Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
23February 2018
Respecting
the Mother Language
“For each of us, the mother
tongue is the key symbol of our individual identity” – former President of
Sri Lanka, Madam Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga
Madam Kumaratunga confirms what most of us know about the Tamil
Tigers who demonstrated cleverness at the expense of Respectability. The closer
we are to our roots / traditions – the greater the show of respectability
needed. One of my students asked me recently whether one had to touch the feet
of an elder to demonstrate respect. The
respect was there but in modern world driven by economic prosperity respect
seems a myth. Hence this student did not have the Energy to surface that respect
felt within.
A person who foregoes earned benefits automatically becomes a
respectable person. A teacher/mother becomes respectable when s/he shares the
benefit which s/he believes is hers/his. Whether the beneficiary of such
sharing pays her/his respects or not – one who shares becomes respectable. This
is carried as one’s self-respect/self-confidence/dignity. One who carries such
dignity naturally shares with others who have the need to be respected. Need for
self-respect is the flower that blooms to make a seat for respect.
In Sri Lanka, Sinhalese leaders as well as Tamil militants have
from time to time, demonstrated serious disrespect for others’ earned status. How
does this happen? Is attachment to the benefits the prime reason/cause, of such disrespect? If yes, how does one
transcend attachment? If no, does respect have no value in such groups?
Our Australian Prime Minister, the Hon Malcolm Turnbull, has
stressed towards addressing domestic violence, on the need to respect the
woman. When the woman with apparently weaker body is respected – man becomes
more human by replacing the animal in him with the higher common person. That is the subjective pathway.
When one trades benefits at lateral level – and there is no
pathway through which to share laterally – the excess produced is returned to
the producer. Hence those who seek to remain close to their mother cultures –
need to demonstrate that respect and take the benefit to the higher level. Listed
in the Appendix are excerpts from
Chapter 17 of ‘Naan Australian’ – about the Hindu Mango Legend which confirms
that one has to forgo benefits from Traditional ways to develop global
structures.
In the case of Sri Lankan Buddhists to whom Sinhalese is the
mother language and Sri Lankan Hindus to whom Tamil is the mother language, has
this ‘attachment’ to local benefits including status been a block to their
Independence?
There are times when a mother/senior/Tradition may not be deserving of respect. But when we have the need to express ourselves, a
structured system would facilitate it through the position of that mother/senior.
That position is empowered by the architects of that structure and by those who
have maintained that structure since then. The net values of past contributors
and distant contributors reside as Energy. When one to whom that area is ‘home’
has a true need, the positive Energy automatically rises to bring that structure
to the mind of the believer / family – who would bow and facilitate a seat for
that structure in her/his mind.
Different cultures practise this in different ways. In most
religions, such humility by the one in need of the service of the respected senior
is built into practices such as prostrating, kneeling and bowing. Recently an
academic said about a Chinese Buddhist student that the student would not turn
his back to the academic when walking
out of the class; but would wait until the academic had left or walk backwards
without turning around – a common practice at Sri Sathya Sai Baba temples. When
those structures come into our mind, we feel empowered as if that leader is
performing with us.
Recent discussions on the basis of outcomes of the Local
Government elections in Sri Lanka, included the analyses by leaders about ‘blooming of the Tamil Eelam and
blooming of lotus bud’ .
The mother flower of Tamils is Karthigai flower/flame
lily/ Gloriosa. It is also the flower of
Lord Muruga. I learnt this not from a Sri Lankan Tamil. Once when buying
flowers for the weekly poojah, I noticed this attractive flower at the Flemington markets
in Sydney. I took them to the Sathya Sai Baba temple
at Carlingford where a Sri Lankan Tamil said it was the flower of the LTTE and an
Indian Tamil Brahmin lady said it was
Lord Muruga’s flower and that it had six petals. That was the first time I
learnt about both. But neither of the above devotees found it in Flemington
markets around which a good proportion of Tamils live. I felt I found it due to
my need for the higher status showing the common value.
To
the extent Sri Lankan Tamils respect India’s Tamil Nadu as an elder they would
respect Buddhists as a diverse group. They would defend but not attack.
Likewise,
Sinhalese, majority of whom are Buddhists who use the Lotus flower common to
Buddhism and Hinduism would naturally accept Hindus as their global brothers. The
Lotus flower would come to them if they are true Buddhists in nations where
Buddhists are in the minority.
LTTE
was strongly supported by Indian resources but they demonstrated lack of
respect for India’s leadership by killing India’s Prime Minister the Hon Rajiv
Gandhi. This confirms excessive attachment to ‘freedom
fighting’ and its current benefits.
Sri
Lankan Buddhists who are active in Politics carry the karma of a Buddhist monk
murdering the Sri Lankan Prime Minister – the Hon Bandaranaike - Madam Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga’s father – who rose
to pay his respects. That is like murdering Lord Buddha in the position of
Prime Minister. Both happened due to desire for current benefits – more and
more desire for immediate benefits due to lack of discipline to become
respectable by sharing current benefits with juniors who are needed to confirm
maintenance of Tradition. Benefits have
to be escalated as structures to become common and further as Energy to be an
Eternal power.
Appendix - excerpts from Chapter 17 of Naan Australian
As pre Hindu Legend Muruga
renounced the prize mango – to establish His own kingdom. Elephant faced Ganesh and Muruga are the two
children of Shiva-Shakthi. Saint
Naradhar is usually known to highlight
an issue by promoting/escalating a
conflict which ultimately ends well. This time Saint Naradhar took a mango to
Shiva-Shakthi and said that whoever ate that mango would attain eternity. Given that Shiva-Shakthi did not need it
(they were already immortal) they decided to share it equally between their two
children. Saint Naradhar says that to attain the value of eternity, the mango
should not be shared but should be eaten in full by one person. This means that anything physical should be
fully experienced by one person to raise
it to the higher value. For
example, our workplace credits need to
be fully owned by us before we could raise it to ownership level. Towards this
we need to feel grateful to those who contributed to our development and the
opportunities through which we obtain those credits. If we are not able to do
this, we need to share benefits purely on merit basis. Hence Equal Opportunity
principles in countries/cities that have
high migrant population.
The two sons – Ganesh and Muruga
are invited to participate in the race to go around the world to get the prize
mango. Muruga the active junior,
immediately takes His vehicle the Peacock and starts on His around-the-world
trip.
Ganesh, who is the thinker – and
who would have been at a disadvantage compared to Muruga due to the latter’s
ability to fly – compared to Ganesh’s mouse - asked Saint Naradhar whether it
was correct thinking that His parents – Shiva-Shakthi stood for the whole
world. Saint Naradhar said ‘yes’. Then Ganesh
asked whether it was therefore correct that if He went around Shiva-Shakthi He was actually going around
the world. Saint Naradhar said ‘yes’. So Ganesh went around His parents – believing
them to be the whole world and Ganesh won the prize mango. To me this is the
academic way. But then that works only if their academic gurus are their whole
world.
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