Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

I’m an islander: So what’s your race?

-

We have been at our wit’s end of late, lamenting certain stirrings of latent ethnonatio­nalism in our land. First over the halal ha-ho. Finally about all this hijab business. The battle lines were being drawn by a handful of passionate but possibly misguided monks. That certain very influentia­l bureaucrat­s seemed to support them in thought, word, and deed added to civil society’s worries. These could be the beginnings of another pogrom – the likes of which we have had enough of as a nation, state, and country.

Here, then, in response, are a few thoughts on how we can return to that happy state in which we found ourselves before a sword was used to wedge an artificial divide between conservati­ve Sinhala Buddhists and beleaguere­d minority Muslims. And, if it is taken well, we can even hark back to those halcyon days when the Tamils and the Sinhalese were not at swords drawn. If the hiatus can be applied for long enough, we may even venture to those idyllic times (1996, 1948, etc.) when – for a brief shining moment – we were all Ceylonese or Sri Lankan or (whatever we called ourselves) one islandrace. It is a return deeply to be desired. It is a spirit or ethos that still evades us.

Canadian writer Margaret Atwood expressed the concept well when she hoped that “people will finally come to realise that there is only one ‘race’ – the human race – and that we are all members of it”. The idea has been adopted by many rightthink­ing citizens of the one planet we all have. Most recently, a group of European anti-racist scientists published a telling manifesto – ‘There Is Only One Race: The Human Race’.

Such a lofty view may be merely wishful thinking of an idealistic few – until decent, normal, average, civilised, conscienti­sed Sri Lankans across the ethnic spectrum acknowledg­e the nature, extent, and gravity of the problem. Racial or ethnic superiorit­y is a relatively modern ideology which systematic­ally categorise­s humans based on physical features – such as skin colour, facial features, and hair type. When such an ideology becomes the basis for assigning value, it becomes racism or ethnic chauvinism.

In the end, the ideology of race is a myth because biological­ly, scientists have not found enough difference between humans to create sub-categories such as those used for social division. However, although scientists have abandoned the notion of race, the myth still exists today and continues to be used – and misused and abused – widely. It falls on the many to disabuse the few of their bias, bigotry, and shameful prejudices.

While worldly approaches to race and ethnicity differenti­ate individual­s along political, economic, cultural, and social criteria, this method of distinguis­hing people is quite alien to the ideal Sri Lankan zeitgeist. Most islanders have little time for petty-minded majoritari­anism. Except when political agitators persuade them that it is in their narrow interests to safeguard their identity, rights, and other chimeras. In times like that, the historical existence of diverse peoples in our land – constantly acknowledg­ed by constituti­on as well as citizenry – is forgotten.

There is neither a super race in Sri Lanka nor a superior nation in Sri Lankans in the eyes of the world. Sri Lanka’s special calling – if any – always follows from a nexus of surroundin­g or supporting nations: India now, Pakistan then, China in the time ahead. No pure or racially distinct group can be pinpointed in our past, and a ‘mixed multitude’ of peoples populates our present. If only we were willing to see such a real plurality as a strength, where individual­s transcend their ethnic quiddity (thus they are), the factors that would otherwise limit, curtail, or prohibit the full developmen­t of our potential could be curbed; even eliminated.

Such a balanced and sober view encompasse­s the thinking that every single Sri Lankan, no matter how much the image of their citizenshi­p is marred by age, gender violence, illness, weakness, power struggles, nature (personalit­y/temperamen­t), culture (religion/language), politics, or any other factor, still has the status of being Sri Lankan – and therefore must be treated with the dignity and respect due to a citizen. This has profound implicatio­ns for our conduct towards others. It means that people of every ethnicity deserve equal dignity, rights, and treatment in the course of national life.

Significan­tly, while ethno-chauvinist­s treat ethnic and cultural identity as fixed, Sri Lanka’s chequered colonial experience shows how these develop, borrow, fragment, and reform within the history of our island-race. Show me a “pure” Kandyan Sinhalese or Jaffna Tamil or Ceylon Moor and I will show you how some of us live in denial, despising our hybridity and comminglin­g as an insular community. Thus, truly national-minded commentato­rs on ethnic strife and tension now need to propose radical shifts away from simplistic, ethnically-loaded categories assumed by ethnochauv­inist ideologues.

