the committees
to hi-jack and subvert them and divert them from their original objectives,
or use them for self-publicity. Or the members have violently conflicting
views of the aims.
Moreover, to set up such a Centre costs a lot of money. The hall charges
alone for the hire of the Palace Suite at Alexandra Palace for the ceremonial
opening on 2nd December 2000 cost more than £3,000. On top of that there
were the charges for the band, the singer (who was brought direct from
Sri Lanka), fees for the cultural dances, costs of the dinner etc. -
all of which totalled nearly £6,000. The charges for the occasion at
the Porchester Hall on 3rd February 2001 also cost nearly as much.
Q. Some people often complain that they were not invited into the
committees for this project and you have a mind of your own and difficult
to work with you. How do you defend yourself ?
A. Everyone is entitled to their opinion but I will tell you some thing
and that is, it is very difficult to persuade people to contribute even
small amounts of money. People cannot expect a right to get into committees
without taking on the obligations? I have been involved in work relating
to the Sri Lankan situation for the past seventeen years, but only a
very small number of people have ever contributed any money - and that,
also, mostly in 1983 to insert that famous advertisement titled 'You
heard the Media: Now read the facts' in the (UK) Guardian.
Q. Do you mean to say that you have not had any response from the
Sri Lankan compatriots in support of your endeavour since then ?
A. No. Except for a very small number of cheques which were received
in recent years - and these we diverted straight to other Sinhala organisations
- the reluctance of people to contribute is very dispiriting. But the
reluctance is also partly due to the fact that many believe in the past
some individuals had collected money from the public, but the money
had 'disappeared'. Allegations are that some even set up private businesses.
As a result, even the few people who were concerned enough to want to
contribute money for the Sri Lankan cause, stopped giving.
Q. Do you think that is the major stumbling block you face ?
A. It was because of this difficulty of getting our people to contribute
any money that I stopped even asking people, and from that time on,
all my efforts - for three years, I even published a newspaper called
'Sri Lanka International' - were financed by me.
Q. People have said that the programme is too long - going on from
10.00 in the morning till 1.30 the next morning. Because of this, though
substantial numbers of people have been turning up, it gives the illusion
that the numbers are low because the crowd is dispersed over more than
fifteen hours.
A. The Sri Lanka centre is intended to perform the function of a permanent
centre. People should be able to visit whenever they feel like it -
whether to come and purchase groceries, or to have a hopper or string-hopper
lunch, or for dancing or even simply to sit down and read the papers
or have a chat with other Sri Lankans. The Centre caters to all of these
objectives.
Q. Why have the Sri Lankan businesses not supported your venture
so far?
A. Businessmen have to look for their profits and are, traditionally,
conservative. But they are now realising that having a stall at the
Sri Lanka Centre makes very good economic sense. Businesses need to
go where the people are, rather than expect the people to go to the
businesses. By having stalls at the Centre, they can advertise their
products directly to potential customers, answer customer queries, solve
customers' problems, and immediately sell their products. As any Sales
Manager knows, this is this ideal opportunity to do all that.
Q. So why have organisations like the Bank of Ceylon, with their
new Corporate image, not seized the opportunity of The Sri Lanka Centre?
A. Very good question.The Bank of Ceylon spends a large amount of money
for advertisements to try to and induce people to open NRFC accounts.
But people do not go all the way to Devonshire Square to open NRFC accounts,
but to conduct their own business. If the Bank wishes to induce people
to open such accounts, it should come to The Sri Lanka Centre - to where
the people are - and speak to them, explain the advantages of such accounts,
and get the paperwork completed then and there. If the Bank had only
done so, I am certain that more NRFC accounts would have been opened
at the past three Sri Lanka Centre occasions than have been opened during
the past five years.
Q. Since this is a good community project, why has the government
not done this, rather than leave it to a private individual?
A. When the late General Sepala Attygalle and General Cyril Ranatunga
were holding the position of High Commissioner here, they repeatedly
promised to help seting up of a Sri Lanka Centre, but nothing materialised.
The new High Commissioner, Mr Mangala Moonesinghe, is more concerned
and we feel that we will now have the Government support for a permanent
centre. It will be more economical for the government to purchase a
suitable building to house all the government organisations in one complex,
and we could help in the running of the Sri Lanka Centre in one part
of the building. After all, considering the number of Sri Lankans living
in the UK this becomes an important and vital requisite.
Q. You have already held the Sri Lanka Centre event on two occasions
and spent a large amount of money for this project. People say that
either you have too much of money, or you are foolish to do this. What
have you to say to such criticisms?
A. This is a typical Sri Lankan attitude. Many people do not want to
do anything, and when someone does, people are ever ready to criticise.
It is the government that should have done this, but over the past fifty-three
years it has done nothing. The lack of a Centre has been very harmful
to our nation because it has eroded our sense of nationhood. Today we
tend to think of ourselves as members of this or that old boys' association,
or of one or other professional organisation or even of one political
party or another. But we do not think of ourselves as a nation.
Q. How optimistic are you that in the very near future your dream
to establish a permanent Sri Lanka Centre will come true, despite all
the negative criticism being levelled by some people?
A. I believe that a permanent centre can be established very soon. In
fact, the major problem is finding a suitable building. If anyone knows
of a disused cinema building, church hall or any other building within
about a ten-mile radius of Ealing, we would be very grateful if he/she
gets in touch with us on 020 8998 3024.
As you have no doubt heard the Sri Lanka Centre was formally opened
by H. E. Mangala Moonesinghe, High Commissioner for Sri Lanka in the
U. K. at the Palace Suite, Alexandra Palace, London N22 on 2nd December
2000. The Sri Lanka Centre will open once a month at different venues,
and opened at the Porchester Hall, Queensway, London W2 on Saturday,
3rd February 2001.
The Sri Lanka Centre will next open on Saturday, 10th March 2001
at the Ealing Town Hall from 12.00 noon till 7.00pm. The Centre covers
a number of activities, aiming to perform as much service as possible
to the Sri Lanka community