Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
17
November 2019
THE
CONSTITUTION WE HAVE ALREADY DEVELOPED
Our Trainee at Vaddukoddai rang me to say she was
feeling better but was still unfit to go to our office. I had been concerned –
not knowing whether she wanted to come to office or not. Losing motivation is
not uncommon in Vaddukoddai these days. Prior to the war – i.e. – when I was
active in Northern Sri Lanka – most folks seemed to go about their work and
there seemed to be no major ‘problems’ apart from financial ones. Our Trainee
Kowsi surprised me by stating that she would deposit the loan instalment due
for this month into our bank account. Then I knew that she was part of our
structure. Gone was my anxiety. I said to do that when she felt fitter and also
to get back to work once she felt she
was over the Dengue. I felt good because I felt that Kowsi was an insider.
To my mind, the foundation of our investment in
Vaddukoddai is our own family by birth, by law and by service. Mine with
Vaddukoddai is largely through my current service there – where I groom those who
are seeking to be my parallel in their own diverse environments. Kowsi is one
of them. Through them their children are also trained in a culture that is more
firmly structured than the one they were born into. Kowsi’s family is of toddy
tapper origin but they no longer tap toddy. Kowsi’s mum was a cook in Jaffna
town and often caught the bus back with me after work. This was during early
2000’s when I was trying to discover the truth of Vaddukoddai towards ‘structuring’ our own ‘Constitution’
which would maintain Vaddukoddai as per its total investment in itself, by
itself. Truth sustains Itself. Hence I set out to discover through the truth
known to me through my Vaddukoddai family, the truth of the folks currently
making a home in Vaddukoddai. I am recognized as a senior – usually by junior
castes. Members of senior castes treat me as equals – however less educated
they may be, relative to me. I use merit basis in their case for my own
purposes.
In his Financial
Times article ‘Securing
a People’s Constitution’ Mr Victor Ivan states:
[Making a People’s Constitution does not mean
that all the people of the country gather at one place and collectively draft a
constitution. It means giving the people of the country every possible
opportunity to get involved in the process of making the constitution so that
the important ideas they have are taken into consideration, particularly those
of marginalised social groups that are essentially voiceless. It is a
democratic practice that allows the public to be actively involved in the
process. It can also be seen as an instance in which the direct democracy is in
operation in making a constitution.]
Around
the time I was reading that article – came the WhatsApp messages from cousin
Vathanee in Toronto. Most of them were about Hinduism in Indonesia with
particular emphasis on Bali. One had Hindu deity Ganesh on Indonesian currency
note. These confirm the Hindu ancestry of Indonesia that protects the nation
from extremism through the belief of the People. I feel that if Bali had
invested in secularism – especially in relation to tourist industry – it would
have prevented the Bali bombing.
Indonesia
by its Pancasila (Pancha Sila / Five
Principles) confirms as a fundamental requirement – ‘Belief in the Almighty God’.
I would interpret this to include ‘Truth’ and ‘Love’. But those who are led by
particular religion would not include ‘Truth’ and ‘Love’ as forms of Almighty
God. Hence those who follow the path of secularism would be ‘foreigners’ to
such Indonesians. Once we are foreigners – the temptation to ‘ rule’ over us becomes strong after we stop ‘giving’ that
which is desired by those who think they ‘own’ the place by ‘possession’. In
Australia, migrants who stop ‘giving’ their skills – are punished by those who
think they are owners by possession / occupation. This often happens when they
do not actually participate in the Government’s immigration programs. Such
thinking is then extended by the
government, in extreme form to refugee applicants – including those who are certified
by the UN. To the extent migrants feel ownership – often by foregoing the
status they think they ought to have as per current merit basis – they automatically
get a share of the ownership earned by the senior Australians. Towards this
they should not separate in their minds.
Sri Lanka has greater tendency to claim ownership
through majority which is the lateral version of occupation. This has happened
largely through Buddhism as a particular
leading religion of the State. This automatically makes foreigners of
non-Buddhists. By stating the ‘obvious’, the politicians stop short of discovering the
deeper less visible values of commonness including amongst the Buddhists. They
then do not synergize to become common and hold as reserves the values that are less visible and
less known . The deeper owner discovers these treasures.
The Sri Lankan Constitution that recognizes and
includes the diversity of its various parts will sustain us and prevent loss to
invaders. The way it stands now – the written Constitution is not confirmed in
practice by majority political leaders. If there was need to state that Buddhism
is the leading religion in Sri Lanka –
then the fact that we have had two lady leaders as heads of State confirms that
Buddha who is not depicted with a female half – was not followed by sight nor
by knowledge. But no one wants to remove that emphasis. This automatically
develops a gap between true value and apparent value. To the extent – non-Buddhists
operate within their areas of belief –
they become Equal owners due to the Constitution. Beyond that when they practice
the Buddhist values that are commonly included in their pathways – they become greater
owners than Buddhists who limited themselves to Buddhism only.
Given that
many Politicians go regularly to Hindu places of worship – Article 9
amounts to politicians lying to the constitution and therefore themselves as a
common group.
The Constitution needs to be closer to our truth and
towards this each electorate must submit its own truth in the language of democracy.
That would lead us to natural globalization.
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