Colombo elite more racist than others, says academic

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Colombo elite more racist than others, says academic
March 20th 2012
Colombo elite more racist than others, says academic
* Most challenging issue Sri Lanka faces:
Restructure education system to produce Sri Lankans,
and not Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims…
business community has important role

                                      Professor Rohan Gunaratna addressing a conference on ‘Reconciliation
                                      through Education’ recently, said the business community had an
                                      important role to play in the reconciliation process but said there was so
                                      much racism among Colombo’s elite than anywhere else in the country.

                                      "When I travel to the North or to the South or to the East I do not see
                                      racism, but I see so much of racism among the elite in Colombo. There has
                                      been a significant amount of propaganda in circulation in the capital. In
                                      contrast, the people in the rural areas want to live in peace. When I ask the
                                      people in the Vanni, what is it that you need? They will tell me, I need
                                      security, I need a job, I need a house to live in and I need to send my
                                      children to school. Addressing such issues should be the focus not
                                      dividing Sri Lanka by ethnicity and religion.
                                        "I think that there should be reflection and discussion about these key
issues confronting the ordinary people by the elite and the intellectuals in Colombo. There are many mistakes
that we have made in the last 25 -30 years that created and sustained the Sri Lankan conflict. It is time we take a
hard look at what we have done well and the mistakes we need to undo and make progress so that there will be
no relapse or return to conflict," Prof Gunaratna said.

The full text of Prof. Gunaratna’s speech follows:

"The course of Sri Lanka’s history changed on May 19, 2009. Since then, there has been significant progress in
the area of reconciliation. Sri Lanka witnessed progress in three different areas. First, humanitarian assistance,
second, socio-economic development and third, political engagement.

The first step in the national reconciliation process is the rehabilitation of the ex-LTTE cadres, particularly
those under 18 years of age. About 12,000 former members of the LTTE underwent rehabilitation. Initially, it
was not very clear as to direction Sri Lanka will move, whether it would be retributive justice, whether those
Tamil Tigers would be prosecuted or if there would be restorative justice, where they will be rehabilitated and
released. I want to share with you that neither the Sri Lankan government nor the Sri Lankan people wanted to
prosecute the Tamil Tigers. To ensure future stability and peace in Sri Lanka, the Sri Lankan government
decided to rehabilitate and reintegrate 11,500 Tamil Tigers.

Of the 12,000 Tamil Tigers, about 500 members of the organization were all children below 18 years of age.
The Sri Lankan government decided to give them opportunities in education. They were almost all educated at
the Hindu College in Ratmalana.
Today I’m very proud to say that a few
hundred of those Tamil Tiger members
who underwent rehabilitation have
entered university. Some of them have
even entered the medical school. This
demonstrated the spirit of the Sri
Lankan people. Even though they were
former combatants, some of them did
killings in the North and East and even
outside that area, the response of the
Sri Lankan public and the government
was to rehabilitate and reintegrate them.

Rehabilitation is the first step in reconciliation. To move beyond this point, Sri Lankan launched a
multifaceted reconciliation enterprise. To build harmony, the Kadirgamar Institute created 12 different
clusters in reconciliation. Reconciliation by engaging the leaders in (1) business, (2) education, (3)
information technology, (4) media, (5) religion, (6) community, (7) security, (8) youth, (9) diaspora, (10)
women (11) sports and (10) art and culture.

On November 24, 2011, the Kadirgamar Institute convened its inaugural National Conference on
Reconciliation. On February 26, the Institute hosted the National Conference on the Role of the Business
Community in Reconciliation, a highly successful conference. ,Many of the key business leaders either
invested or decided to invest in the North and the East. A very important Sri Lankan business leader by the
name of Eassuwaren helped 52 ex-cadres to get married. He provided the women with sarees, the men with
their traditional garments, and cash gifts. A wonderful celebration was held to mark this event

Eassuwaren has now started a series of enterprises to support the beneficiaries to fully reintegrate into society.
They have embarked on certain enterprises that would bring them a livelihood. For example, the making of
‘handunkuru’ or incense sticks. Although they were former members of the LTTE, we don’t refer to them as
terrorists. The rejected violence and embraced peace. We call them beneficiaries because they benefited from
the reconciliation programme. The rehabilitation programme had six key modes of rehabilitation (1) religious
and spiritual rehabilitation (2) educational rehabilitation (3) vocational rehabilitation (4) social and family
rehabilitation (5) recreational rehabilitation and (6) psychological rehabilitation.

Under religious and spiritual rehabilitation, the beneficiaries reflected. They listened to sermons, read
religious books and meditated. Under educational rehabilitation, teachers came and taught the beficiaries.
Only about 60% of them had only studied up to Ordinary Level. Many were illiterate. The end of the conflict
provided these misguided men and women of Sri Lanka a golden opportunities for them to study and
transform into productive citizens. In many ways, these rehabilitation centres became learning institutions.
Under vocational training programme, the beneficiaries were given opportunities to start a second life. The
private sector played a crucial role in building a new set of skills in the beneficiaries.
Under social and family rehabilitation, the contact with the family members, including visits became
frequent. Under recreational rehabilitation, the beneficiaries played and learnt sport. They didn’t play
against any ethnic group, but in mixed teams where they played together and made new friends. Under
psychological rehabilitation, the benificiaries engaged in the creative arts and in mentorship programme.
Many important personalities, be they froim the government, the private sector, the recreational sector, or
media personalities, came and addressed the beneficiaries. These role role models from their own ethnic and
religious communities gave them hope.

