Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
18 October 2018
Governor or Chief Administrator?
Governing President or
Executive President?
Positions help us
regulate our expressions and actions driven by emotions and knowledge. We may
be Truthful but whether or not it is appropriate in a particular environment is
determined by the positions we accept and hold. That is when our thoughts form
common network connections.
Truth develops natural
positions in any relationship. Often one has to leave a particular position of
high status to express one’s Truth. I did that at the University of NSW and experienced
much pain. Little ‘miracles of faith’ happened to confirm to me that I had
earned higher natural position relative to the one I was allocated and which I
accepted at the University of NSW. Those
little miracles to me were the
experiences of Absolute power that any true faith leads to. From then on that
person becomes a true Governor of oneself, that position, family, institution and/or nation.
All true subjective powers are
underpinned by this Absolute power of Truth. Electing a person through faith is
a manifestation of such Subjective power. A Governor needs high level of such
true Subjective power to ‘include’ - as if the citizen were part of
her/himself.
Where this true power is weak, subjective Administration requires one to use principles
and laws – as per home culture/inherited from others in the biological environment
or from externals with whom we have commonness through one pathway or the
other. The latter usually involves active learning. They help us make
intellectual, logical decisions . To
that extent one is an Administrator using the path of relativity. Reliable
relatives become Family due to such commitment to logical order. Until both
sides become one – there is no governance value.
In Northern Sri Lanka, where majority
are Tamils, a Sinhalese would have to sacrifice much, to become
Governor/Family. Mr Reginald Cooray who holds the position of Governor has
revealed that he is actually playing the role of Chief Administrator of the
Province.
The Daily News reports as follows in
this regard:
[Northern
Province Governor Reginald Cooray has focussed on developing the North on par
with the rest of the country and resolving the social issues that plague the
region. Recently, he visited London to meet the Sri Lankan community and
convince them to invest in the region. He believes that there are a lot of
opportunities for investment in the fields of solar power, wind power, fishing,
salt manufacturing, milk processing, agriculture and tourism. He believes that
the diaspora should be encouraged to invest in the province]
One could disregard the inappropriate position
description as a language problem. But one would be misleading the oneself and
the People when one accepts Administration as Governance and v.v. The thoughts
of the alleged Governor were recently presented by him as follows by the Daily
News:
However,
some political leaders try their level best to arouse communal, religious,
traditional and caste sentiments, which is very bad for the country and for the
North as well.
The
people in the North suffer because of the climatic conditions throughout the
year. Of the 12 months in a year, they get rain only during nine months, and it
is very difficult to find drinking water and a lot of diseases plague the
people.
At the
same time, they also suffer because of the politics in the Northern Province.
They normally don’t talk about caste. Though
we talk about human rights a lot, this caste system is totally in violation of
their basic human rights. The low caste people are sometimes not permitted
to enter certain kovils and sometimes the low caste people cannot be buried in
certain graveyards as they are reserved only for the high castes. These issues
are hidden by the politicians and nobody talks about it. However, I am
optimistic about the situation in the North and feel that the politicians
cannot get the mass support for another rebellion because the people want to
live in peace.
The caste system was a structure that was ‘work-based’
not only in Tamil community but also in Sinhalese community. The law applicable
to Northern Tamils – Thesawalamai Law included caste-based laws, until majority
embraced the secular pathway due to active investment in common education.
Those who genuinely practiced the caste system developed heirs which paved the
way for the junior castes to become farmers. But those who did not connect to
the mind of the senior caste disenfranchised themselves and became isolated. Majority
militants were of this category. Hence when militants were in power – they took
revenge and there is no more real pain that needs to be addressed. Like with
the name of the position, the caste system’s name has been ‘possessed’ by Mr
Cooray. This confirms to me that Mr Cooray does not have true power to make
discoveries about the currently active generation. As for temples – different
cultures within Hindu community have different ways of worshipping. In the
toddy-tapper village of Thunaivi – where our family temple is Vibhoothi – the holy
powder denoting wisdom is strewn on the floor during primitive ritual healings.
As per my culture – it is so very wrong to abuse Vibhoothi which represents
wisdom born out of the ashes of ignorance. Such rituals are banned at our
temple. Such bans also contributed to revenge attacks – such as stoning when I
complained to the Police about damage to our fence and trespass. At that level –
possession is ownership.
As for another rebellion – Mrs Vijayakala Maheswaran
is a stronger indicator than Mr Reginald Cooray and according to this lady –
that reawakening is not yet dead. Education for life would prevent such reawakening. If it does happen
despite such education – it would be for all the right reasons – along the
lines to prevent/diffuse Sinhalese from taking over our ancestry and polluting it
as Mr Cooray has done.
The following question and answer confirm this
further:
“Q:
The Northern Chief Minister is adamant that Buddhist temples should not be
established in the North and that Tamils should be allowed to rule the North
which should be solely an area for the Tamils. What is your take on this?
A. The Chief Minister was earlier a reputed judge and he
is a very good gentleman. However, politically, I feel he is incapable and does
not understand reality. These politicians think of winning the next election,
but statesmen think of the next generation. Hence, he is doing all this just to
be elected again. The easiest way to be a leader is by rousing racial,
territorial and religious sentiments. Now sadly, this reputed judge is also
playing this game of politics.”
If there is no change to the Constitution in regards
to Article 9 which states that Buddhism is the foremost religion of Sri Lanka –
then next generation non-Buddhists have to look outside Sri Lanka for higher thinking religious minds.
This includes Mr Cooray himself - who is
a Catholic. Mr Cooray has obviously sold his Equal rights to practice religion
to Buddhist leaders. It is his right to protest against the implementation of
Article 9 in majority Hindu area that Northern Sri Lanka is. As Mr Cooray has
highlighted Mr Wigneswaran in his past position was a reputed judge. This means
that he would have been respected for higher thinking relative to the average legal
practitioner.
As highlighted yesterday, the First Amendment to the
American Constitution is reported to state:
[Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of
grievances.]
Where, by law, the Government is higher than the
citizen claim of Equal Opportunity becomes a mockery. If that is the Belief of
Buddhists – then the effect of that could be offset by the opposite with Hindu
Foremost in Tamil areas. It is the duty of every citizen to show opposition to
unjust laws. Mr Wigneswaran’s expressions are effectively the parallel of the
First Amendment which prohibits religious preference by the government. It is
also the parallel of Equal Opposition Leadership of Tamil in National
Parliament.
Sri Lanka as a nation is not able to produce a true
governor at national level. Provincial level Governance was born through the 13th
Amendment, out of sacrifices made by Tamils. But by denying and/or limiting
Administrative powers to elected members – the National level law makers have
limited the provinces to local beliefs. Hence Mr Wigneswaran has the duty to
uphold Dharma through the claim of Hindu Foremost in Northern Province. His
handicap in structuring them into laws is due to his attachment to his judicial
knowledge based largely to apply in non-religious areas. Mr Wigneswaran is more
a governor than Mr Cooray. Both lack Administrative wisdom in Democracy.
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