Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

His low profile belied his stellar achievemen­ts

- Rauff Hakeem

The passing of N.M.M. Izeth Hussain removes one of few illustriou­s civil servants who embodied great intellectu­al grasp, exacting personal integrity and consequent­ial profession­alism in our nation’s public service.

A career diplomat by profession, he served his country with great distinctio­n but retained a low profile that belied his quiet efficiency and stellar achievemen­ts.

As a member of the Board of the Bandaranai­ke Centre for Internatio­nal Studies he played a pioneering role in its formative years from 1989 to 1994. Hussain was an old boy of St. Joseph’s College, and graduated from the University of Ceylon, with an English (Hons) degree.

In retirement, he reached unmatched distinctio­n as a public thinker defending, upholding and promoting the essential values of a plural, modern democracy. In later years he emerged a prolific writer with a vast number of articles, monographs and lectures to his credit.

His academic forays covered a wide spectrum including Islam, the present predicamen­t of Muslims of Sri Lanka. Hussain’s was a unique and an objective voice that bore the brunt of a long and arduous struggle to flesh out the truth during the times of mindless attacks on the minority groups within and outside the Muslim community.Yet, he also found time to focus on subjects dear to him such as Urdu literature and Islamic culture in South Asia. Lest we forget, He was the founder editor of the Sailan Muslim website.

His often published positions on issues of national significan­ce were masterpiec­es of persuasive advocacy, elegant prose and above all beacons of wisdom that avoided rhetoric and insisted on reason. Hussain in his years of retirement developed himself into a sharp social critic. He called a spade, a spade, a racist, a racist, regardless of the faith or colour they belonged to, including those from his own community.

I remain an unabashed and an ardent admirer of his principled life that made him an inimitable adornment of the Muslim community of Sri Lanka. I convey my deep sympathies to his family in their bereavemen­t. May he attain Jinnathul firdhouse.

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