{"id":68532,"date":"2017-08-03T21:25:08","date_gmt":"2017-08-04T03:25:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=68532"},"modified":"2017-08-03T14:18:42","modified_gmt":"2017-08-03T21:18:42","slug":"the-third-deadly-event-of-the-first-independence-day-part-ii-continued-from","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2017\/08\/03\/the-third-deadly-event-of-the-first-independence-day-part-ii-continued-from\/","title":{"rendered":"The Third Deadly Event of the First Independence Day -Part II \u2013 continued from&#8230;&#8230;.."},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em><strong>H. L. D. Mahindapala<\/strong><\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>It\u00a0 is by looking back that one\u00a0 can detect how coming events had cast their shadows across the political landscape in Sri Lanka on the first Independence Day.<\/p>\n<p>In the previous article I showed how the two major events that was staged on the Galle Face end of the city on the first Independence Day \u2013 1. the joint rally of the Marxists at Galle Face Green and 2. the official Independence Day celebrations at Temple Trees\u201d, the residence of the first Prime Minister of Ceylon (as it was known then) &#8212; foreshadowed the class war\u201d that raged in the south. The Marxist leaders dominated southern politics with their doctrines of revolutionary politics which, among other things, legitimised violence. They promised that the revolution that was coming\u00a0 round the corner would eliminate poverty and usher in the\u00a0 worker\u2019s paradise. With this promise they launched wave after wave of strikes that took them nowhere. Neither the revolution nor the paradise ever materialised. But they created the ideological environment for the rise of the next generation of Marxists, the fascist JVPers, who resorted to brutal violence in a futile bid to overthrow the capitalist class and replace it with their regime which would have been, if\u00a0 it materialised, another Pol Potist regime. The misguided, angry, frustrated youth, stagnating in pools of unemployment without any upward social mobility, went berserk armed with mainly ideological weapons of destruction. Mercifully, their military adventures were short lived.\u00a0 The force that presided over history saved the nation from the barbarism of the Sinhala Pol Potists.<\/p>\n<p>The Tamils of the North were not that fortunate. Jaffna Tamils have been the victims of their own perverse history, starting from Sankili to Prabhakaran. Their misery in the 20-21st century can be traced back to the third event that took place on Independence Day. This mysterious event was never recorded at the time, or even noticed by anyone. This third event turned out to\u00a0 be the most intriguing and sinister. It was the obscure beginning of a movement that grew into menacing proportions over time.\u00a0 It moved stealthily in down-town suburbs of Colombo. It was flying in a car, moving in and out of Bambalapitiya, Wellawatte and Cinnamon Gardens localities. It was so insignificant that no one took any notice of the car or the symbol fluttering on its bonnet. It was only a token protest at the time but, as the subsequent events proved, it contained all the potential to breakout into the most powerful force in the post-independent era. In fact, it developed into the dominant force of the 20th century, pushing the Marxist class war into the margins\u00a0 of history. The car was flying a flag which was not known to the vast majority in the south. Inside the car was Murugeysen Tiruchelvam, who was the then Deputy Solicitor-General, the father of Neelan Tiruchelvam. He was flying the Nandi (Bull) flag, heralding the Tamil separatist movement. (See, <strong><em>Senator Tiruchelvam\u2019s Legacy<\/em><\/strong> \u2013 p 22, edited by Ram Balasubramanian, Vijitha Yapa Publications., 2007). This was the third event that cast its ominous shadow darkening the remaining days of the 20th century.<\/p>\n<p>The Nandi flag flown by Tiruchelvam\u00a0 on the\u00a0 bonnet\u00a0 of car was the initial symbol of Tamils which represented their hopes of regaining their lost kingdom. Velupillai Prabhakaran, rejecting the symbols of\u00a0 his political fathers, abandoned the Nandi symbol and redesigned it with his Tiger flag, imitating the MGM lion. Squatting in the streets of Chennai he dictated his design to a street artist who was paid a few rupees. With his limited imagination Prabhakaran replaced the MGM lion with his snarling tiger, putting his head out of a ring of 33 bullets crossed by two guns with fixed bayonets. It\u00a0 is the most devilish flag of any known civilised community with no redeeming features in it\u00a0 at all to express the humane side of Tamil\u00a0 society. Barbarism is written all over the flag.