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LANKA
GUARDIAN
Vol. 18 No.13 November 15, 1995,
Price Ris.10.00
Registered at GPO, Sri Lanka QD/S3/NEWS/94
WHEN JAFFNA FALLS
What next?
— Mervyn de Silva
Tony Clifton
CAPTAIN COOK AND
PROF. GANANATH — revisited
— Ron Brunton
BLACK JULY
— K. M.de Silva
THE SCHOLAR SHAKEA
— 4, Karunatilake
S. W. R. D.
— after Oxford
—Ananda Welihena
DRUGS AND QUALITY CONTROL
—K Palasanthiran
AJITH AS EDITOR
— Jayantha Somasundaram
KARACHI: Can Benazir do a Rajiv?
—Mani Shankar Aiyar
Re-reading Sri Lankan history
—Jonathan SpencerWITH THE BEST COMPLIMENTS
OF
ELEPHANT HOUSE SUPERMARKET
QUALITY AT AFFORDABLE PRICES
NO. 1 JUSTICE AKBAR MAWATHA
COLOMBO 2.NEWS BACKGROUND
WHEN JAFFNA IS TAKEN ....
Mervyn de Silva
miliary vicory end a soap
‘lection. Is that President Chan-
dika Kumataiunge's grand game-plan?
With the mood ofthe Sinhalese, an over
Wwhelming majority (74%), the F.A. could
ba certain of @ ninaway polls victory, say
ost PA, dtivists. Even the less opini-
Sic aro quia sure that the ogrtpady
aliance, no Grand aliance realy, would
do fer botlar fan th quite modest 503%
Vote in August lastyear. twas Candidate
Chandika thet made the P.A’s postion
far mora stzbie with her unprecedented
62.63%, UNP.ersdo altep! to maketthis
record less improssive by emphasising
ihe effect of tie Dissanayake assasira
tion, Truo, Gamini Dissanayako was a
formidatle challenger and tis. widow
Srima had rately addressed a party rally
butthat fact alonecouicnotexpiain Gendi-
dato Chandila’s massappeal in Novo
bet. Chiet Minister of the Wastern pro-
vince fh 1990, Prime Minister n August
1994 and President in Noverrber 1994 is
a phenomenon ivhich can be fuly ex:
panad orly in lems of personaly
Of course a roltician’s extraordinary
‘appeal cannct be explained in the same
terms as a Marilyn Monroe or 2 Moha-
mmed Ali (Cassius Giay). Between
‘mid-August General election and the
November face-to4ace, two new factors
nesdtobeadmitedto the discussion;first,
apercertage shi ofthe not-so comvnitied
volar who now decides to join the winning
side, a reaction best explained in terms
of folk wisdom (vaas/paththeta hoiya ..).
But more crucialy in my view, the sclid
backing ofthe minoxiies—the Tamils and
the Christian, the north-westam Catholic
belt in paricuiar. This was a spirited
‘confidence-vote n ‘the peace cancicaie’,
already the favourte daughter of the
USslad coalition put together by ths local
representatves of the western alience;
after the former Marxist, Comrade Chan-
ira had bean perstaded of course to
recognise the proven virtues of private
enterprise.
The mein plank of this strategy colle-
peed when the LITE took the P.A. by
complete surprise to launch another
EELAM War.
Numbers, aimour, tacties and strategy
— a now approach, adopted by Army
Commander Gerry Silva and his senior
‘commanders, in this instanco Major-Go-
neral Rohan Daluwatte, Erigacier Janaka
Perera etc, trom OPERATION LEAP
FORWARD, through HANDSHAKE! and
2, THUNDERSTRIKE to the current
RIVIRESA (SUNRAYS),
‘There's a big diference. General Dalu-
watte is deciding the tineable, He is in
no hurry. Ho has reduced eacualtios to
a minimum by not allowing the LITE to
choose time and place. And quite evi-
dnlly, he enjoys the fullest confdance of
Deputy Defence Minister,Lt.Col Anurud-
dha Ratwatte who had made a pit to
Visit the front frequent. Morale, we all
realiso, i vita
‘And this time, the “Tigers’ have taken
a beating at the hands of the Si Lenkan
army, Thal wasnatthe casein Oct. 1987
when the IPKF kunched ils fist major
olfensive OPERATION PAWAN (Wind).
