Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
06 December 2020
ENGLISH LANGUAGE: ‘WHERE
DO I BELONG?’
Proficiency in English language is
a status indicator in Northern Sri Lanka. It means that we are continuing to
value the times when British were the ruling class in Sri Lanka. Many of the
high achieving Sri Lankans who have emigrated to Western countries are proficient
in Tamil or Sinhalese in addition to the
language of the new nation. To my mind, the language is the outer body through
which we communicate our cultural values. One who seeks to ‘show’
In Democracy, attachment to the
physical often leads to rebellion when one thinks one is ‘free’ and that one is
better than the individual in the officially senior position .
When one acts as per that ‘freedom’
and in harmony with one’s conscience – and without relating to any official senior, that is that person’s
personal law. So long as that person operates within the boundaries of that personal law, without enforcing it on any
other – and limiting oneself to the benefits earned through that law’s pathway,
that person is self-governing.
That self-governing Energy naturally merges with Universal /
Prapancha Energy. Voting process in Democracy is an avenue through which we
identify with a political leader who is the best fit to represent our
self-governing Energy. Then our personal law merges with the nation’s through
that leader.
In
their Proposal headed ‘A proposal for a new chapter on fundamental rights and
freedoms in the Constitution’ , academics Dr.
Asanga Welikala (University of Edinburgh), Dr. Dinesha Samararatne (University
of Melbourne, University of Colombo), Dr. Kalana Senaratne (University of
Peradeniya), Dr. Kumaravadivel Guruparan (University of Oxford), and Dr. Gehan
Gunatilleke (Harvard University), state:
[This
proposal for a new Chapter on Fundamental Rights and Freedoms in a future
constitution was prepared in response to the public invitation to submit
proposals to the Ministry of Justice Experts Committee to Draft a New
Constitution for Sri Lanka. This proposal is made on the following assumptions
1.
That the new Constitution will
guarantee irreversible, meaningful, and extensive devolution of power within a
united State, and, accordingly, all references to the ‘State’ in our proposals
are references to public authorities and organs of the State at all levels,
including devolved units and local government……..
Assumptions
There is no room for ‘assumptions’ in law-making. One who makes the law makes it as per
her/his/group’s belief in the institution – as if s/he/it and the institution
were One. In democracy such a maker needs to be connected to grassroots where
belief dominates over external knowledge.
These Academics, as per my knowledge represent the following :
Dr.
Asanga Welikala (University of Edinburgh), - United Kingdom
Dr.
Dinesha Samararatne (University of Melbourne) – Australian
law academics
Dr.
Kalana Senaratne (University of Peradeniya) – Sri Lankan
law academics
Dr.
Kumaravadivel Guruparan (University of Oxford) – Eelam Tamil
elites
Dr.
Gehan Gunatilleke (Harvard University)- American law academics
If their proposals were accepted as they are – that would be the
parallel Buddha Sasana in Sri Lankan
Parliament. Academics often plagiarize to get the grades. They often fail when
it comes to actual practice.
In Democracy each group that feels
that its belief is not represented in the fundamental rights section of the constitution
and/or that the existing law in the fundamental rights section facilitates
breach of the group’s belief based expressions and actions - needs to be facilitated to make its proposals similar to project proposals
– showing the quantifiable outcomes due to the change.
In effect that is the parallel of
political elections through votes. That would confirm existence of rights that
are ‘irreversible, meaningful, self-devolution
of power by the believer.
The group
proposes:
Language
3.
That in addition to the substantive
fundamental right with respect to language in the proposed chapter, there will
be a separate chapter on ‘Language’, which includes the substantive principles
reflected in the current chapter on ‘Language’ in the 1978 Constitution
As per
article 18 of the current Constitution:
18. (1)
The Official Language of Sri Lanka shall be Sinhala.
(2) Tamil shall also be
an official language.
(3) English shall be
the link language.
As per common understanding, an individual is made
up of:
(1) Body
(2) Mind
(3) Soul
Belief resides in the soul. Mind is
a combination of that belief and the body that shapes the visible aspect of the
individual. Language of law is the parallel body of the belief based on which an
action is shown / a law is made.
As per my experiences in Jaffna
& Colombo – the higher courts use English as the primary law of
communication and rightly so, given our law-heritage. Where a community seeks
to go back to pre-colonial times, it would have been appropriate to leave out
English from the official language list. But to use the brains of the English in
Tamil or Sinhalese confirms plagiarism.
Plagiarism has the effect of stealing knowledge.
The law is the regulated pathway
that connects cause and effect. The believer in the law makes this connection
more quickly than a non-believer. The latter would be able to make the
connection through her/his own belief, but to show wider world – s/he needs the
law as well as evidence. Those who use
the same law and/or practice, develop commonness of mind. That common mind
leads to common belief and therefore harmonious living.
Article 18 needs to be amended to
include English as a National Language. In fact it is the common-most language
in Sri Lanka and that which is Common should be assured the highest position of
all. Given that those to whom English is
mother language are the smallest minority group – this would raise them to the
National level due to their heritage. That would then make the contributions by
the above academics officially more common than they are now. Officially they
are like Dual-Citizens unless they had their law education in Sinhala only or
Tamil only.
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