<\/p>\n<p>But what\u00a0 he did not know was that he was predicting his own future in his design. The ring of 33 bullets predicted his own fate : Prabhakaran lasted exactly 33 years. And the Nandi flag of Tiruchelvam too foretold its own future : the movement it unleashed ended in Nandikadal. This ill-fated Tamil movement to establish an Eelam also corresponds to the prediction of Supathidda-muni, a remarkable visitor to the court of Yalpanam\u201d. King Pararajasegaram, respectfully asks the Muni about the future of the Jaffna kingdom. The reply is ominous. He foretold\u00a0 that after the Portuguese, the Dutch and the English return to their countries handing over the government of the whole of Langka\u201d, the Tamils would\u00a0 lose their\u00a0 sovereignty forever.\u00a0 The sovereignty will never again come back to your descendants,\u201d prophesied the Muni. (pp. 27 \u2013 29 &#8211; <em><strong>Yalpana Vaipava Malai, or the History of the Kingdom\u00a0 of Jaffna, <\/strong><\/em>translated by C. Britto, Asian Educational Services, New Delhi, 1999<em><strong>). <\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p>Obviously, Tiruchelvam would\u00a0 not have envisaged this turn\u00a0 of events when he was roaming the suburbs of Colombo flying the Nandi flag in his car on Independence Day. Nor was he aware that he was unleashing forces that were going\u00a0 to spin\u00a0 out\u00a0 of\u00a0 the control of the Tamil leadership. It was the hidden force of this obscure, unrecorded and insignificant event that burst out from its confines in Jaffna and, in the following decades, overtook all other competing political movements and dominated national politics. The car in which M. Tiruchelvam flew this Nandi flag rolled down, in due course, from the North like a juggernaut destroying everything in its wake.<\/p>\n<p>This unsung flag-flying exercise happened to be the seminal symbol of the most divisive and explosive event that challenged the nation, its identity, sovereignty and territorial integrity. In hindsight it stands out as the leading\u00a0 symbol of the events that were to unfold in\u00a0 its wake with disastrous consequences, mostly to the Jaffna Tamils. Not surprisingly, the\u00a0 first victims\u00a0 of the Northern violence were the fathers who gave birth to it. There are some parallels in the violence that erupted in the north and the south. At its peak the violence of the south and the north reached unmanageable proportions threatening the elected democratic state. In the south the youth took up arms on class warfare\u201d based on economics. In the north the Tamil youth were drawn\u00a0 into a racist war, targeting the Sinhala-south. The racist war declared by the Tamil leadership at Vadukoddai in 1976 eventually, overtook the Marxist revolutionary\u201d movements and emerged as the most brutal of violent movement that plagued the post-independent era. Quite appropriately, in keeping\u00a0 with its ruthlessness, the rather placid image of the sedentary Nandi was replaced by the snarling\u00a0 face of a brutal Tiger. The\u00a0 new symbol of the Tiger helped\u00a0 to maintain the rage. But in the end both flags sank in\u00a0 Nandikadal lagoon. Tiruchelvam\u2019s Nandi Flag going down in Nandikadal is another event that predicted the coming events on Independence Day. Coming events certainly had a way of casting their grim shadows into the future.<\/p>\n<p>The ideological forces that propelled southern and northern youth into rebellion point the finger to the political fathers who indoctrinated and directed their children into two divergent paths of violence. The Marxist leaders demonised the capitalist class and the Sinhala youth took up arms to overthrow the ruling elite armed with the kaduwa\u201d &#8212; the English language. The Marxist produced children to wage a class warfare and had to face them unexpectedly when\u00a0 they were in the seats of power. Beware of what you wish in the twenties you might get them in the forties, they say.<\/p>\n<p>The Tamil leadership, taking on a similar leadership role, spun an ideology of identity politics, filled invariably with\u00a0 hate, targeting the Sinhalese \u2013 all which were encapsulated in the Batakotte (Vadukoddai) Resolution of 1976.\u00a0 They demonised the Sinhala-Buddhists \u2013 the only ideology on which they survived and thrived in peninsular politics. They produced Tamil children to wage a racist war. Marxists\u00a0 promised a workers\u2019 paradise. The Tamil leadership promised Eelam. The Marxists were hoping to ride on the backs of the helpless workers into a paradise of sahodarayas\u201d who would do all the work and, at the end of the day share all the riches produced by their\u00a0 labour. The ageing Tamil leaders were hoping to ride on the backs of the Tamil youth into the elusive Eelam that was on the other side of Nandikadal which they never crossed. In the end both leaderships discovered, rather late, that they had sowed the seeds of their own destruction.