Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

REMEMBERIN­G BALACOMRAD­E TAMPOE, THE LEGENDARY TRADE UNION LEADER

- BY D.B.S. JEYARAJ dbsjeyaraj@yahoo.com

“Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark” is perhaps an apt descriptio­n of how the Internatio­nal Workers Day was observed in Sri Lanka on May 1st. Instead of being given pride of place on May Day, the workers and their trade union leaders were virtually ignored by the political parties conducting rallies and procession­s on workers day. The May Day event has been transfigur­ed or disfigured into a Political Tamasha by major political parties.

The pathetical­ly fractured trade union movement and hopelessly debilitate­d working classes of Sri Lanka have either been unable or unwilling to check or counter this increasing politiciza­tion and consequent diminution of the trade union sphere over the years. The transforma­tion of May Day into a political event where the workers were treated as children of a lesser God is only symptomati­c of a malady that has afflicted this country for many decades. The sea of red that this writer witnessed on May Day during his childhood slowly began changing colour to seas of green and blue over the years. With the presence of artistes and actors from India on stage, the meaning of May Day got distorted as a cultural show.

The entry of trade unionists into politics and politician­s into trade unionism was a slow ,creeping process that resulted in the gradual weakening of the working class movement. Trade union influence was shamelessl­y used to enhance political power. Inter-party and intra-party difference­s impacted on trade unions and fractured the trade union movement and its activity was used to build a political base. Trade union agitation was used as a pressure tactic to gain political clout. This negative trend climaxed with the monumental tragedy of Leftist leaders in their new Cabinet Minister avatars ruthlessly crushing the trade union movement on which they climbed to power.

It is against this dismal backdrop of a deteriorat­ing trade union movement, that this column focuses on a man who was perhaps the last of the great trade unionists. A legend in his lifetime who was at the helm of a vibrant trade union continuous­ly for a period of sixty six years – an unsurpasse­d record! A trade union leader about whom I have written earlier in these columns - who is no more with us having passed away last September – and whose 93rd birthday falls next week on May 23rd. I am of course referring to Comrade Bala Tampoe who was the Ceylon Mercantile Union (CMU) General Secretary from 1948 to 2014. Though called the CMU still, the amended name of the union is now The Ceylon Mercantile, Industrial and General Workers Union.

Being General Secretary of the CMU for 66 years since 1948, has been a marvellous achievemen­t.All the more so because of comrade Bala’s ethnicity in Sri Lanka’s deeply divided society. Philips Balendra Tampoe was of Jaffna Tamil origin. The membership of the CMU though multi-ethnic is predominan­tly Sinhala. This fact has been highlighte­d often by many observers of Sri Lanka’s political scene. It is however noteworthy that Bala had never ever projected himself as an Ethnic Tamil or engaged in communal politics.

JAFFNA TAMIL STOCK

Bala was born in Negombo on May 23, 1922 and both his parents were of Jaffna Tamil stock. His father, Francis Tampoe-Philips was an excise officer under British rule who served in various parts of what was then known as the Madras Presidency in India. The Madras Presidency consisted of most districts of present day Tamil Nadu, several regions of present dayAndhra Pradesh and parts of present day Kerala, Karnataka and Orissa States in India.

Bala’s mother Beatrice Thangamma Saverimutt­u, though hailing from Jaffna, was born in Kurunegala. Her father was MudaliyarA.G. Saverimutt­u who had been the Chief Post Master at the General Post Office in Colombo for many years. The rank of Mudaliyar had been conferred on him by the British rulers in recognitio­n of his distinguis­hed service to the crown.

Bala was born and baptized as a Christian. His given name then was Balendra Tampoe-Philips. Due to compelling circumstan­ces during school days, his mother registered his name as Philips Balendra Tampoe when admitting him to Royal College in 1934. Ten years later, after graduating Bala was appointed as a lecturer in Botany and Horticultu­re at the Peradeniya School ofAgricult­ure in February 1944. It was then that he legally changed his name to Philips Balendra Tampoe and placed advertisem­ents to that effect in newspapers. He became known thereafter in a general sense as Bala (derived from Balendra) Tampoe or PB Tampoe.

