{"id":57165,"date":"2016-07-31T22:57:29","date_gmt":"2016-08-01T04:57:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=57165"},"modified":"2016-07-31T01:39:28","modified_gmt":"2016-07-31T08:39:28","slug":"rubbishing-rajapaksa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2016\/07\/31\/rubbishing-rajapaksa\/","title":{"rendered":"Rubbishing Rajapaksa"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><em><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">By\u00a0Rohana R. Wasala<\/span><\/em><\/h2>\n<p><strong><em>One&#8217;s own self-worth is tied to the worth of the community to which one belongs, which is intimately connected to humanity in general. What happens in Darfur becomes an assault on my own community, and on me as an individual. That&#8217;s what the human family is all about.<\/em><\/strong>-Wole Soyinka (b. 1934), Nigerian dramatist and poet<\/p>\n<p>To want to perpetuate our own bloodline is a natural biological characteristic that we share with other animals. Love of one\u2019s own race is a normal thing. Racism results when this love drives one to harm other races on that basis. We are not guilty of that. It is a biological aberration to hate one\u2019s own race. It is not sanity to try to rationalize racial self-hate.<\/p>\n<p>\u2018Giving sanity a chance\u2019 (by Tisaranee Gunasekara\/July 24, 2016, Sunday Island) begins with a piece of perverted thinking that characterizes the whole essay: \u2018Racism is not the birthright of any one race.\u2019 No sane person will describe racism as anybody\u2019s birthright. A birthright literally means a right that you have from your birth to the ownership of something valuable or some special privilege. It is something positive, something useful, something you can cherish. Which pervert community claims racism as a birthright? Of course, we readers are sane enough to understand that probably TG is using the term \u2018birthright\u2019 ironically. Based on the general tenor of her writings that reflects her habitual antipathy towards the majority community (to which she\u00a0 seems to belong at least nominally) and particularly towards Mahinda Rajapaksa whom she always maliciously identifies with that racist insanity of her own imagination, we could say that her meaning is that the Sinhalese Buddhists of the south are inveterate racists, but that they get upset if a few Tamils of the north show the same communal characteristic; that is, in other words, the Sinhalese practice racism against other communities as if it is their exclusive right to do so! This is in the face of overwhelming evidence available, if she cares to look at it, to prove that the Sinhalese are today a beleaguered race in their own homeland; they are abject victims of racist discrimination, especially internationally, rather than a perpetrator of the same offence against others. What Tisaranee does is to first assert as gospel truth her jaundiced view of the majority Sinhalese, and the only national leader who represents the interests of the whole country without discrimination against any community based on his own ethnicity, and write articles filling them with misinformation culled from different sources that are usually inimical to our country.<\/p>\n<p>I feel tempted to comment on this alleged ingrained racist madness of the Sinhalese and the actual madness in others aggravated by their uninformed belief in the supposed genuineness of that charge. To do so, let me repeat a line from Shakespeare: Though this be madness, yet there is method in\u2019t\u201d, as the prudent and sagacious Polonius says in the play \u2018King Lear\u2019 about the king who, he believes or knows, is gone really mad; for he observes sound logic in what the king is saying, in his insanity, about his own old age. Of course, let\u2019s not forget that this is a comedy scene in a tragic play.<\/p>\n<p>I am quoting below the 7<sup>th<\/sup> major rock edict of Ashoka in full, as translated by Romila Thapar (b. 1931), the distinguished Indian historian specializing in her country\u2019s ancient history, who was a professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India. The source of this extract is Prof. Thapar\u2019s Ashoka and the Deccline of the Mauryans\u201d, where her translations of the Ashoka edicts are given in an appendix. She says she has translated them freely for easy comprehension by the average reader. The full text of the Ashokan inscription is strikingly irrelevant to the subject broached by TG (irrelevant because, where\u2019s the religious intolerance that she pretends our society to be afflicted with?). (I was prompted to do this by her selection of a stub of the same edict from a different translation to introduce her piece):<\/p>\n<p>The Beloved of the Gods, the king Piyadassi, wishes all sects may dwell in all places, for all seek self-control and purity of mind. But men have varying desires and varying passions. They will either practice all that is required or else only a part. But even he who is generous, yet has no self-control, purity of mind, gratitude and firm faith, is regarded as mean.\u201d (By \u2018sects\u2019 here, we may assume, are meant forms of religious belief\/religions. There is no religious intolerance among Sinhalese Buddhists to talk about, except that created in the imaginations of the NGO mercenaries to justify their survival in the business in Sri Lanka.)<\/p>\n<p>The purported relevance of TG\u2019s reference to the particular Ashokan edict to her essay is this: she wants to impress on the reader that the religious tolerance advocated in the rock inscription by the ancient monarch who had been inspired by Buddhism has gone by default among the Sinhalese Buddhists, who, she thinks, are led by an intolerant rabid religio-nationalist in the form of Mahinda Rajapaksa.