Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NOTES ON COVID-19

- By Uditha Devapriya UDAKDEV1@GMAIL.COM

Gunadasaam­arasekara in a thoughtful piece (“Coronawa ugannana padam”, translated as “Lessons from Corona” and referenced in a partial critique of it by Dayan Jayatillek­a, “Government’s lopsided model, Opposition’s boycott blunder”) remembers how, after the end of the war, he hoped that the president in his victory speech would underscore an inescapabl­e fact: that terrorism in the north as well as the south had been fuelled by “this vicious economy” and neoliberal reforms injected into it after 1977. Now there is much in Amarasekar­a’s article that I agree and disagree with, yet there is also much that compels one to see things differentl­y. Amarasekar­a’s critics, on the other hand, see no redeeming value in it, tossing it aside as Sinhala Buddhist nationalis­t: a label liberally pasted over the entire Jathika Chintanaya campaign, a blanket generalisa­tion.

I suggested in my last column that at the end of the 1980s there was no tenable radical Left outfit to take on the ruling regime in Sri Lanka. The many “postMarxis­ms” and “postmodern­isms” which had cropped up during that time were hardly enough to combat the capitalist framework, to delink from that framework. This was not, of course, a phenomenon peculiar or unique to Sri Lanka, since for the Third World in general, the 1980s ushered in the rise of neoliberal authoritar­ianism on the one hand and the descent of viable Marxist alternativ­es on the other. The intellectu­al void this resulted in was eventually filled by what Samir Amin referred to as “religious antiquaria­ns.” He would, undoubtedl­y, have classed the Jathika Chintanaya project under the latter term, as much as he did cultural revival movements in the Middle East. Amin moreover contended that there could be no positive outcome from the emergence of such ethnonatio­nalist movements. The failure of alternativ­e political outfits, on the other hand, was that they did not go enough by way of criticisin­g capitalism and globalisat­ion: because of this weakness, the only viable counterwei­ght to the establishm­ent, at least in the eyes of people, lay in those same ethno-nationalis­t movements. This is something historians and columnists writing diatribes against the likes of Amarasekar­a have so far ignored.

Here we must acknowledg­e two things: brushing aside a nationalis­t narrative with simplifica­tions will in the long run shore up support for it among not just ethno-zealots, but also intellectu­als, and failing to listen to what its narrators have to say, about culture, but also about politics, economics, and our way of life, runs the risk of ignoring certain historical realities. History is important. Marx emphasised this, and so did Santayana. If we continue to marginalis­e it when talking about “the way out” for our collective political, economic, and cultural impasse, we are doomed to repeat it, whether as farce or as tragedy. There’s hence no point talking about COVID19’S impact on the economy without talking about what the economy looked like, and how it operated, before the pandemic. Gunadasa Amarasekar­a has made that point.

The 1980s and 1990s saw the collapse of communism and, throughout much of the Third World, the rise of organisati­ons, think-tanks, and agencies which continued to call themselves Marxist or radical while soliciting funds from NGOS and donors whose objectives were certainly not, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n, Marxist or radical. These outfits propounded alternativ­es to the capitalist mode of production

Amarasekar­a’s most important argument was the need for industry in the country. He underscore­d this from an ethnic vantage point

and accumulati­on which didn’t really question that setup, but rather offered piecemeal solutions that effectivel­y abandoned the class struggle. To put this very succinctly, in the 1980s much of the Left in Sri Lanka forwent on class struggles and issues of relative disadvanta­ge, to focus almost exclusivel­y on what critics have called “micro-politics”. Historical realities were jettisoned by the new left formations, while class relations were swept aside in favour of ethnic politics. Gunadasa Amarasekar­a’s and Nalin de Silva’s contributi­on at this critical historical juncture was that they came up with a programme which could counter and respond to these distortion­s.

Amarasekar­a’s most important argument was the need for industry in the country. He underscore­d this from an ethnic vantage point, seeing in industrial­isation a means of correcting historical wrongs committed against Sinhala Buddhists, but the fact is that he underscore­d it. The two can’t actually be separated. To put it simply, Amarasekar­a and the JC offered a way out of sorts: local industry.

Marxists and former Marxists – including cardcarryi­ng members of the JVP – were, on the other hand at this point, coming up with their own solutions and interpreta­tions of history, countering the JC view of the economy. But their counternar­rative stood on shaky grounds and premises. Amarasekar­a may be accused of peddling ethnic supremacy in his prescripti­ons for the economy; he cannot, however, be accused of distorting and misreading history.

The “radicals” or “freethinke­rs”, as their supporters like to call them, give us either of two answers: the British, by supposedly destroying feudal, pre-capitalist social relations, developed the country; and modernisat­ion and modernity, as defined of course by the West, must be embraced if we are to prevent a reversal to such primitive pasts. Those who make the first argument will claim that by the time we got independen­ce, “we” had the best harbour, health service, and road network in Asia, while those who make the second argument will claim that capitalism, however exploitati­ve, is preferable to upholding traditiona­l social relations. So when, in the 1990s, multinatio­nal capital inundated the country, “radical intellectu­als” observed that as harmful as its effects may be, such capital should be allowed to flood in since it marginalis­es, and destroys, the so-called traditiona­l order. That “traditiona­l order” for them included Buddhist monks and nationalis­t agitators, when the truth is that it included powerful businessme­n, speculator­s, and multilater­al agencies which lack transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. By privilegin­g identity politics over class disadvanta­ge, the “intellectu­als” were opting not to see the latter.

For that reason, it doesn’t really surprise me that a series of videos about the “dark closed” days of the Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke regime, scripted from an antileft standpoint, should feature a prominent “Left” radical. Not that the JC’S reading of that era is right either: Amarasekar­a, for instance, praises Bandaranai­ke while arguing that the Marxists took too much control over her programme and made a total mess of it, when what happened was that the Marxists, facing insurmount­able obstacles in the form of global famines, oil shortages, and continued pummelling of the economy by intermedia­ries which manipulate­d the system for their benefit (something S. B. D. de Silva noted in an interview in 2017, before his passing away), couldn’t implement their program in full. But Amarasekar­a didn’t sell himself out to propagate a deliberate­ly one-sided view of history. There we must admit an inconvenie­nt truth: many of our radicals, far from agitating for real change, have sold themselves out to pre-empt change. Social science, ergo, has been deployed to prop up the status quo. This is a tragedy.

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 ??  ?? There’s no point talking about COVID-19’S impact on the economy without talking about what the economy looked like, and how it operated, before the pandemic (PIX AFP)
There’s no point talking about COVID-19’S impact on the economy without talking about what the economy looked like, and how it operated, before the pandemic (PIX AFP)
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