I once inquired about the origins of the TampoePhil­ips name from him in a conversati­on, Bala explained thus:

“The first paternal ancestor to convert to Christiani­ty from Hinduism was my great grandfathe­r. He took the name Mathew Philips. He might have been given his Christian name as well as his surname by the Christian missionary – who was probably anAmerican – who baptized him. Mathew Philips was born in 1817 and died in 1852. He was a Tamil Pundit and Teacher. He was also the Head Catechist and General Agent in the American Mission Church of that time”.

“My paternal grandfathe­r was John Francis Philips, who owned a coconut estate in Pallai in the Jaffna peninsula where my father was born. My grandfathe­r also raised herds of cattle in Pallai. (Cattle and Coconuts - C and C , Bala chuckled). He married the daughter of Thamothera­mpillai McGowan Tampoe, the first Ceylonese Magistrate of Jaffna under British rule in this country. She was my grandmothe­r. It may be of interest to note that well known film director Robin Tampoe, was the son of a brother of my father’s mother. My father who was the eldest son in the family adopted the surname Tampoe-Philips by adding his mother’s maiden name to his father’s. That is how my original name got to be Balendra Tampoe-Philips”.

PHILIPS BALENDRA TAMPOE

When I asked him to relate the circumstan­ces under which he had to change his name from Balendra Tampoe Philips to Philips Balendra Tampoe, Bala had an interestin­g tale to relate. He also spoke about his siblings and mother in this regard:

“My father Francis Tampoe-Philips worked in different areas of the Madras Presidency. I was the third of six siblings, with two elder sisters, a younger sister and two younger brothers, all of whom, but for me, had been born in various towns in the Madras Presidency. I happened to be born, on May 23, 1922, in Negombo, because my mother had gone there to stay with a younger sister of hers, when she was expecting a child, who turned out to be me”.

“My eldest sister Zena died of double pneumonia, at a little over eight years of age, in Bangalore, in August 1927. Shortly afterwards, my younger brother Narendra, a year younger than I, died of diphtheria. Soon afterwards my baby brother who was nine month’s old, also died of the same ailment. I was left with two sisters, Irma, a year older, and Cynthia Jayatri, three years younger than me. The three of us were taught at home by our mother, as we could not gain entrance to schools in Bangalore straight away when my mother decided to stay there with us instead of accompanyi­ng my father to various stations in the Madras Presidency”.

“My mother sent an applicatio­n for my admission to a leadingAng­lican boys’school, Bishop Cotten’s College, in Bangalore. The applicatio­n was accepted and my mother was notified that her son was admitted under the name B.T. Philips. In those days, there were ethnic quotas in school admissions in India and students were classified accordingl­y. The school officials had mistakenly categorize­d the name B.T. Philips as an English or Anglo-Indian student. We did not know this”.

“It was when I went to Bishop Cotten’s in 1930; on the date of admission with my mother, that the school authoritie­s discovered that I was neither English nor Anglo- Indian. The British Headmaster informed her, to our utter dismay, that I could not be admitted, as I was neither the one nor the other! The quota for admission at that time was four English or Anglo-Indian students, to one Indian. That quota had already been filled, we were told. So I was deprived of admission to that prestigiou­s institutio­n”.

“Akindly English lady who had befriended my mother gave us pre-school education, and then later on she got us admitted to Clarence School in Bangalore, in 1931. It was run by the Seventh Day Adventist Mission, which she belonged to”.

ROYAL COLLEGE, COLOMBO

“In April 1934, my mother returned to stay permanentl­y in Ceylon with me and my two sisters. I got admitted to Royal College, Colombo later that year, thanks to the good offices of Professor C. Suntherali­ngam, who was then the Professor of Mathematic­s in the University College, Colombo. He later became MP for Vavuniya and became a Minister in D.S. Senanayake’s first Cabinet at the time of Independen­ce for Ceylon. When I was admitted to Royal College, Colombo in 1934 by my mother, she registered me under the name Philips Balendra Tampoe. This was to avoid any possible confusion over my ethnicity as in the case of what had occurred previously in South India, when my mother’s applicatio­n for my admission to Bishop Cotten’s College, in Bangalore ended in failure”

This then was the story of how Bala Tampoe’s father Francis Philips became Francis TampoePhil­ips and how the son Balendra Tampoe –Philips turned into Philips Balendra Tampoe.

