Speaking out the 
			unspoken: revisiting the tracks of the Great Divide 
			Northeastern Herald, 13 September 2002 
			 
			The logic of South Asian politics has reasserted 
			itself in all its customary intensity. On 16th September, the three 
			major ethnic groups of Sri Lanka are meeting in Thailand to work out 
			a plan for the devolution of power that would ensure coexistence. 
			 
			Can Sri Lanka escape the tragedy of India / Pakistan and Pakistan / 
			Bangladesh? Of course India became wiser and quite soon under the 
			guidance of India�s Foreign Secretary K. M. Panikkar devised a 
			system of linguistic states, which in spite of many tensions, is 
			keeping India intact. Unfortunately, neither Pakistan nor Sri Lanka 
			realise the value of accommodating with grace the �smaller brother.� 
			Sri Lanka faces this uphill task now.  
			 
			At this time when an earnest attempt is being made to resolve the 
			Sri Lanka problem, which has ravaged the country for almost 26 
			years, it will be useful for curative and preventive purposes to 
			view �clinically� what went wrong, where. This article attempts to 
			present the Tamil point of view on how the alienation took place and 
			the Great Divide became a reality. 
			 
			Sri Lanka�s entry into electoral democracy was through the gates of 
			communalism. In the 19th century, the British colonial government 
			made the Legislative Council more representative by appointing 
			unofficial members from the various communities in Sri Lanka � 
			Kandyan Sinhalese, Low Country Sinhalese and Sri Lankan Tamils. When 
			it came to the Muslims (Moors), this community accused Sir 
			Ponnambalam Ramanathan of trying to block Muslim representation by 
			claiming the Moors were really Tamils. Tensions had already started. 
			 
			In the beginning, the movement for Buddhist identity and cultural 
			revival, as much as it was in Saivism, was not anti-Christian. And 
			as the 20th century opens with Anagarikka Dharmapala coming into the 
			picture, the cry was against �foreigners.� Buddhist writings of this 
			period reveal a strong anti-Muslim trend. In a way, the 
			Sinhala-Muslim riots of 1915 though overplayed by the British 
			government, lay within the logic of history. 
			 
			Ramanathan, the great Tamil, chose to speak for the Sinhalese and it 
			is said he made a special trip to London to plead their cause. The 
			late Badi-ud-din Mahmud, the minister of education in the UF 
			government of 1970-1977 told this writer, �The Muslims shall never 
			create a chance for another 1915 and never forget what the Tamils 
			did to their linguistic brethren.�  
			 
			At that time there was not much vitriolic writing against Sri Lankan 
			Tamils though there was the undesirable trend in historiography to 
			treat Tamil intrusions into pre-Western Sri Lanka as foreign 
			invasions. John M. Seneviratne in his �Story of the Sinhalese� is 
			quite clear in dubbing the South Indian Tamil intrusions as 
			�invasions.� The emerging Buddhist consciousness and the general 
			attitude of the Sangha was to uphold the �Mahawansa� tradition of 
			treating the non-Buddhist intrusions as something against the 
			country and its people. The basic Mahavihara ideology of the 
			�Mahawansa� was not taken into count and terms like the �Demalas� 
			read in Geiger�s translation of the �Mahawansa,� had a completely 
			different meaning in the 1920s and 1930s. It took almost 30 years 
			for historians like R.A.L.H. Goonawardene and W. I. Suraweera to 
			take a more historicist view of the �Mahawansa� narrative. 
			 
			An intellectual decision was taken almost unanimously to distance 
			Tamil and Tamilnadu history from Sinhala and Buddhist, and present 
			the Tamils, at least in historical researches, as a damaging force. 
			The interactive and the syncretistic were almost always overlooked. 
			More basically, the interaction of the culture of the Tamils with 
			that of the average, village-level Sinhalese was also ignored. The 
			Theravada layer of Sinhala culture was highlighted, almost ignoring 
			the �thovil� and �gammaduwa� traditions (which constitute a rich 
			legacy for the ritualistic dramatic traditions of the Sinhalese) 
			coming to terms with those same acts of syncretism. 
			 
