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Selected
Writings
Brian Senewiratne, Australia
Adrian Wijemanne – an Appreciation
by a fellow Sinhalese
28 July 2006
[see also Fr. Chandiravarman Sinnathurai
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In
Gratitude: Adrian Wijemanne
and Selected Writings - Adrian Wijemanne ]
This is not an obituary. There are more informed people who can
write one. This is just a “Thank You” to a fellow Sinhalese who has risen
above the ethnic chauvinism that has consumed my people. A “Thank you” for being
a shining light in the darkness of Sinhalese ignorance, and for the example and
encouragement to those of us who have supported the struggle of the Tamil people
to live with equality, dignity and safety in the country of their birth. A
“Thank you” for trying to save Sri Lanka from physical and economic destruction.
I once wrote, “It makes me proud to be a Sinhalese because it is the ethnic
group to which Adrian Wijemanne belongs”.
My knowledge of him is
meagre. He graduated in the University of Ceylon (in
European, Indian and Ceylon History) and then passed the examination of the
prestigious Ceylon Civil Service, where he worked for 14 years, the last five as
Deputy Land Commissioner. After a varied career in both the public and the
private sectors, he worked in Switzerland and the Netherlands in charitable
foundations, financial institutions and the World Council of Churches. He
retired to Cambridge, UK.
I know little else of the man whom I met just once, in 2001, when I was invited
to London to address the International Tamil Foundation on The Abuse of
Democracy in Sri Lanka. Adrian had addressed this group twice. The organizers
offered to pay my passage from Australia but I said it would not be necessary as
long as someone took me to see Adrian.
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l to r: Brian Senewiratne, Jeyam Thamotheram, Adrian Wijemanne and S.Sivanayagam |
So,
three of us, the late
Jeyam
Thamotheram, the doyen of expatriate Tamils in the UK,
Subramanium Sivanayagam, one
of the finest and most courageous journalists Sri Lanka has produced, and I,
were driven to Cambridge. A photograph of this unique meeting of two Sinhalese
and two Tamils, all working for the same cause, has been published in Siva’s
monumental work, Witness to History. (I am ashamed of the shirt I wore. It was
not meant for publication!) Adrian had an enormous advantage over us, lesser mortals, because of his
extensive knowledge of History. While I struggled with a background in Medicine,
Adrian could see the problem in Sri Lanka from an enlightened perspective. In an
article I wrote for his 80 birthday, I said that he “has written more sense than
any Sinhalese I know”. His observations and suggestions vis a vis the problems
in Sri Lanka and their solution, have been outstanding.
While those of us with inadequate knowledge struggled to come up with a solution
to problems in a country with two separate armies, Adrian had the answer, which
he set out in his Unitary State, Federation, Confederation and Union – A
personal experience. He summarized his life and wide experience in several
countries.
The first 23years were in the colonial state, Ceylon, under imperial rule. He
“…cannot recall any sense of oppression during that time though towards the end
of that period I did desire independence in the sure and certain conviction that
life would be better if we were independent.”
The next 25 years were in independent Ceylon. He describes the “mounting sense
of disillusionment on the poor quality governance and the rising tide of
physical violence in affairs of state. The newly independent State attempted to
function like the former colonial state by exercising State power by military
means. No one, myself include, seemed to understand that the new State needed to
be founded upon the freely given consent of the governed rather than coercion.”
The next three years were spent in the world’s only Confederation, Switzerland.
“The classical difference between a Federation and a Confederation is that in
the latter all power vested in the constituent States of the Confederation
except those ceded by the constituent States to the Federal central government”.
The next 10 years (from 1977) were in one type of Union – the Benelux Union, of
three independent sovereign countries – Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxemburg .
He pointed out that “….this Union differed from other forms of government
(Unitary, Federal and Confederal) in that it had no unified military force under
a central command. On the contrary, each country has its own independent
military force under the control; and direction of each government.”
He finally moved to another form of Union, the European Union, made up of the
Benelux countries and 12 other countries. “The EU, as it exists today,
illustrates the possibility of having an economic, social, judicial, and
monetary union without military unification.”
He concluded, “Now for the lesson I wish to draw from this experience. It is
quite simply this. Where military unification is not possible, it is still
possible to have a viable, social, economic and monetary union between each
State, each of which has its own independent military structure. I am convinced
that this is the only practical basis on which peace and prosperity can be
founded in Sri Lanka.”
Since Sri Lankan Governments are too dumb to appreciate this, Adrian forecast
the future.” In Sri Lanka, he stage is set for a long-drawn-out guerilla war,
the total impoverishment of both nations (the Sinhalese nation and the Tamil
nation), the demise of civil government among the Sinhala people and the
essential establishment of the State of Eelam. The best efforts of the Sinhala
State can only postpone this sequence of events – they cannot avert the final
outcome.”