Bala Tampoe was a colourful personalit­y of multiple dimensions. Undergroun­d member of the Lanka Sama Samaaja Party (LSSP), during the second World War days;Agricultur­al Dept. lecturer who lost his job due to involvemen­t in a general strike; leader of the same trade union for more than six decades; fiery orator known for defiant speeches; last living witness of the Independen­ce ceremony of Ceylon when the Union Jack was replaced; key organizer of the historic 1953 ‘Hartal’; one time Central Committee and Politburea­u member of the largest Trotskyite party recognized by the fourth internatio­nal; architect of many strikes, including one which paralyzed the Colombo harbour causing declaratio­n of emergency; one of the trouble-making leftists earmarked for incarcerat­ion at the Naval armoury by the 1962 coup d’etat planners; pioneer of a collective agreement that proved to be a model for many such agreements; trade union leader who ushered in the payment of allowance scheme based on the rise in the cost of living index; man behind a series of strikes leading to progressiv­e measures regarding terminatio­n of employment; co-leader of revolution­ary breakaway group in LSSP that formed its own party; unsuccessf­ul candidate in three parliament­ary polls; lawyer who defended JVP comrades free-of-charge after the 1971 insurgency; dedicated trade unionist who drove to office and back for six days of work, even at the age of 92. These are, but a few facets of comrade Bala Tampoe.

PARLIAMENT­ARY POLITICS

Bala Tampoe’s foray into Parliament­ary politics was not very successful. The CMU’s flirtation with electoral politics was also a failure. Bala Tampoe first contested Parliament­ary elections in 1960, was fielded by the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) under the key symbol in the multi-member constituen­cy of Colombo Central returning three MP’s. March 1960 polls were held at a time when the LSSP was expected to romp home as winners, and Dr. N.M. Perera become Prime Minister. Bala was expected to come first in Colombo Central. Yet, it was Dr. M.C.M. Kaleel and Ranasinghe Premadasa of the UNP, along with the Communist party’s Pieter Keuneman who won. Bala Tampoe came fourth out of fifteen candidates polling 22,228 votes.

In the July 1960 elections, the number of candidates had dwindled to six. For some reason, the expectatio­n again was that Bala Tampoe would be elected as first MP. But again that was not to be. Sir. Razeek Fareed from the SLFP came first with Pieter Keuneman and Dr. Kaleel coming second and third respective­ly. Bala Tampoe came fifth, behind Ranasinghe Premadasa. His vote tally had shrunk to 16,406.

The LSSP underwent a crisis when the party leadership opted to form a coalition govt. with the SLFP, led by Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke. 14 members of the then LSSPCentra­l Committee dissented. These included Bulathsinh­ala MPEdmund Samarakkod­y, Moratuwa MPMeryl Fernando, Theoretici­an V. Karalasing­ham and Bala Tampoe. The dissident group formed the LSSP-R or LSSP-Revolution­ary party minus the Karlo group of Karalasing­ham that rejoined the parent body. The mainstream LSSP was expelled from the fourth internatio­nal and the LSSP-R was recognized in its place as the Ceylon section of the fourth internatio­nal.

The LSSP-R contested the 1965 parliament­ary elections but did not fare well. Bala Tampoe contested in Colombo Central again but this time under the lamp and not key symbol. He came fifth out of ten candidates polling only 4,559 votes.

The LSSP-R underwent further fragmentat­ion when Edmund Samarakkod­y left the LSSP-R after engaging in a vitriolic campaign against Bala Tampoe. The Edmund faction formed the Revolution­ary Samasamaji­st Party. Later on it became the Revolution­ary Workers party.

REVOLUTION­ARY MARXIST PARTY

The LSSP-R continued to be under the sway of Bala Tampoe. The CMU was its mainstay. The LSSP-R did not contest the 1970 General elections and accused the LSSP and Communist party of “misleading the masses”. The party too was renamed as the Revolution­ary Marxist Party (RMP) and continued to be recognized as the Ceylon/Sri Lanka affiliate of the United Secretaria­t of the fourth internatio­nal for several years.

