Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
29
June 2019
FOREIGN OR LOCAL
ATTACKERS?
Recently I said to a Lankan
journalist that I paid my respects to Mr D S Senanayake every morning of my
stay here at Galadari hotel. Then the young journalist said that Mr D S
Senanayake also had favoured his son Mr Dudley Senanayake above Mr SWRD Bandaranaike
who then broke away from the UNP to form the SLFP. I stated that I had no
knowledge of that but that the UNP seemed more of an heir of the British system
which was more easy for me to follow due to my own background. I thought about
it and found the following in Wikipedia under SWRD Bandaranaike:
He (SWRD) contested
for the newly formed House of Representatives in the 1947 election from the UNP
from Attanagalla, winning with a good majority. In September 1947,
D. S. Senanayake appointed him to his cabinet as the first Minister of Health and Local Government of Ceylon and he was elected as
the Leader of the House. Effectively this made
Bandaranaike the most senior member of the cabinet, after the Prime Minister.
In fact, Senanayake had Sir Oliver Goonetilleke discuss with Bandaranaike as
leader of the Sinhala Maha Sabha, the draft agreements for independence; which
Bandaranaike received with mixed feelings. However, he did not object and the agreements
signed with the Britain government making way for Ceylon to gain self-rule. As
leader of the house, he delivered the address of thanks at the ceremonial
opening of parliament on 4 February 1948, which marked Ceylon's independence
from Britain.
During the next few
years, he supported legislation proposed by the government as leader of the
house. This included the Ceylon Citizenship Act No. 18 of 1948 and the Indian and Pakistani Residents
(Citizenship) Act No.3 of 1949 which deprived citizenship to Indian
Tamils. He initiated
several projects for the improvement of health as minister of health, including
the expansion of hospitals and uplifting ayurveda medicine. He attended the Third World Health Assembly in Geneva in May 1950 as Chief delegate of
Ceylon. However, he found himself at odds with Senanayake administration on
policy. By 1951, it also appeared that Senanayake did not intend to make an
early retirement that would have allowed Bandaranaike to succeed him as prime
minister.
Cross over and formation of the
Sri Lanka Freedom Party
In July 1951,
Bandaranaike resigned from his government posts and crossed the floor to the
opposition with several of his close associates from the Sinhala Maha Sabha. Thereafter
he dissolved the Sinhala Maha Sabha and formed a new party, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party(SLFP) having its inaugural
meeting at Town Hall on 2 September 1951.
A few months later,
on 21 March 1952 D. S. Senanayake fell off his horse after suffering a stroke
and died the following day. Although SirJohn
Kotelawala was expected to succeed him, his son Dudley Senanayake, Minister of Agriculture was
appointed Prime Minister on 26 March 1952 by the Governor-General Lord Soulbury. Dudley Senanayake called a general election in 1952, which the UNP won gaining 54
seats in parliament.]
When Tamil politicians
separated themselves from Sinhalese politicians - they were labeled
‘separatists’ Tamil militants gave credibility to such description. The
breakaway from UNP to form SLFP on the other hand was accepted as being within
the laws of democracy. In both - it is about ‘home rule’ based on belief.
The above account of ‘what
happened’ contradicts the ‘judgment’ by the young Lankan journalist and cleared
the status of Mr D S Senanayake in my mind. I concluded that the young
journalist lacked the ‘experience’ to identify with the truth. If the young
journalist had respected Mr SWRD Bandaranaike as his elder - then he would have
stated the parallel of my appreciation for Mr D S Senanayake. Instead by
finding fault - the Lankan journalist was taking senior position above Mr
D S Senanayake. This is a serious risk with those who lack the experience but
enjoy ‘freedom of expression’.
By genuinely respecting seniors
and elders - we bring them into ourselves. Knowledge without experience blocks
this merger with the past. Truth is experienced. Fact is a starting point or
destination of that travel through truth. To the extent Mr D S Senanayake and I
believed in the British heritage - we become ‘common’. To majority Tamils whose
higher education is of heritage value - the likes of Mr D S Senanayake
would be part of that heritage. Here in Colombo CBD when I go to places like
Pagoda Restaurant where I had quality food but tightly budgeted - I have the
positive deja vu experience. It is positive because I can now afford much more
than I did as a student. But the quantity is still the same - due to my age. But
the feeling of financial affordability is great. The past experience where I
lived within my budget supports my current feeling of true ‘freedom’ from
desire.
Knowledge like food - needs to be
limited according to the experiences we are ready to have for us to become
independent of the desire for knowledge.
The connection I identified with
through the Wikipedia report was the common details between Mr Sirisena who was
strongly influenced by Mr SWRD Bandaranaike’s daughter - Madam
Kumaratunga when Mr Sirisena broke away from the Rajapaksa regime to contest in
the Presidential elections. Mr Sirisena was also Health Minister in the
Rajapaksa regime. Like Mr SWRD Bandaranaike, Mr Sirisena also actively
promoted the Buddhist leadership. The question that comes to mind is whether
Madam Kumaratunga channelled her father through Mr Sirisena ?
In his article headed ‘How real is the challenge of
jihadist attacks in Sri Lanka?’ - Dr Ely Karmon of the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism states:
[According to a report by SITE Intel group, which
monitors jihadi networks and forums, ISIS supporters portrayed the attacks as
revenge for strikes on mosques and Muslims in general. In this author’s evaluation
the attacks could be a direct revenge for the massacre in two mosques in
Christchurch, New Zealand, by Australian radical right-wing terrorist Brenton
Harrison Tarrant.]
What happened would be interpreted
by us in diverse ways. To the extent we have the experience - as if it happened
to us we would find the solution through why it happened to us. Towards this we
need to feel part of one group or the other and have their experience as ours.
It would be difficult for Sinhalese soldiers who had to fight against the
anti-Muslim - Tamil group LTTE - to act against Muslims so long as they
are actively against the LTTE. That would explain the lack of action to
discipline Muslim rebels who have become the Government’s Reserve forces
against Tamil militants. A militant without belief - is the parallel of
politician who promotes religion for votes. When the former is punished by the
latter - both reproduce exponentially. That is the problem with using the name
of belief for pleasure. It has the effect of blasphemy. Is Christchurch
massacre connected to the Sri Lankan bombings? Yes - through this frivolous use
of Nationalism by Politicians and Militants and Jihadism by those who have
given up on the sanctity of life.
Whether it was foreign or local
force that caused the attack could be worked out by the effects provided there
are clear lines of demarcation between the groups. When a government neglects
its local group - they are easily adopted by the Stateless like ISIS. One who
becomes international by showing international power that s/he/it has not
earned - is Stateless. The true global mind would easily make them the youngest
children of global village that is experienced and not seen.
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