In an article War and the New Realities (October 2002), Adrian drew attention to
the fundamental changes brought about by war – irrespective of who ‘wins’.
“The changes wrought by war are, generally irreversible. At the end of a war a
new era commences for the societies and nations that join to make the peace that
ends the war. Deplorable as war is, it is war that marks the great watersheds of
human history. The status quo ante bellum is wiped away and gone for ever,
utterly beyond recall. This is the case irrespective of whether the war ends
with the unconditional surrender of one of the protagonists (e.g. the Axis
powers of World War II) or by a stalemate between two undefeated adversaries
left with their forces intact (e.g. the end of the war of Irish Independence in
1922)”
He goes on to deal with some crucial issues regarding the war in Sri Lanka - the
“End of the single all-island State”, the “Rise of the Eelam Tamil diaspora”,
“The vain hopes (of the Sri Lankan government) of international help”, “the
increasing costs of the military hardware” and “the implications of these
realities for policy”.
He concluded,
“The political parties of the Sinhala nation, old and new alike,
must now evolve new, rational, credible, viable policies based on the se new
realities, policies which offer hope of ending war and delivering a lasting
peace”.
In March 2005, with Adrian desperately ill with a pneumonia complicating myeloma,
a type of bone-marrow cancer, I called for world-wide prayers. Whoever listens
to these summed to have acted, since Adrian recovered and went on to celebrate
his 80th birthday (29 May 2005). I wrote
another article calling for “good
wishes to be sent to this extraordinary man”
Adrian is one of only a handful of Sinhalese who have freed themselves from the
shackles of Sinhalese chauvinism to campaign for the Tamil people. It is not a
fight between the Sinhalese and the Tamils. It is a fight between injustice and
justice. It is not a question of who wins the war between Sinhalese chauvinism
and justice for the Tamil people; it is a question of defining where one stands.
Adrian has clearly defined where he stood. In a recent article I defined where I
stood and why. I suggest you do the same. If you stand with a brutal government
determined to force the Tamils to be second-class citizens, say so and justify
your stance. If you cannot, then join us – there is plenty of room on our side.
It is too important an issue to have no opinion, to sit on the fence and be on
no side.
At a recent TV interview in London, I was questioned by a listener who started,
“As an impartial person ….” I stopped the questioner in his tracts by saying
that I was not impartial. I was very partial, being heavily biased in favour of
the oppressed Tamil minority.
There have been, (and are), Sinhalese such as Bishop Lakshman Wickremesinghe (Ranil’s
uncle), Edmund Samarakkody (my uncle), Merryl Fernando (a close associate of my
uncle), Nanda Wickremesinghe, Kumar Rupasinghe, Victor Ivan and others, who,
despite ostracization, vilification, and even threats to their lives , have had
the courage and integrity to stand with the Tamil people and/or their struggle.
The pity is that they are few and far between.
Adrian, like all of us who have stood with the Tamil people e.g. Professor Peter
Schalk of Uppsala University, Sweden, has had his fair share of insults – being
called, completely inappropriately, a “Tamil Tiger Terrorist”. (For the record,
this ‘terrorist’ was, for some 11 years, a senior executive in the World Council
of Churches and Prof. Schalk is the Professor of the History of Religions!)
While such a ‘title’ is expected from Sinhalese chauvinists and hoodlums, it is
not expected from those who profess to be Christians. I learnt this the hard way
– at no small cost.
There is a long-standing quarterly, The Christian Worker, published in Sri
Lanka. It had championed the working classes and had the support of people like
Bishop Lakshman Wickremesinghe and my uncle, Edmund Samarakkody (who introduced
me to it). In 2001, I was told that the publication would have to cease if funds
were not found for a computer and printer. I offered to send both from Australia
to prevent the closure of what, I thought at the time, was a reasonable
publication. The management said that it would be ‘better’ to purchase them in
Sri Lanka. I got the bill – nearly A$10,000. I sent the money and then contacted the Manager to make sure that he got the
money.
I said I was leaving for London to address the International Tamil
Foundation, and also to see Adrian Wijemanne. The response, “Why do you want to
see that Tamil Tiger terrorist?” It was later that I realised that the Christian
Church in the Sinhalese South is more Sinhalese than Christian. This extends
well beyond the Christian Worker, into the Church establishment itself. If there
is a need for a revival of Buddhism , there is an equally important need for a
revival of Christianity, in the Sri Lankan Sinhalese South. If there is any doubt about this, may I suggest that you contact the Christian
hierarchy in Colombo and ask whether any of them have voiced their concern at
the massacres of Tamil civilians in the North (many of them Christians, not that
that matters), now reaching alarming proportions. Let me be specific.