I personally believe that none of those 11,500 Tamil Tigers rehabilitated and reintegrated will go back to
violence again. They committed, and they saw, what conflict was and they experienced it personally. In my
personal opinion, they would lead mainstream lives. Overseas, there is a very small segment of the Tamil
community who live in a bubble. I say that they live in a parallel universe. They didn’t experience the reality
of what happened in Sri Lanka. Unlike those living in Sri Lanka, a segment of those who live overseas want
to Sri Lanka to return to conflict. The way the private sector, community organizations and the government
came together in the rehabilitation and the resettlement of the 11,500 LTTE detainees will create greater
stability in the country in the coming months and years.

With rehabilitation of the Tamil Tiger members, their thinking was mainstreamed. Similarly, it is very
important to make an even greater investment in the general population of the North and East.
The 30 year conflict generated tremendous suspicion and mistrust. Due to the bombings and attacks by the
LTTE in the south and the military operations in the north, the thinking of the people in the North and South
polorized. There was a fragmentation of society and the people started to misunderstand each other. To build
harmony and to bridge this divide, reconciliation is the tool.

So reconciliation can be through the business community, university and school teachers, and other media.
We have also planned a series of events to engage the diverse sectors of society. With the National
Conference on the Role of the Youth in Reconciliation, we will engage the youth. With the National
Conference on the Role of the Diaspora in Reconciliation, we will engage the diaspora and migrant
communities. With the National Conference on the Role of the Arts and Culture in Reconciliation, we will
engage the public through song, dance, puppetry, and music to build a harmonious living. The arts have
mesmerized people across ethnic and religious divides. After years of conflict, These platforms can be
harnesse to bring people of diverse communities together.

In the education field, there has been some progress. However, the progress made so far must be
consolidated and the efforts must be sustained. For instance, today we have the visionary principals of a
number of schools participating in the National Conference on the Role of Education in Reconciliation.
The former Principal of Holy Family Convent, Sister Canice, Javed Yusuf, the former principal of Zahira
College and Mrs. Nirmalee Wickremasinghe, the Principal of Ladies College played a very important role in
bringing people of diverse ethnic and religious communities together.

I must say that all these schools have invited children from the North to come and spend time with their
brothers and sisters in the South, and similarly the children from these schools have visited the North.
To spur reconciliation, the Ladies College can be a model for other schools that do not have exchange
programmes.

Even before the conflict ended, a number of schools with visionary educators developed models that are
worthy of emulation.

Today, the most challenging issue Sri Lanka is facing is to restructure its education system to produce Sri
Lankans, and not Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims.

As an educator himself, the Monitoring MP for Education, Mohan Lal Grero, will understand the
educational challenges Sri Lanka is facing.

I grew up at Ananda College but I want to tell you that all my friends were Sinhalese and almost all of them
were Buddhists. So we grew up as Sinhalese, we did not grow up as Sri Lankans.

Similarly, in Tamil schools, the children grew up as Tamils and not as Sri Lankans.

The same is with some Muslim schools. So we need to create an education system where the children will
grow up as Sri Lankans. They will benefit by coming to know the richness of growing up with brothers and
sisters of different Sri Lankan ethnic and religious groups.

When they start to learn Tamil or Sinhalese, they will not have mutual mistrust or suspicion of what another
ethnic or religious group represent.

A few years before she passed away, together with Prof. Bruce Hofman, one of the leading counter
terrorism specialists in the US, I met with Mrs. Bandaranaike. I asked her, "Madam, what caused the ethnic
conflict?" She was very clear when she said: "it was the Sinhala-only Act." Then I said, "Madam, it was
your husband the late SWRD Banadaranaike who introduced the Act?" She said, "yes, that is true but that
divided our country in many ways." Politicians will always be politicians, whether it is politicians from the
current government, opposition or the TNA.

They will always play the ethnic card, the religious card especially close to the elections to get votes. They
will suddenly become un-Sri Lankan. It is very important to develop a norm and an ethic in Sri Lankan
society against the exploitation of ethnic and the religious differences in our rich society. We must not
permit politicians to play the racial and religious card and damage the social fabric of Sri Lanka.

The greatest heritage, every Sri Lankan inherited is harmony. Unfortunately, the political leaders in the
North and South exploited the ethnicities and the religiosities of the people for their personal and political
advantage. The politicians made our people racist. As a result, for 30 years the Sri Lankan people could not
enjoy and benefit from this great heritage of harmony. Our education system can recreate the ideal Sri
Lankan of the future.

It is my fervent hope that this conference will spur debate especially among the elite of our vision to build
that ideal Sri Lankan. When I travel to the North or to the South or to the East I do not see racism, but I see so
much of racism among the elite in Colombo.

There has been a significant amount of propaganda in circulation in the capital. In contrast, the people in the
rural areas want to live in peace.

When I ask the people in the Vanni, what is it that you need? They will tell me, I need security, I need a job, I
need a house to live in and I need to send my children to school. Addressing such issues should be the focus not
dividing Sri Lanka by ethnicity and religion.

I think that there should be reflection and discussion about these key issues confronting the ordinary people
by the elite and the intellectuals in Colombo. There are many mistakes that we have made in the last 25 -30
years that created and sustained the Sri Lankan conflict. It is time we take a hard look at what we have done
well and the mistakes we need to undo and make progress so that there will be no relapse or return to conflict.

Link :- http://www.island.lk/index.php?page_cat=article-details&page=article-details&code_title=47804
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