*ihwasamonumentalblunder wrote M.A.
Narayan Swamy in the bestcelalledstudy
of the IPKF's warageinst a few thousand
guerillas, THE TIGERS OF LANKA
(Konark Publishers).
In the fitst few weeks, the LTTE did ry
to clow down or halt Genoral Daluwatto
‘and his troops. But advening on his own
modest fimeteble, and careiul not to risk
lives, General Daluwatte reached the
‘outskirts ofthe northern captal to find that
the LTTE andits senior commandershad
fled the city.Lt. General Denis Perera, the
former Army Commander, summod up
the significance of the Army's suecass in
a brief comment: “They (LTTE) tried to
take on the army head-on. They should
have stuck 'o queria wasfare. They ere
firct-rato at that”
The battlefield victories not merely
strengihen President Kumaratunga’s
case — the case she placed before the
intemationel community on her ripioNew
York forthe U.N's 50th anniversary cele-
bralions — bul keeps the aimed forces
happy, despite the casualties. The Army
thas been able to pursue iis own strategy.
onitsownterms. Andichas madeitspoint.
‘The army's sucoass compelled the LTTE:
to open a now front — Golorbo, The
sabotagea! the Kolonnawa oil depots and
last week's terrorist ettacks in Colombo
are a definte sign thet things have NOT
gone the LTTEway—notatall. Te LTTE
‘sooms tohave underostmatediheamy’s
esources or over-estimated iis own capa
city toadopt the methods of conventional
warlare. Just as it adminstered Jafina
successfully enough to believe thet had
estabished a govamment, the LTTE felt
it could teke on an army frontally.
GUARDIAN
Vol 18 No.13. November 15, 1805
Price ‘As. 10.00
Published fortnightly oy
Lanka Guardian Publishing Co. Ltd,
No 248, Urien Piace
Coloribo- 2.
Editor Mervyn de silva
Telophona: 447584
Printed by Ananda Press
80/5, Sir Ratnejothi Saravanamutia
Wawatit, Colombo 13,
Telephone: 436975
CONTENTS
‘An Uncertain Frumeh 2
Confit and Foreign Pofcy (6) 4
‘A Soluton to Kerech 6
SWIR.D:Meking of Schoar 8
TheReumoftheMilisavs 10
“The Pastintte.
resent SiLanka a
Correspondence 7
Gananath Obayesckere
end Captain Cook 2An Uncertain Triumph
By Tony Clifton, with Mervyn de Silva in Colombo
@ Sri Larkan Government's
21,000 troops began advancingmae
cattiously as thay reached the out skits
of vaifna. There was nothing to gain from
rushing in. The Tarnil secesslonisis'capi-
tal had bocome a ghos! town. Most of the
roughly 10,000 fighters belonging to the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eslam (LTTE)
had melted eway into the jungle. As many
as 400,000 civilian inhabitants hacfled for
theirves, according to international relict
workers inside thecily, With nowhere else
to nun, many of the refugees hunkered
dow cn roadsides outside the city, we
ting for word they could safely go home,
That wouldr't happon until the gavern-
ment troops managed to find a way
through the maze ofiandminesandbooby
traps the LTTE had planted around the
City before abandoning it.
No one expects the fall of vatina to end
the war in Sri Lanke. The Tigers have
fought motciiosely for the last 12 years io
create 4 separate homeland for he Tamil
ethnic minority, Since the army launched
ite latoct offensive on Get, 17, more then
1,000 LTTE fighters have been killed ard
possibly three times that nurver woun-
ded. But miltary experts in Si Lanka
pradict those lossos will make the rabol
.groupevenmore cangercus. The govern-
‘ment is bracing for a new Tiger terror
campaign, including mass murdore.of civ-
lians, suicide bombings. political assassi-
nllons and missile attacks against milta-
ryaircreft. Securty has been tightened at
government buildings in the capital, Co-
lombo, and the nation’s schools have
been orderedshutuntiltheendofthe year.