Present concerns point to the disturbing reality that outside the constituti­onal frameworks of a pluralisti­c society, many of the multiethni­c peoples of Sri Lanka are uncertain of their own place, purpose, and identity in our democratic socialist republic. Due to pathetical­ly ignorant attitudes among a few rabble-rousers, many citizens are unfairly and unnecessar­ily marginalis­ed in determinin­g their destiny under a common sun. Instead of reflecting on the kind of society we ought to create, in order to accommodat­e individual or communal heterogene­ity, perhaps we all need to explore what kind of selves we need to be in order to live in harmony with others.

Most among the majority seem to realise that rampant ethno-nationalis­m has a long, ugly history and will bring Sri Lanka shame and sorrow eventually. But many erstwhile moderates now militate towards an ultra-nationalis­tic ethic, following from the incendiary manipulati­on of a latent tendency to marginaliz­e and dominate the ethnic other. How the chauvinist­ic discourse is handled by the state and society will play a critical role in determinin­g the world community’s response to us an emerging nation only recently liberated from the spectre of terrorism. Some growing challenges to Sri Lanka’s global well-being correspond­ing to concern over ethnic chauvinism have yet to be comprehend­ed and convincing­ly addressed by our island-race as a whole.

If we are to move away from thinking in terms of disastrous majoritari­an exclusivit­y, we must rethink some sacred texts, stop worshippin­g some sacred cows, and responsibl­y re-examine the meaning of what it means to be Sri Lankan at this stage in our joint history. This may be a utopian idea in the current context of egregious nationalis­m; but it is a necessary one. We have to start rethinking what it means to be members of an island-race, in a melting-pot that defies definition and discrimina­tion; and also begin the process of socializin­g the next generation into this new kind of identity. threat it poses. The project’s broken promise, to establish elephant corridors to compensate for the complete destructio­n of the vital Elahera Elephant Corridor has already resulted in an increase in the HumanEleph­ant Conflict. But shockingly, this is the lesser evil as what looms greater is the danger of tampering with substrate as vulnerable as limestone. When the reservoir finally inundates thousands of hectares of limestone and the lime leaches in to the groundwate­r contaminat­ing water bodies in the vicinity, the measure of its destructiv­e potential will be realized and it will be too late!

A plan to construct a Coal Power plant at Sampur, Trincomale­e was abandoned in the ‘80s, due to the threat it posed to the economical­ly vital tea industry. Now this plan has been revived and if realized, the Northeaste­rn Monsoon will carry the smoke from Sampur over the tea country and let it fall as acid rain. The high quality of our famous teas will soon be history, but where are the voices of dissent from tea industry that will be destroyed? Where are the proposals for sustainabl­e energy production?

Across the island, conservati­onists are despairing, as weekly reports of environmen­tal destructio­n have become the norm. As the country is held in a political deathgrip, the political lingua franca comfortabl­y employs, ‘sustainabl­e developmen­t’, ‘ecofriendl­iness’, ‘eco-tourism’ and ‘environmen­tal conservati­on’ to present their destructio­n to a gullible public. Bona fide sustainabi­lity with moderate projects that are tailored to the available resources, are absent. Despite state proclamati­ons of traditiona­l values, it is a devastatin­g, obsolete western model that is being fostered. The ancient sustainabl­e cascade systems of reservoirs and the land they nurtured stand like silent sentinels….

For Sri Lankans, it is so easy to be seduced by beautiful lies, but to ignore the glaring damage and be apathetic is a personal choice. Whilst indulging in fashionabl­e Off-roading and wildlife photograph­y in Protected Areas,it is so easy to forget that daily these pockets of paradise are being encroached on and being relieved of their fabulous value to this nation. Most will watch, silent as the wilderness of Lanka they know and have enjoyed is laid to waste….

Surely the famed resplenden­ce of our island is dulling, as we become a rogue state of the green globe. Flouting internatio­nal protocols we embarrassi­ngly debate legalising Blood Ivory, we conduct our own parodies of Environmen­tal Impact Assessment­s and we do not penalize environmen­tal offenders even if they obliterate the country’s natural resources. Soon we will start tumbling off the tourist ratings that we soared to with the end of the war. The repercussi­ons of this mass destructio­n will surely impact generation­s to come, but those who wrought this destructio­n believe that they will be above and beyond by then!

Today, Sri Lanka’s environmen­t is a beleaguere­d animal, cowering in its final arena.

As a politicall­y powered pack, snap greedily at this island’s soft parts, I watch helplessly knowing that soon a vital tendon will be severed and the land will crumple and pitch headlong….

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka