Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Rememberin­g SWRD

- By Dayasiri Jayasekara Sinhala Maha Sabha (The writer is the General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party)

When considerin­g global politics, there have been many incidents where popular leaders were assassinat­ed and often had untimely deaths.

Great leaders such as Mahatma Gandhi of India, John F Kennedy and Abraham Lincoln of the United States were shot dead, and Solomon West Ridgeway Dias (SWRD) Bandaranai­ke, who rendered an invaluable service to Ceylon in terms of socio-economic and political aspects, was also shot dead by an assailant, silencing the 'Silver Bell in Asia'.

It was the fourth year since his appointmen­t as Prime Minister. Since he broke away from the United National Party (UNP) and formed the Sri Lanka Freedom Party ( SLFP), he had hopes of many changes to be made in the country.

Bandaranai­ke always kept in mind that he had a lot of work to do for the people. However, despite all that he had planned for the betterment of the country, he had to leave the world at an unexpected moment. On September 26, 1959, people who did not expect a disaster to happen, began their usual work and Premier Bandaranai­ke also went to his home in Rosmead Place, Colombo 7 since he had to complete lots of work, as well as listen to the grievances of all who came to meet him.

One of the Buddhist monks who came to meet him came to him without any difficulty. The Buddhist monk Thalduwe Somarama, approached Bandaranai­ke and shot him with a revolver hidden in his robe. Bandaranai­ke was immediatel­y admitted to the Colombo National Hospital, where he underwent a six-hour operation performed by almost all the well-known doctors in the country.

This year, 2021, is the 62nd year since the assassinat­ion of Premier Bandaranai­ke.

A son was born who changed a country

SWRD Bandaranai­ke, born on Jan 8, 1899, inherited the Bandaranai­ke legacy of the Maha Mudaliyar Sir Solomon Dias Bandaranai­ke and lady Daisy Eslyn Obeysekera, an aristocrat­ic family in British- ruled Ceylon. He was named 'Ridgeway' by the then British governor to Ceylon, by his father, the Maha Mudaliyar.

Educated at St Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia and later admitted to the University of Oxford in England for higher studies, Bandaranai­ke returned to Ceylon in 1925 as a young man with many progressiv­e ideas. He worked as a lawyer for a short time, and in 1926 became the Secretary of the Ceylon National Congress.

He was elected President of the 'ProNationa­l Party' in the same year and later joined many national organisati­ons and started his political career.

The beginning of the political journey

He became the Premier of the country at the end of a long political journey, beginning with his election as the Chairman of the Nittambuwa Village Committee. He became the Secretary of the Ceylon National Congress in 1926. In the Colombo Municipal Elections held in December of the same year, he fought against the Labour leader A E Gunasinghe for the Maradana division and won with a majority of 615 votes.

Although many thought that an aristocrat like Bandaranai­ke could not win in an urban, working- class area like Maradana, he launched a successful doorto-door campaign and achieved victory.

He thus entered the mainstream politics of the country as a Municipal Councilor and contested the Veyangoda electorate in the post-referendum state elections held after the 'Donoughmor­e' reforms and was elected unopposed to the State Council.

He was active in politics in the first State Council of Ceylon and expressed progressiv­e views, calling for the expulsion of the three public servants and the abolition of their posts if the country is to achieve full independen­ce. In 1931, he became the Chairman of Ceylon National Congress, the youngest appointed to the position.

In 1934, the 'Sinhala Maha Sabha' was formed by Bandaranai­ke with the aim of uniting the divided Sinhala nation and promoting nationalis­m and giving impetus to the national liberation struggle.

In 1936, Bandaranai­ke was re-elected unopposed to the Second State Council from the Veyangoda electorate.

He was also the youngest Minister in the Second State Council of Ministers and was later elected as the Leader of the House.

The first general election

In the first general election since Dominion independen­ce in 1948, Bandaranai­ke contested from the UNP from the Attanagall­a electorate. After defeating C Gunasekera, he was elected to Parliament with a majority of 26,854 votes and became a Minister in the first Cabinet of Ministers in the country.

D S Senanayake was elected as the Minister of Health and Local Government. He rendered a significan­t service to the country and was also the first to deliver a speech in the State Council in Sinhala.

Establishm­ent of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party

Eventually, he realised that the UNP-led government was not going the way the Sinhala 'Maha Sabha' hoped, but submitted a series of resolution­s passed at the 'Madampe Convention' of the 'Sinhala Maha Sabha' to the then Premier, but the latter did not respond favourably and Bandaranai­ke sat in the Opposition in Parliament on July 12, 1951.

Later, on September 2, 1951, a group of 44 people joined the Colombo City Hall to form a new organisati­on in support of Bandaranai­ke. With the naming of the organisati­on as the 'Sri Lanka Freedom Party', the arrival of a major factor determinin­g the future course of Ceylonese politics took place.

Seven months after the formation of the new party, Bandaranai­ke faced an election in which the SLFP won 9 seats. He won the Attanagall­a electorate by a majority of 32,544 votes and became the Leader of the Opposition in Parliament.

Towards the post of Prime Minister

The SLFP and the Lanka Samasamaja Party, under the leadership of

Bandaranai­ke, reached an unanimous agreement on September 24, 1955, signaling the change in the political power of the UNP until then, and on December 17, 1955, a resolution was passed to the effect that Sinhala should become the official language of the country.

Bandaranai­ke also accepted the "Ten Commandmen­ts" introduced by the United Bhikku Front that Sinhala should be the official language of Ceylon, and pledged that his Government would implement it.

The “Mahajana Eksath Peramuna” was formed on February 21, 1956 with the participat­ion of the SLFP led by Bandaranai­ke, the Revolution­ary Lanka Sama Samaja Party led by Philip Gunawarden­a and the Sinhala Language Front led by Vijayanand­a Dahanayake.

Subsequent­ly, in the 1956 general elections, Bandaranai­ke led the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna to power in Parliament, creating a "common people's era" in the country.

Bandaranai­ke did a great service to the entire community and we are still enjoying the progressiv­e results of the decisions he took then. Among them are the establishm­ent of the Ceylon Transport Board, the nationalis­ation of the private bus service, the nationalis­ation of the port, the establishm­ent of the Employees Provident Fund (EPF), the recognitio­n of state enterprise priority, the designatio­n of May 1, Internatio­nal Labour Day as a public holiday, and the protection of the rights of minorities, the granting of their rights, the amendment of labour laws, the establishm­ent of new state corporatio­ns, the removal of foreign military bases operating in Ceylon, and the establishm­ent of a national education policy.

Although he died less than four years after assuming the office of Premier, the people of this country will undoubtedl­y give the slain Bandaranai­ke the honour of working tirelessly to provide the many services that we still enjoy today.

"Man's ultimate duty is to serve man" is his noble concept. But it is doubtful whether all of us have forgotten this noble advice due to the degenerate politics today.

It is the duty and responsibi­lity of the SLFP, as well as those who love the country, to keep it active and not limited to words, as we commemorat­e his untimely death.

 ?? ?? SWRD Bandaranai­ke
SWRD Bandaranai­ke

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