\u00a0 The Muslim and the Indian leaderships were wise. They retained the leadership of their communities in their hands by not\u00a0 resorting to violence. They remained within the non-violent framework which helped them to save their leaderships and their\u00a0 communities. Handing over guns to the youth can backfire and first kill the fathers who promoted violence.<\/p>\n<p>Tiruchelvam\u2019s decision to fly the Tamil flag on Independence Day clearly was an act of defiance protesting against the Sinhala government\u201d. But the timing gives the lie to the Tamil claim that it was the anti-Tamil acts of the Sinhala governments\u201d that provoked them to pursue extremist politics. When Tiruchelvam drove out of his car from his residence at Wellawatt-am\u201d \u2013 a suburb populated mainly by the Tamils of Jaffna \u2013 nothing had changed from the days of the British Empire which provided the Tamils a privileged position in the public service, the only\u00a0 growth\u00a0 industry at the time. His act of raising the flag of Tamils on Independence Day was a determined declaration of anti-Sinhala hate politics which was not instigated by the rise of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike, or his Sinhala Only Bill of 1956, or even the Citizenship Bill passed by the D. S. Senanayake. None of these political acts had surfaced when he drove out on Independence Day challenging, as\u00a0 it were, the might of the Sinhala\u00a0 state\u201d. It did not augur well for communal harmony. He was flying\u00a0 the flag for divisive politics. There was no valid reason for this anti-Sinhala act because D. S. Senanayake had laid the foundations for multi-ethnic, multi-cultural, multi-party government of rainbow colours with guarantees for\u00a0 the minorities (Section 29 of the Soulbury Constitution) on a sound democratic base of the Westminster model. Besides, G. G. Ponnambalam, the acknowledged leader of the Tamils at the time, was included in the first Cabinet.<\/p>\n<p>So what earthly reason was there for Tiruchelvam to fly a divisive communal flag when the constructive and conducive elements were factored in to build a rainbow nation? It was, by far, the best of times for the Tamils and, for that matter\u00a0 all communities. Everything was in its place, as the British left with no change at all to the privileges, powers and perks\u00a0 of the minorities. So why did Tiruchelvam come out flying his Nandi Flag unless it was to signal the anti-Sinhala hate\u00a0 politics of the Tamils. It must be emphasised again that it was done without any provocation from the Sinhala governments\u201d. And shortly after that, within less than two years, S. J.V. Chelvanayakam came out\u00a0 to declare his federal\/separate state on December 18, 1949 at the government Clerical Service Union Hall in Maradana.\u00a0 The infant state was taking its first steps when the Tamils launched their racist offensive on bogus accusations of discrimination, denial of Tamil rights that were supposed to end in the extinction of Tamils etc.<\/p>\n<p>If Tiruchelvam launched the first Tamil offensive on the very first day of independence with a symbolic act then S. J. V. Chelvanayakam, the father of Tamil separatism, took it to the extreme end of the political spectrum by launching Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi\u00a0 (The Federal Freedom Party of the Tamil-speaking People of Ceylon) in 1949. In his presidential speech he picks on four main issues which should be examined in hindsight to test the validity of his accusations. (See full text of his speech in Michael Roberts\u2019 <em><strong>Tamil Person and State, Pictorial<\/strong><\/em>, Viitha Yapa).<\/p>\n<p>First, he says : The government is indulging in a series of discriminatory legislative and administrative acts too numerous to recapitulate &#8230;..Over two years of internal self-government have reduced the Tamil-speaking people to an inferior status in their\u00a0 own country.\u201d Having said that he picks on four issues: 1. de-citizenize half the Tamil people of Ceylon.\u201d 2. the Lion Flag, saying that it is identified with Singhalese sovereignty. He adds that it is symbolic of its attitude towards the Tamil-speaking people. The Government ignores their existence as a part\u00a0 of the body politics\u201d. 3. Government colonisation. We have only the beginning\u00a0 of it in Gal Oya,\u201d he says. 4. the language policy. The government intends to administer seven provinces in Sinhala without making provisions for the use of Tamil in all the nine provinces, he complained.