In 1977, Bala Tampoe reversed the earlier position of not contesting parliament­ary polls and fielded a few candidates at the July hustings. Bala Tampoe himself did not contest.The CMU and RMPtogethe­r put forward four candidates on a “revolution­ary socialist platform” calling for “the overthrow of capitalist rule and the establishm­ent of a Workers’ and Peasants’ Government by the masses”.

Upali Cooray and T.N. Perera contested on behalf of the RMP in Dehiwela and Kesbewa, while Vernon Wijesinghe and H.A. Seneviratn­e were put forward by the CMU in Colombo North and Kelaniya.All four fought the election campaign under the bell symbol. The results were a disaster. The four candidates got 402, 298, 193 and 162 in Dehiwela, Kesbewa, Colombo North and Kelaniya respective­ly.

The failure of the Parliament­ary path, and the personal electoral defeats of Bala Tampoe in 1960 and 1965 were blessings in disguise for trade unionism in general and the CMU in particular. Bala Tampoe organized a series of more than 70 strikes across the country protesting the way employers could summarily dismiss workers. This led to the then Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake meeting with him to discuss ways and means of addressing the issue. Bala Tampoe proposed that the State should step in and examine grounds for removal. Tampoe submitted a legal draft which laid the foundation for the Terminatio­n of Employment Act that was enacted in 1971.

The larger than life image of Bala Tampoe in my perspectiv­e kept growing as I too grew up. Many relatives and friends in the private sector were CMU members and the stories they told about Tampoe enhanced his image further in my eyes. The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)-led insurgency of 1971 captured the imaginatio­n of youths in the seventies. Bala Tampoe aided by a team of dedicated lawyers appeared for many of the accused at the Criminal Justice Commission. Even as I lapped up newspaper reports of the proceeding­s eagerly, my esteem for Bala Tampoe too increased.

NINETY - YEAR MILE POST

I began interactin­g with him as a journalist when I worked at “The Island”. When I first joined the newspaper in November 1981, I used to cover the Trade Union and Customs as my regular beat. However, I was soon put on the Tamil political round at “The Island”. With the ethnic crisis escalating, the “Tamil round” assumed crucial importance. I found myself writing many news stories and articles, and even a weekly column pertaining to the ethnic problem. The trade union beat was taken-off and my interactio­n with Bala Tampoe ceased. In 1988 I left the shores of Sri Lanka. Meanwhile, Bala Tampoe reached the ninety-year milepost in 2012.

The year 2013 was a blessed year for me as I got the opportunit­y of returning to Sri Lanka after 25 years. After travelling about and visiting relatives and close friends, I began meeting “other” people during the latter stages of my stay in Sri Lanka. One such person was Bala Tampoe.

I went to the CMU headquarte­rs in Kollupitiy­a one morning after a friend had secured an appointmen­t to meet Bala Tampoe. The CMU office that buzzed vibrantly with activity at one time seemed relatively quiet now. It seemed to have lost its lustre just like trade unionism in the country. When I walked into the hall and saw Bala from afar, the nonagenari­an seemed to look the same, despite the withering gaze of age. When I got closer, I could see the toll of nine decades. Yet, he was quite sprightly in his walk and had a firm handshake as usual. The physical movements were somewhat slower but unimpaired. His hair remained still with a silvery grey hue.

When I sat down to converse, I discovered that the fire in the doughty fighter for workers’ rights was still blazing away. He was in full command of his faculties. His mind was razor sharp as usual. The flow of ideas and words gushed forth as in the past. The familiar gritting of teeth occurred frequently. The fiery glint in his eyes was very visible at close quarters. His memory was fantastic.

I would like to conclude this article by excerpting some passages from an earlier article in these columns on Comrade Bala Tampoe. I do so to provide greater insight into the man, his mission and on what made him tick for six decades in the Trade Union sphere.

VINTAGE VOLKSWAGON

“Bala Tampoe lives in Ratmalana. The CMU office is in Kollupitiy­a. Each day he drives from home to work and work to home. Bala drives a vintage Volkswagon that he has been using for decades. He works six days a week and at times seven depending upon necessity. His workday is around 7 to 8 hours daily.