Guerrila bands in the esiem jungles aro
saidto have killed more than 100 vilagers
inthe pes! morth— including vectildren
whoworahacked todeathinaTigarattack
last week,
The most frustrating part of the slau-
‘hier is its apparent senselessness. Late
last year Chancrika Kumaratunga teok
office as president, vowing tomakepeace
2
The fall of the Tamil
‘capital’ won't end war
‘wilh the Tigers. She ordered a ceasefire
and unvelled a plen to divide the country
into self-governing racions, effectively re-
cognizing the Tamiss right to a stale of
their own. The president's plan would
have given the Tigers practically ovo-
ryihing they calmed to be fighting for.
Instead, tho LTTE abruptly and unilatera-
ly broke the truce in April by sinking two
naval patrol Loats. The war resumed, Yet
Kumaratunga insists she remains com-
mited to talking peace with the Tigers.
“We sill beieve the only possblesolution
to the problem sa poltical solution," cha
deciared ina recent speech, The army's
success et Jaina could enhance herleve-
rageat thenegotialing ‘abla —ifthe Tigers
decide they wani to lak.
That's far from certain, Like the Khmer
Rouge of Cambodia, the Tigers thrive on
harcship. The Tamil fighters have eamed
‘ reputation for unquestioning obedierce
to theirleader, Velupilai Prabhekaran, no
‘matter how blcodtnitsty — or sucdal —
his orders may be. Experienced obser
versin Srilanka expect himto concentra.
te more on regrouping his forces than on
seeking a peacoful way of reclaiming his
comiortable Jafina headquarters, “Ha'l
make sure the Tigers fighttothe last man,
woman and child," says one veteran
‘Shamindra Ferdinando
source said,
a a ole oe ea eee
India won’t interfere in Sri Lankan problem
‘The Indian government has rejected repeated calls forts intervention to bring
an end to Sri Lankan military offensive in Jaffna, informed sources said this
Week. The Indian government has indicated inno uncertain terms that it has
No desire to get involved in the riorhem problem, sources seid,
PPoftical analysts and diplomatic sources seid that India likes to see an eno
'o the Sn Lankan confict. “india does not want to see a separate homeland
created for Tamils in North-east Sti Lanka just across the Pak Strais," one
ambassador in Colombo. “Eepacially the
Woman and chic.”
Hit and run;
The capiure of Jafina punctured tho
myth of the Tigers’ invineboily ang gave
the army's morale a badly needed boost.
But the government's forces can't count
‘on continuing thek roll, The Tigers set
themselves up for defeat by ther own
‘verconiidence. Flushed with battlefield
Victories against smaller government ‘0
rays, the rebols abandoned thor usual
hitanc-run guerra tactics. Instead they
massed their forces, trying to stop the
army's advanco using the methods of
conventional Warfare, "The LTTE tried to
take on the army head-on," seys Li. Gen,
Denis Perera, a former Sri Lankan Army
"Thay should have stuck to
uerillawarfare. Thoy'refiet-ratealthat”
Now Kumaratungaand her ross must
quard acanstasimilariansecf judgment
Ine survey laken before the Tigers broke
the truce last Apri, only 16 percent of Sr
Lankans said they beleved in a military
solution othe country's civi war. Recenily
a follow-up poll taken by the same group,
Nitofsky International, found that 67 per-
cent favor a miltary solution. The Tigers
War against the government has already
taken the lives of 80,000 SriLankans. The
president wil need both Lick and wisdom
tokeep that tol romcimbing evenhigher.
(euzwoek)Prabhakaran’s
extradition report
ready by next week
Ravi Ladduwahetty
the Attorney General's De-
Tesmecater nan ep
pertaining to the extradition of LTTE
leader Velupilial Prabhakaran within
thenext week, an AGA’s Depariment
spokesman seis.