<\/p>\n<p>Let\u2019s take his accusations one\u00a0 by one. Re.1 : De-citizenising half\u00a0 the Tamils. The primary task of all ex-colonies was to redress the historical imbalances caused by the colonial masters. The restoration of the historical rights denied by the colonial masters had to be restored. Defining the citizens of a nation was one such duty of the state. Ex-colonies, burdened with the influx of imported labour by the colonial masters, engaged in defining their citizens and the new government enacted the citizenship acts which gave citizenship to those Indians workers who could prove that their fathers were born in Ceylon. G. G. Ponnambalam, the acknowledged leader of the Tamils voted for the bill. So did all other community leaders, including\u00a0 the Muslims. Predictably, the Indian Congress representing the Indian estate workers voted against\u00a0 it. So it was not an act of the Sinhala government against the Tamils. It can\u2019t be an act of the Sinhala government if the Tamil leader, Ponnambalam, and\u00a0 other minority leaders voted for it. But Chelvanayakam blamed it as an act of discrimination against the Tamils by the Sinhala government. Furthermore, later, under the Srima-Shastri Agreement, India agreed to repatriate the Indian estate workers who do not qualify and accept them as Indian citizens. Even this was condemned by Chelvanayakam. He was more concerned about the Tamils losing their electoral clout than the Indian\u00a0 workers losing\u00a0 their citizenship. Eventually, the Sinhala governments\u201d revoked the earlier decision and gave citizenship to the bulk of the Indian workers who remained in Sri Lanka. The\u00a0 problem was resolved to the satisfaction of all parties. But the Tamil lobby continues to blame the Sinhala governments of de-citizenizing\u201d the Indian estate workers<\/p>\n<p>Re 2 : The Lion Flag is symbolic of its (state\u2019s) attitude towards the Tamil-speaking people\u201d. Chelvanayakam was objecting\u00a0 to the Lion as symbol of majoritarian supremacy. He did not object to\u00a0 Tiruchelvam running around with the bull in his flag. But it was highly objectionable for the Sinhalese to have their lion in a multi-ethnic, multi-religious flag. It is this kind\u00a0 of perverse logic that exacerbated inter-ethnic relations. In any case, the overall design of the national flag was signed and endorsed by all community leaders, including G. G. Ponnambalam. The orange strip is for the Tamil and the green\u00a0 is for the Muslims. The Sinhala attitude towards the Tamil-speaking\u00a0 people\u201d was evinced in the distinguish place given to\u00a0 the minorities\u00a0 in the flag. For instance, there are 193 flags flying at the UN. The only flag that has given the Tamils a place is the Sri Lankan flag. Not even India, which\u00a0 has the largest concentration of Tamils, has given a pride of place for the Tamils in their national flag. So how valid\u00a0 is Chelvanayakam\u2019s anti-Sinhala complaint?<\/p>\n<p>Re.3 : Government colonisation. The Tamil colonisation of the hill country by the Indian workers, evicting the Sinhala peasants, and the colonisation of the suburbs of Colombo (example : Wellawatta-am\u201d) with government servants from Jaffna were the outcome of\u00a0 state-sponsored jobs created and handed over to recruits of the Indian and Jaffna Tamil communities by the British government. In\u00a0 the hill country the Sinhalese villages were forcibly taken over under the fake Waste Land Act. Overnight the Sinhala villagers became homeless people evicted from their traditional homeland. Chelvanayakam did not\u00a0 object to that. He objects to only Sinhalese settlers going back to\u00a0 their traditional homeland from\u00a0 ancient\u00a0 times in the east and the north. Besides, Gal Oya is now in the hands\u00a0 of the Muslims more than the Sinhalese. Clearly, Chelvanayakam was scare-mongering to push the Sinhalese out and replace them with Tamils. His objective was to increase and consolidate his electoral clout to beat the Sinhalese.