			It is understandable that the Buddhist upsurge was not taken to 
			highlight the pre-Buddhistic and non-Buddhistic elements. But it 
			also chose not to highlight the Tamil-Buddhist interaction that was 
			very much evident in the history of Sri Lankan Buddhism. Efforts 
			were also made not to emphasise the post-Polonnaruwa cultural 
			intermingling, which was seen in the Dambadeniya and Kotte periods. 
			(Scholars like Professor Liyanagamage have drawn attention to some 
			of these interactions). All these led, inevitably, to treating 
			Tamils as being against the Sinhalese and Buddhism.  
			 
			On the part of the Tamils, (at least the articulate Tamils of the 
			day) Sinhala culture was nothing but a mosaic of what had travelled 
			down from India � especially South India. They made the mistake of 
			not realising that those Indian influences in Sri Lanka had blended 
			into such a form that there was something specifically Sri Lankan 
			about it. But in the Buddhist / Sinhala view, the innovativeness of 
			the adaptation was a Sinhala achievement. One could even say the 
			much-respected Ananda Coomaraswamy himself made this mistake. 
			 
			It was in such a situation and with the coming of communal 
			representation that the Sinhala � Tamil divide began to take 
			substantive form. With Ramanathan out of the picture, his brother 
			Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam could not convince Sir Claude Corea and 
			Sir Marcus Fernando that the Tamils in the Western Province deserved 
			representation. And it might be recalled the word Tamileelam is now 
			traced to the last days of Arunachalam when he formed the first 
			Tamil party. 
			 
			History since the 1930s and the working of the Donoughmore 
			Constitution are well known for building silent barriers between the 
			Sinhalese and the Tamils. The great nationalist effort of the Jaffna 
			Youth Congress to boycott the 1931 elections under the Donoughmore 
			system was taken as an act of communalism. Seelan Kadirgamar has 
			argued very convincingly in his edition of the Handy Perimpanayagam 
			papers how the whole matter was misunderstood. It should be accepted 
			that the foundations for a racial, if not ethnic divide was firmly 
			laid during this period. 
			 
			The coming of the Donoughmore Constitution and the decision to go 
			for territorial representation led only to an extension and 
			expansion of communal politics. The failure of the Ceylon National 
			Congress (CNC) in real �national� terms should be seen in this 
			context. And the Sinhala Maha Sabha was an important political group 
			and no less a person than S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike was associated 
			with it. 
			 
			It was in this situation of mutual distrust and backstabbing that 
			Sri Lanka took two very effective steps towards future 
			democratisation � steps, which enabled the participation of the 
			entire population of Sri Lanka. The first was the decision to 
			develop education in Sinhala and Tamil. In fact there was a proposal 
			that Sinhala and Tamil be made national languages in the State 
			Council. Second, and more important, was C. W. W. Kannangara�s 
			proposal of a system of free education. Education, which was the 
			only passport for the upward mobility in colonial Sri Lanka, was now 
			open to all � irrespective of class differentiation and distance 
			from Colombo.  
			 
			This brought about a great revolution. Coupled with the shift to 
			�swabasha� as the medium of instruction, free education was a 
			radiant socio-political fire that swept across the country. But 
			though Sri Lanka did the correct thing educationally and 
			democratically, the manner by which it was implemented went against 
			it. In deciding to make Tamil and Sinhala the media of instruction, 
			it did not care, or pause think, on the need for coordination 
			between the two languages. Sinhalese did not have to learn Tamil and 
			Tamils did not have to learn Sinhalese. There was no coordination 
			for the establishment of a Sri Lankan linkage.  
			 
			This led slowly and surely to the erection of impenetrable walls 
			between the two communities. Given the contemporary mood of the 
			Sinhalese, what began going into Sinhala textbooks on the history 
			and culture of the country were really material accusing the second 
			largest community in the country of playing a negative role in the 
			development of Sinhala and Buddhism. The year 1956 marks an 
			important turning point. What the average Sinhalese did not feel as 
			having imbibed in 1948 at independence, he or she felt they had 
			found in 1956. Power, S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike said was now in the 
			hands of �panchcha maha balavegaya� � the �sangha,� �guru,� 
			�kamkaru,� �veda� and �govi.� The historiography of the Sangha made 
			the Tamils look villains. 
			 