He further said: “We have almost
finalised the examination of al the
documents which will lead to the
extradition. We have already exami-
ned the material in connection with
the application mace by the covern-
ment of India. However, in the event
(of requirement of further detcile, we
will inform the Government of India".
“One we suomit our documents
to the ministry of deienee, they will
file papers in the High Court of Colo-
bo for the oxtiatition of the LTTE
leader. The defence ministy in co-
‘sultation with the High Gouricl Colo-
bo wil be given “authority to pro-
ceed” he sald
However, once the recommen
ations of the depariment are sub:
miltedto the secretary tothe ministry
of defence, it will be handed over to
Presicent Chandrika Bandaranaike
Kumaratunga whoisalsotheminister
cf defence. Then t will be a poitical
ecision, the spokesman explained.
—Ielere
Scholars Tale — 24
Hisiory having exhausted all is options
Was repeating seifin tnbectle explosions
On the laws of chance, Madras was about enough
But cyanide and old bras called the blufy
In fact our Scholar was entirely shaken
That his trust in Probability was mistaken
‘The Fantasy of Barber Street, Babu and the Blast
Reduced reality to adream slate and a Farce
The time had come prucience told hin
To take stock of situations wracked and reeling
So he marshalled alt his borrowed disciplines
Yet found his intellect uae fecbly peeling
With this acute cerebral psoriasis
He shed all responsibility by amnesis
For each carefully laboured thesis
(Of consultancy on a Royaliy basis)
‘Though intelectual pinion to ttvo Monovirates
He was Justa minion to the Global Dictates
Towhom his Scholarship was as mich garbage
As Market Democracy’s two longued verbiage
So he siaggered out ofthe dump of Hisiory
Where recent scrap was aleady rusty
And gave himselfup to nuefil meditation
On the foul fall-out of hts decade of mischief
He had manipulated a complex Asian culture
Tit mulalton crealed such mist creatures
(As the old Imperial Order hal never begol)
For the New Global Order to be rapidliy wrought
His rerendering of Social Norns
‘That had weathered flesh pots and brain-storms
Sold the pass (o the Microchip teams
Pouring in and aroundl to the Pacific Rim
its brain beeped out and ceased to tick
While moctule and cassette became cerebral brick,
4nd the prograruned growth on the New Frontiers
Opened tive flood gates of Bleod and Tears
As tn the New Prussics there was AntiMatier
‘There was Terror and Anti Terror
Arms car‘els arranging talks for Peace
And engineered genes baitling Ari-genes.
‘There were suffielent groggy guys all round
Tatking Peace and selling guns
Propounding the Philosophy of Safe Sox
‘With the Virus clearing the population decks
Numbness and dumbness set in steady ancl sure
‘So that even keptScholarship was no more a lure
And when the Apocalypse came to the last Frontier
‘The Horsemen trampled down Scholar and Peer.
U. KarunatilakeCONFLICT AND FOREIGN POLICY (5)
Black July: The Indian Response
K.M. de Silva
he vblenoe may perhaps be
called a pogram perpetrated by the
majority Sinhala on tha mnofty Srilanka
Tamils. Since 197, there were sporadic
instances of violoncs and counter-violon-
ce perpetrated by beth the ethnic com-
munities as well as the Sri Lankan siate
itsolf. But the actual spark thatignitedthe
ethnic passions was an aitack by Tamil
riliants on a patrol of goverment so-
Idlers (who were all Sinhala) on 23 July,
resuling in the death of 13 of them. The
Sinhala reaction was thal the whole of
Colombo was up in flamas in a frenzy of
kiling and arson directed at Tamis living
there, including the infarrous Welkade
prison massacre on 25 July of 37 inmates
that included TELO (Tamil Eelam Libera
tion Orgarization) leaders Kutimani and
‘Divan’. The government putthe death tol
ai 87, butothor estimates ofdoaths wore
reported to be in the recicn of ‘wo thou-
sand. About 120,000 Tamils were rende-
red homeless and were housedin hastily
sset Up refugae camps. Many Tami hou-
‘606, business establishments and 70 fac.
tories owned by Tamils were destroyed
The violence also spread to all those
provincial towne where Tamil business-
men lived, as well as to some plantation
areas."