<\/p>\n<p>Re.4: The language policy. The claim of Chelvanayakam that the Tamil language will disappear and Tamils will be reduced to slaves under Sinhala Only legislation have proved to be absolute bunkum. Tamil language has been given a place in the state as never before. Better than even in India. Take also the case of the Tamil diaspora. They live in various\u00a0 parts of the world. In which of those country has Tamil language a place as in Sri Lanka. Which currency declares its value in Tamil? Which stamp of other\u00a0 countries prints its identity in Tamil? Which international airline announces in Tamil? And yet the Tamils go round demonising\u00a0 the Sinhala state as the enemy of Tamils which had suppressed and denied the Tamils their linguistic rights. From its inception Radio Ceylon, the state run\u00a0 broadcasting institution, (the BBC of Sri Lanka) has been a centre for the promotion of Tamil culture.<\/p>\n<p>Chelvanayakam and\u00a0 his team had never stopped talking of discrimination. How far is this true? Consider, for instance, a fundamental issue affecting all communities. Children of all communities are given free education, irrespective of race, religion or caste, from kindergarten to\u00a0 university. Not\u00a0 even Tamil Nadu, the only homeland\u00a0 of Tamils, give free education\u00a0 to the Tamils. I googled fees for a university degree in Chennai. I was shocked. It\u2019s 1 crore for MB,BS. And the Tamils have the gumption to accuse the Sinhala state\u201d of discrimination for giving\u00a0 them free education.<\/p>\n<p>It is the doctors who got free education from the Sri Lankan medical faculties who financed the Tiger war, crying\u00a0 discrimination. Tamil humbuggery knows no limit. They are scared to acknowledge the realities because they know that the truth will demolish their claim to be victims of the Sinhala state. Besides, their only means of hiding their brutal\u00a0 persecution, murder, and\u00a0 discrimination against their own people over the ages is by pointing a finger at the Sinhala state.<\/p>\n<p>Chelvanayakam\u00a0 complained that the Tamils have been\u00a0 reduced to an inferior\u00a0 status at a time when Sir Kandiah Vaidyanathan was the first Prime Minister\u2019s first Permanent Secretary, the highest position\u00a0 in the public\u00a0 service. Also the first Sri Lankan Army Commander of Independent Sri Lanka was Maj-General Anton Mutucumaru. The second Navy Commander was Rajan Kadiragamar. There were at least four Tamil IGPs. Head of the Treasury was Raju Coomaraswamy, the father of the\u00a0 present head of the Central Bank. The list is unending. Yet the Tamils were made to believe that they are the victims of Sinhala discrimination. Yes, there was discrimination. That is only field in which all Sri Lankans are treated equally without exception. When the UNP wins all the Sinhala SLFPers, are beaten, houses burnt, transferred, demoted, or sacked. And vice versa. Now if that happened to Tamils it would be broadcast as discrimination.<\/p>\n<p>It\u00a0 is time that the Tamils faced reality and worked for reconciliation first by apologising to their own people \u2013 not the Sinhalese &#8212; for the crimes committed against them for centuries. I am sure that if all the crimes committed by the Sinhalese are piled up next to\u00a0 the crimes committed by the Tamil against the Tamils the Sinhala crimes would stand at the level of an ant hill compared to the Himalayan heights of Tamil crimes. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Listen\u00a0 to\u00a0 the words of S. Chandrahasan, son of Chelvanayakam and V. Anandasangaree, one of the last of the Chelvanayakam generation, who have said that Prabhakaran had killed more Tamils than all the others\u00a0 put together. What more evidence is\u00a0 needed to\u00a0 prove that the Tamils have been better off under the Sinhala governments than under centuries of fascist Vellala rule or the Pol Potist regime of Prabhakaran?<\/p>\n<p>End of story \u2013 a tragic story indeed in which the Tamil crimes against the Tamils, particularly against\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 the Tamil\u00a0 children, make Jaffna the grim black hole\u00a0 of Sri Lankan history.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>H. L. D. Mahindapala It\u00a0 is by looking back that one\u00a0 can detect how coming events had cast their shadows across the political landscape in Sri Lanka on the first Independence Day. In the previous article I showed how the two major events that was staged on the Galle Face end of the city on [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[18],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-68532","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-h-l-d-mahindapala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/68532","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=68532"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/68532\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=68532"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=68532"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=68532"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}