<\/p>\n<p>TG\u2019s policy seems to be misrepresentation as a weapon against those she hates for some unknown reason. A hate-filled mind cannot heal a divided society (where the division is more imaginary than real and has been artificially induced by its enemies). Isn\u2019t this a disservice to our beleaguered island nation? (I consider all the people of my country as the nation, but they are of different races, religions etc. The Sinhalese are the majority race, and they have a right to assert their racial identity in freedom like the other races have a right to assert theirs. In ancient times, \u2018Sinhale\u2019 embraced all the people who made it their home preserving their racial and cultural identities.)<\/p>\n<p>At the very outset, TG writes: The clash over a dance item in the Jaffna University was not a Tiger conspiracy or even a sign of Tiger resurgence, let alone the first salvo of another war\u201d. Who could be sure that it was, or it was not, one or more of those three frightening possibilities, without sufficient evidence? The \u2018clash over a dance\u2019 interpretation of the incident, I am sorry to say, is an outright lie, based on the simian logic: Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil\u201d, which may be interpreted in the present context as Turn a blind eye to the obvious truth that some Tamil university students assaulted a group of their mates because they were Sinhalese and still dared to perform a cultural item that marks their ethnicity\u201d. TG\u2019s casting about to absolve the Tamil students of blame or at least to lessen their guilt by implicating the Sinhalese students as well flies in the face of available evidence. The students who have experienced repeated discrimination at the university of Jaffna over the years have decided to talk about it only now.\u00a0 To be in denial is an expedient policy for politicians to adopt, but, in the long run, it will only worsen the problem\/s that gave rise to such a demonstration of racial hatred on the part of those young Tamils. (If TG has read the many analyses of the Jaffna University incident that appeared in the media after her article, she must now know that it was not a pure Sinhalese Tamil clash, and that the incident brought to light a positive trend that the authorities must seize as an opportunity for defeating separatism.)<\/p>\n<p>Actually, \u00a0at first, there was no physical clash between Tamil and Sinhalese students over the Kandyan dance item. Some intolerant individuals among those who had first objected to it democratically though unreasonably, based on some ideology, started attacking the Sinhalese dance performers, as it appears in videos. The dance had probably been staged at all because the opinion of the senior Tamil student organizers who supported the Sinhalese cultural item being included in the welcome ceremony must have prevailed over a dissident view, prior to this incident; the dance item supporters must have been in the majority among the organizers, and the objectors a minority. If there was a clash, it was a clash of opinions between these two factions. But it later developed into a violent clash between Sinhalese and some Tamil university colleagues.<\/p>\n<p>TG\u2019s comparison of this incident to a recent obstruction of a play in the Wala (the open air amphitheatre) at the Peradeniya University campus is farfetched. I myself witnessed numerous instances of impromptu juvenile audience reactions to plays staged in the same venue a few decades back; her invocation of other similar episodes in universities elsewhere in the south is likewise gratuitous. Those incidents were not triggered by racism or religious fanaticism.<\/p>\n<p>Right from the beginning, the Sinhalese Buddhist majority have been the real victims of racism. First the occupying British did everything they could do to harass and suppress them, because only they posed a threat to their \u2018possession\u2019 of the island. As they did elsewhere, the British enlisted the support of the unsuspecting minorities against the majority by privileging the former over the latter in education, in government service, in the professions, etc (the notorious \u2018divide and rule\u2019 strategy). This does not mean that every Tamil, Muslim or Burgher was privileged under the British, but only those who were useful to them, which included compliant members from the majority community as well. At independence, the Tamil leaders feared that they would lose the special advantages they enjoyed under the British when power passed from the foreign rulers to the native population where the Sinhalese were positioned to step into the shoes of the departing British. While the Sinhalese leaders fought for freedom from foreign rule for all Sri Lankans, the minority Tamil leaders (not all) were more concerned about preserving the status quo ante. That is why G.G. Ponnambalam proposed his preposterous 50-50 division of parliamentary seats between the Sinhalese and all the minorities put together, which even the British rejected with contempt.<\/p>\n<p>D.S. Senanayake tried his utmost to reassure the Tamils that independent Ceylon (Sri Lanka) was for all Ceylonese equally, which however meant certain anomalies in governance that, though they unfairly advantaged some members of the minorities, were detrimental to the long oppressed majority Sinhalese, had to be eliminated. But this was not a case of robbing Peter to pay Paul; Sinhalese were in no way going to lord it over the minorities. \u00a0D.S. wanted his countrymen to think of themselves as Ceylonese, not as Sinhalese, Tamil, Muslim, Burgher, etc. Some Tamil politicians have managed to project a false image of the Sinhalese as racists. Whole generations have been gradually brainwashed to believe that the Sinhalese are oppressors. People still don\u2019t know what rights or privileges Tamils are denied that the Sinhalese enjoy.