Historic Trincomalee
Pathirakali Ambal chariot
King Rajendra Cholan, the
First in the 11th Century A.D. - Tamilnet
Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam – 13 March 2016
Truth vs Reconciliation
Today is the first day of the festival of
Mother Kali temples at Sangarathai-Vaddukoddai and Trincomalee – the place that
attracts ‘foreign’ powers due to its natural harbor. As per the Sunday Times article
‘Trincomalee’s long road from ethnic
conflict to ethnic harmony’:
[In
this eastern district, where the strategic port city of Trincomalee, the
administrative capital, appears as an ideal ground for national reconciliation,
more people now turn up at police stations to lodge complaints in a sign of
increasing public confidence in the police and the judicial system.]
One could therefore conclude that the author
admits to the lack of Police service to have contributed significantly to the
ethnic conflict. My investment in Trincomalee was work related – through Prima
Ceylon Ltd. Prima is a big business organization in Singapore and I believe I added value to
Prima through my services while working in Prima. Years later, when we purchased
a unit in Coogee-View apartments here in Sydney, Australia - I was pleasantly
surprised to learn that Prima was the owner-developer.
This further confirmed that my ‘ownership’ work while in Prima was not lost
when I left Prima to join the National
carrier – Airlanka. My true investment in Prima traveled beyond time and place
borders to support me in Australia. I felt the blessings of Mother Kali of
Trincomalee when I had a dream about my life beyond Sri Lanka. This meant also
that Trincomalee was ‘home’ to me – just as Colombo and Jaffna were. Likewise,
Vaddukoddai due to my ownership-investment in my husband’s family. Today, on
this auspicious day, I pay homage to
both cities.
The above observation about the People
accessing the Police Service more and more now, needs to be read in conjunction
with the following observations in that article:
[Trincomalee businessman Nishantha
Abeywickrema said: “All communities lived in harmony in this district before
the war, but now we see that communities live in isolation, confined to their
respective villages. The interaction is not the same as it used to be.”]
The way I read this, before the war People of
Diverse cultures were not aware of the need to interact with each other, while
after the war – they feel obliged to do so. Once we have knowledge of the law
and its custodians, we are tempted to use them. Once we use them – mentally and/or
physically, we become relatives. To the extent we are disappointed with them –
we separate ourselves and live away from them – as I do even now with those of my
biological relatives who give preference to the physical above the mental and
the ‘Common’.
Both side leaders in the ethnic war were
limited by their biological relationships and their irredeemable actions and policies
that others acted upon – remain as Energies – positive as well as negative –
affecting all those to whom that place is ‘home’ and more importantly all those
who ‘claim’ that place is their home. Mother Kali is the personification of
Courage to act physically. Both these cities carry that power for better or for
worse.
Those to whom these places of war are ‘home’
would be Natural with the positives and negatives – as the People of Thunaivi
in Northern Sri Lanka are. But if they went / or were taken to the Police –
they would not know how to construct their case as per the law. Under those
circumstances – the matter will be constructed as per the interpretation of the
Police and unless the Police consider, the persons concerned as their higher relatives than the biological relatives
through families and members of their community – the judgment of the Police is
likely to be as per their own cultural values. A person with higher education
for example needs to consider others with investment in higher education as
her/his higher relative than one with biological ties but without investment in
higher education. To an officer, a higher relative must rank before a biologically
closer relative.
The Sri Lankan ethnic war deteriorated to
the lower level of using arms – due to both sides using the lower personal approach in preference to the higher
common approach. Today, an Australian reader wrote in response to my article ‘LTTE Killing Rajiv Gandhi - Mistake or
Natural?’ :
‘Tamil rebels? Don't they mean.....murdering
terrorists?’
Having lived with the People of Thunaivi-Vaddukoddai
– as part of that community – my response
is NO. Most of the People of Thunaivi react emotionally and would expect to be
killed even when they set out to kill the other side. It is animal behavior alright but ‘murdering
terrorists’ – NO. One who has knowledge of right conduct as per her/his own
environment with fairly comfortable access to the law – and sees the events
through such eyes - would find it easier to mark these guys wrong – and label
them as murdering terrorists. Not one to whom that place is ‘home’ through common
faith. If the above Australian were part of the ‘Hybrid’ system of judgment –
including at social and Australian political level, such injustice would be a
negative force for Australians who are active in this issue.
Truth when written from within – through our
own experiences – is the measure at the individual level. Reconciliation is
needed by those with official positions of responsibility. Majority Australians
of Sri Lankan origin – do not insist on
Equal Opportunity practices here in Australia. They accept the lower status and
make up the loss through ‘Community-structures’ and their financial freedom.
Devolution as per cultural diversity prevents such ‘expectations’ and therefore
disappointments.
In Sri Lanka – at the official level – any reconciliation
needs to include Buddha Sasana due to Article 9 of the Constitution. Accordingly in terms of the actions of the armed
forces – this test also has to be applied to their actions and/or non-actions
in attacking the opposition. Judges without knowledge of Buddha Sasana are disqualified due to Article 9.
On the basis of Equal Opportunity
principles facilitated by articles 10 and 14 (1) (e ) of the Sri Lankan Constitution, a non-Buddhist
Sri Lankan has the right to be heard on the basis of her/his religious belief
when interpreting the law as well as ‘facts’. In terms of Reconciliation – one side
does not have the right to speak for the other – but has the authority to declare
independently – its own claims as per its own interpretation of law and facts
as experienced by that side. Separation is needed for this the exercise of
independence. Without such separation – reconciliation would not be legitimate
even if accepted by those concerned as happens here in Australia.
Where the level of Truth discovered is
higher than the ‘facts’ reconciled – Devolution of power in regards to the
issue of use of arms is a legitimate claim of minorities who have established this claim.
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