			We are now in the late 1950s and 1960s. The die was cast and 
			divisions along ethnic lines could not be postponed further.  
			 
			It is at this point that one should take count of the Sinhala media 
			� especially the influential press. Growing out of the 
			anti-Christian and anti-alien tradition it did not differentiate 
			either between race and religion, or country and race. It argued 
			very strongly for the Sinhalese of the entire country and the 
			reification of what is referred to as Sinhala-Buddhism. In the eyes 
			of the influential Sinhala press, any attempt on the part of the 
			minorities to assert their presence was taken as anti-national.  
			 
			It is true that in 1949 and the early 1950s the political forces 
			that led Tamil opinion were insisting on Tamil with a Dravidian 
			flavour, bringing into Sri Lanka the overtones of the Dravidian 
			parts of South India. It should be agreed this element was 
			substantively present in the rhetoric. But it was enough to frighten 
			the already frightened Sinhalese community, which was becoming a 
			victim of its own minority complex forgetting the fact it was a 
			majority. 
			 
			At a time like this it was expected the major left parties of the 
			day could have played a decisive role. And to a certain extent they 
			did. The CPSL was for regional autonomy and it were they who 
			organised the first meeting opposing Sinhala Only at the Colombo 
			town hall. Dr. Colvin R. De Silva made the famous remark �two 
			languages one nation, one language two nations.� But the vagaries of 
			Soviet politics and the absence of a sound Marxist understanding of 
			the Sri Lankan situation, led to the major left parties to take a 
			pro-Sinhala position in five � six years� time. 
			 
			The only political force that could have cemented the Sinhala � 
			Tamil rift was now becoming openly anti-regional autonomy and by the 
			mid-1960s the leftist slogan of �Dudleyge badey, masala wadey,� 
			brought out the hatred of the hitherto uncorrupted Sinhala comrade 
			to view the Tamils as political enemies. 
			 
			The coup de gras comes in 1972, when the Marxist Constitutional 
			Affairs Minister Dr. Colvin R. De Silva presented the Republican 
			Constitution, taking away Section 29 of the 1948 Constitution, which 
			was the only safeguard for minority rights. What Prime Minister D. S 
			Senanayke had to accept from the Whitehall, De Silva unceremoniously 
			threw out of the window. Following this, the old and feeble Federal 
			Party leader S. J. V. Chelvanayakam, made a two-sentence declaration 
			in the House. Many of the members of the House did not know what he 
			said till the Hansard arrived. And the wolf the Sinhala media had 
			been crying had at last arrived. Chelvanayakam declared that his 
			party now stood for separation 
			 
			The new Constitution and the actions of the United Front government 
			alienated the Tamil youth too. By the late 1970s, Tamil militant 
			groups vehemently attacking the traditional Marxists but using 
			Marxist slogans of liberation etc. had come to stay. In such a 
			loaded situation, 1983 was not far away. With 1983 there was no 
			denial of the ethnic war coming into the open. This was a reflected 
			very strongly in the lexis used. The Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims 
			were no longer �communities� living in one country, but became 
			�ethnic groups� with defined, almost racial characteristics.  
			 
			The passage from community to ethnicity is the price the Sri Lankan 
			polity has had to pay for intransigence in dealing with Tamil 
			demands for justice. Further, when there is a reference to 
			ethnicity, cultural separatism is implied and the demand for 
			political separatism is only a matter of time. Since 1983 Tamil 
			resistance has become resistance against oppression � both military 
			and administrative.  
			 
			It is this run of events we have to look back upon and if possible 
			correct. Till 2002 it was argued that when the UNP was in power the 
			SLFP opposed all what the UNP said and did, and vice versa. But from 
			the Tamil point of view there is no better opportunity to resolve 
			the ethnic conflict than at the present moment, where there is a 
			SLFP (PA) president and a UNF (UNP) premier. 
			 
			If the Sinhalese cannot come to an agreement between themselves now 
			as to how they are going to accommodate the other sections of the 
			Sri Lankan population, it is hardly likely they would do so in the 
			future. But ironically (or is it tragically?) the Sri Lankan state 
			has two governments within it. And let it not be forgotten the 
			Tigers too have their own government. �Lead kindly light lead thou 
			me on, I am far away from home.�  
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