On 17 June
2006, there was a clash between the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan Navy in the
sea off Pesalai, a largely Catholic community situated halfway between Mannar
and Talaimannar in the northwest. Terrified civilians, some 3,000, took refuge
in the Church of Our Lady of Victories, in the heart of the town.
Men,
identified as marines from the Sri Lankan Navy, fired at the refugees in the
Church and, for good measure, tossed a grenade into the Church, killing several.
They then moved to the beach and shot Tamil fishermen who happened to be there,
burnt 39 fishing boats and 45 fishing huts. Bishop Rayappu Joseph was prevented
from visiting the beach.
What did his Christian brothers in Colombo do? Did they express outrage or
merely raise their hallowed eyebrows (if they did even that), to express their
Christian concern? I went to London to draw the attention of the Archbishop of
Canterbury (in whose Cathedral I have worshipped), and his Roman Catholic
counterpart (whose earthly ‘charges’ were being massacred). The former was too
busy to see me , the latter did not bother to respond. I might add, completely
irrelevantly, that when the Sri Lankan Armed Forces were on their way in 1995 to
bomb Jaffna to smithereens, the banners of the Armed Forces were placed on the
alter and blessed . As they marched off to inflict their own brand of terrorism
on the half-million Tamil civilians in the Jaffna Peninsula, the Band struck up
Onward Christian soldiers marching as for war. The miracle is that I am still a
Christian, admittedly clinging to my faith with my fingernails. But I digress.
In my good wishes for Adrian’s 80th birthday, I said,
“It is a tragedy that
there are fewer and fewer Sinhalese who can see the entirely justifiable cause
of the Tamil people, struggling, not for a separate State or even a Federal
State, but for the basic human right to exist as equals in a multi-ethnic, multireligious, multilingual and multicultural country.”
I went on to deal with the need to apprise the international community, “The
‘ammunition’ for this ‘international assault’, has been supplied by people like
Adrian Wijemanne.” This is the ‘voice of reason and authority’ that we have just
lost.
I ended with a futile hope that if Adrian “…is spared for a few more years, he
might see what he has campaigned for all these years – justice for the Tamil
people.”
At the time I wrote it, I was not fully aware that the Tamil State, which Adrian
had forecast, had already arrived and was functioning very well, certainly
better than the totally corrupt, incompetent and chaotic regime in the Sinhalese
South. Adrian was too ill to read
Professor Kristian Stokke’s outstanding paper,
recently published, Tamil Eelam – a De Facto State. Building the Tamil Eelam
State: Emerging State Institutions and Forms of Governance in LTTE-controlled
Areas of Sri Lanka. Had he read this he would have said “I told you so”. It is a
pity that he did not live long enough to see de facto transformed into de jure
which will surely happen.
Adrian has left us a legacy – his opus magnum,
"War and Peace in Post Colonial Ceylon1948-1991”, published in 1996. This is essential reading for anyone
interested in Sri Lanka. He dedicates this, in typical Adrian-style, to his
charming wife, Chitra, (who made asparagus rolls for us when we visited Adrian!)
“To Chitra, my wife, whose relentless opposition to the entire project and
uncompromising rejection of every salient point herein have dispelled any
lingering doubts as to the need, the urgent need, for this book”
He has also left behind a large number of very important articles. When I met
him in 2001, I suggested that we publish these as a book. He said he had left
this for his friend, Neville Jayaweera, to do. Neville was a former Government
Agent in Jaffna, and an outstanding one at that. He was the one who read
Adrian’s tribute at Jeyam Thamotharam’s funeral. His own contribution on that
occasion was a refreshing departure from the usual anti-Tamil stance adopted by
most of our ethnic group. Directing his comments at the packed congregation
(mainly of expatriate Tamils) he said something like this, “I want you to ask
yourselves why it was necessary for all of you, talented people, whom Sri Lanka
needs so much, to leave that country”
When Adrian’s papers are finally published, I hope that they will be translated
to Sinhalese and distributed free, if necessary, in the Sinhalese South, so that
my people will know that they are being seriously misled by ethno-religious
chauvinists and political opportunists. They will realise that there are
solutions to the ethnic problem that do not involve ‘crushing’ the Tamils and
which will result in a situation that leads them out of grinding poverty. They
will then realise that it is rampant corruption and outrageously poor
governance, not Tamil ‘terrorism’, that is making Sri Lanka a failed State.
It might be also a fitting tribute to this extraordinary man, to have an annual
memorial lecture, one in Sri Lanka and one in London, The Adrian Wijemanne
Oration, which focuses on a just peace in Sri Lanka.
I am so very grateful to Adrian for his infectious enthusiasm, courage,
leadership, integrity and persistence, which has been an inspiration to us all.
I will certainly miss him, but it should not be tears and sadness but a
celebration of a life dedicated to a worthy cause, which is already yielding
visible and tangible results.
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