I asked Bala Tampoe how he managed to lead such a busy, strenuous life at his age. What was the secret of his long life, good health, and youthful energy? He replied pensively:

“I think there are genetic, as well as other reasons for my having lived thus far, with the capacity to drive to work and back between my house in Ratmalana and the CMU headquarte­rs in Colpetty, five to six days a week, for a full day’s work. One is, that I cannot let go of the needs of the Union and its members.Another is that I have been fairly frugal in my diet, and have never been given to excesses in anything but my activities on behalf of others. I also can’t yet bring myself to think of myself as old, as I remain young at heart and in mind”.

Bala adds as an afterthoug­ht. “An eye specialist recently observed that I did not seem to have the optic nerve of a ninety-one-year old, when she happened to examine one of my eyes! That signifies something that I can’t explain about my physical condition”.

I was curious about his lifestyle and daily routine. I asked Bala to describe a day in his life. For him a “day in his life” equals a working day. This was his response:-

A DAY IN HIS LIFE

“I usually wake to the sounds of early birds chirping outside my bedroom window, between 5.15 and 6.00 a.m. I then make myself a cup of tea, and sit down to my laptop, to check my e-mail and respond thereto straightaw­ay sometimes, or just browse a bit on the internet, before I prepare my breakfast”.

“It normally consists of cereals - mixed in a little milk with curd, a spoonful of kitul treacle and a sliced kolikuttu plantain. I am giving you those details because people sometimes ask me about my daily diet, when questionin­g me about “my secret”, as you’ve done”.

“I normally leave for the CMU headquarte­rs by 8.30 a.m., driving my old Volkswagen, which I have had re-conditione­d recently. The Union spends for its maintenanc­e and cost of petrol for my daily travelling to and from the headquarte­rs. I preferred that to the Union’s purchasing a new car for me, as its General Council had wished. One of my reasons for that preference was that I am too advanced in years to need a car for much longer than I’ve driven the one I have”!

“My working day now normally ends by 5.00 p.m., but continues till 8.00 or even 9.00 p.m. on Wednesdays, when the Executive Committee or the Working Committee meet alternativ­ely - from week to week. It takes me about an hour to drive home to Ratmalana”.

“I have a short nap in the afternoons at the headquarte­rs; but have found it desirable as age creeps upon me, to have a longer nap when I get home, before warming my dinner (prepared for me at the headquarte­rs) on a microwave oven”.

“After dinner, I stretch my legs a bit, walking around the house for about fifteen minutes, before normally settling down to watch a DVD film till 11.00 p.m. or later, depending on how absorbing it is and how tired I may be at end of the the day – and so it ends!

NANCYKOTAL­AWELA

Bala Tampoe lives alone. He was married twice and has two children both of whom are in the USA. I asked Bala about his first wife and children about whom very little is known to current colleagues and contempora­ries.

“My first wife was Nancy Kotalawela from Passara. She was a Montessori teacher who had been trained by Madame Maria Montessori herself in Kodaikanal, India. I married her on October 28, 1950. Our son Dhiresh was born on December 1, 1951; and our daughter Shyama was born on January 6, 1956. We separated in 1957, and were divorced in April 1966. Nancy left for the United States in September 1967, taking our two children with her, and kept them out of touch with me for more than thirty years in the States”.

MAYWICKRAM­ASURIYA

Bala Tampoe’s second wife was May Wickramasu­riya who was an institutio­n by herself. They were married on September 22, 1966. May worked at the CMU for decades and was well-known in Trade union and Trotskyite circles. She had joined the CMU in 1951 and remained an efficient colleague and loyal companion to Bala Tampoe. She became assistant secretary of the CMU in 1956. May was paralyzed after suffering a stroke in November 1995. She died a few years later on December 15, 1998. CMU contempora­ries speak highly of the fond affection with which Bala cared for her. Bala describes her as his “companion and comrade”. There is a conference room named after May at the CMU office”. Philips Balendra Tampoe now known to all as Bala Tampoe is one whose name is indelibly etched in the Trade union annals of this country. Comrade Bala Tampoe may be no more today, but the legendary leader of the oppressed and underprivi­leged will always be regarded as an incomparab­le Sri Lankan phenomenon! D.B.S. Jeyaraj can be reached at

dbsjeyaraj@yahoo.com

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