<\/p>\n<p>But there have always been Tamil politicians who work with Sinhalese and other community leaders as national leaders. Tamils, like Muslims, have always been represented in every government in responsible positions. Even the highest positions in the land are as open to them as to the Sinhalese and to others.<\/p>\n<p>(Mr. Rajapaksa lied. There was no incident of a Sinhala-Buddhist child being raped by a Tamil\/Muslim\/Christian, then or now.)\u201d TG adds parenthetically, while referring to an interview with\u00a0 President Rajapaksa broadcast on Al Jazeera TV in 2013. She says that the president lied in saying that a certain attack happened when a girl of 6 or 7 was molested: the implication was that enraged neighbours or relatives of the victim were probably involved, and that this escalated into a major incident. He was only responding to a question of the interviewer, and was obliquely referring to an isolated incident that might have triggered the later incidents. It was only a casual example of what can usually happen in our society or anywhere else. His meaning was that we have look into the background of the incidents\/attacks etc, before drawing conclusions, and take remedial action. I revisited that interview on Al Jazeera, after reading TG\u2019s article. The president was not lying about anything. Interviewer James Bays from Al Jazeera, like many typically arrogant, prejudiced Western media men and women, demonstrated that he wanted Rajapaksa to be exposed as a corrupt, authoritarian, intolerant third world tin-pot dictator. But it was a Rajapaksa who was rightly confident of his legitimate achievements after four years in office on his second term that emerged from the interview. He authoritatively dismissed as propaganda all the allegations that James Bays repeated before him \u00a0based on senile Navi Pillai\u2019s extremely biased post-tour-of-Sri Lanka report, asking for his response.<\/p>\n<p>TG asserts that the present rulers are only marginally better than Rajapaksa in \u2018corruption, nepotism and venality\u2019; she is asserting that the former two are not tainted with racism, while Rajapaksa is. She must be a more generous fair-minded person to see the truth. There is evidence for her to look at if she wants.<\/p>\n<p>Had the Rajapaksas been in power today, the army would have been sent to the University of Jaffna and a hysterical campaign against \u2018LTTE resurgence\u2019 launched islandwide with imprisonments and abductions galore\u201d. What nonsense, TG?<\/p>\n<p>Under Rajapaksa rule, religio-cultural differences were turned into political problems and every little incident of racial\/religious disharmony turned into an existential crisis. Issues were manufactured, when none existed. The best case in point is the anti-Halal campaign conducted by the BBS with toxic ferocity. The anti-Halal appeared from nowhere, occupied the centre stage and vanished, all in just three months.\u201d Balderdash. Nothing like this happened under Rajapaksa. The exact opposite happened. We saw on TV news an exhausted Rajapaksa rushing straight to Aluthgama, without going home, to pacify the people there after a grueling 8-hour flight from Latin America. The halal issue was amicably settled through peaceful and clear sighted interaction between reasonable Muslim leaders and the monks without the interference of anti-national agent provocateurs who indulge in their sadistic schemes instead of pouring oil on troubled waters.<\/p>\n<p>As D.B.S. Jeyaraj, a veteran journalist based in Canada, recently pointed out, it was after 2009 that the Jaffna University (created during Mrs Sirima Bandaranaike\u2019s United Front Government in 1974) again began to admit students from all races and regions in the country. This was due to the process of reconciliation made possible by the defeat of terrorism under Mahinda. Last year, there were 1600-1700 Sinhalese students studying there (30% of the nearly 6590 students enrolled there). They got on very well with their fellow Tamil students. Of all the students now studying in the Science Faculty (where the welcoming ceremony fracas took place), Sinhalese students account for 52%. Some 1763 Sinhalese students are to be or have been accommodated in the university this year.<\/p>\n<p>Had Rajapaksa been in power today, such a disruptive incident wouldn\u2019t have happened in Jaffna. Interactions between the north and the south would be proceeding more smoothly. Restoration of normalcy started under Rajapaksa. The absence of his leadership is telling on the country today. TG, just look at the tens of thousands of ordinary people agitating against the oppressive policies of the government in the massive Pada Yatra under Rajapaksa\u2019s aegis. Are they all insane?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By\u00a0Rohana R. Wasala One&#8217;s own self-worth is tied to the worth of the community to which one belongs, which is intimately connected to humanity in general. What happens in Darfur becomes an assault on my own community, and on me as an individual. That&#8217;s what the human family is all about.-Wole Soyinka (b. 1934), Nigerian [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[91],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-57165","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rohana-r-wasala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/57165","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=57165"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/57165\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=57165"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=57165"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=57165"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}