‘There was sporade ethnic violence in
‘SriLanka in every decade ever since the
1950s. But the July 1989 rots were cife-
rent not orlyin is magnitude and impica-
fions but also in what appeared to be
omnousy new. This ‘novelty’ was rellec-
ted in the organised manner of the vior
Jence,"in he partisanrole ofha security
forces," in the colusion of some promi-
rent party and government polticians,""®
and in the partisan atttuce and manner
of handing the ciisis situation by the
goverment. Al sposches by Sinhalese
Ministers were adoressed fist and fore-
‘most to the Sinhalese public and not to
the victims of the violence. Curfew was
declared several days atter the passing
4
ofthe helght ofthe ull tury ofthe violence.
‘One U.N, Report said that the riots had
‘been made worse by goverment indife-
rence to the fale of the Tamils. Fresident
Jayewarcono himself was parly blamed
by a crc for leting the rioting get out of
hand by not intervening untl it was too
late. The President's first address to tha
nition was only on 23 July when he urged
restain{ but added that the violence was
fa spontaneous reaction of the Sinhaless
who would never agree to the divsion of
the country as advocated and fought for
by the Tami miltants.""”
Ifthe phenomenon af the autonomist
demands of the Sri Lanka Tamils in the
1850s tutning secessionist in the 19703
was symptomatic of a gradual erosion of
national consensus between the two
‘ethnic communities, the 1983 violonco
was the final blow ‘othectisiso’ credibility
of the Tami minoriy in he central autho-
‘ty. This was, in fact, the culmination of
she conflict between the two ethno-natlo-
nalisms in tho island. Sri Lanka wanted
{0 solve the ensuing elhne problem by
mnitary means and it locked up to non-
Indian sources {or help, in keeping with
its non-conformist inda policy. New Delni
reactedsharply andtook advantage ofthe
situation n Sti Lanka by making the small
‘sland state conform to India’s forelon
policy and scourity concems and agree
‘oan Indian role in its ethnic issue.
India’s rosponse to davolopments in
Sri Lanka, The hortiie camage in Sri
Lanka evoked sharp responses nol only
in Tamil Nadu but also in the rational
cept, New Delhi. The reaction in Tarnll
Nadu was literally wild. The mood there
was aptly grasped by one Sri Lankan
author who wrote that "a wave of sponta
neous indignation ewep! through Tamil
Naduand ife in the state cameto a virual
standstil with large numbers joining in
public processions and meetings against
the kilings in Sn Lanka’.'""
India has notonly consistently cpposed
the extension of extemal presence in Sr
Lanka, but has also been desirous of
expanding its own influence intheisiand’s
domestic matters. India's interest in Sri
Lanka's ethnic issue was manifest in the
former's concem for the cause of the Sri
Lanka Tamils. The general impression in
Incia about the ethric stuation was that
the ise of Tamil rilkancy was the resuk
of @ systematic, orchestrated and delibe-
rate discrimination against the minority oy
the mejor. Secondly, the steady flow of
the Tamil refugees into Tamil Nadu from
Srilanka was 2 concemforlndia, Thirdly,
Sri Lanka's cortinuing non-conformist 'o-
reign policy was a major concer of India
which considered the oblaining security
environmert hostile to tts security ine
rosts.112
The potey suggestiors that had e
coed from Incas parliamensary debates,
Urging tie Government of Incie 10 act,
were as follows: () to raise it in internato.
nal fora including the UN, Human Rights
Commission, (i) omobiise worlé opinion
for an amicable solution, (ji) to prevent
athers, regonal or from beyond, from
meddling (v) extend humantenan zi,
(0) to uige Si Lanka to solve the crisis
paltealy,(v)to snap ciploratic relations,
(ui), to suppor Eelam, (il 10 Interven
politically/diplomatically, offering good
offees either unlaterally or mulaterally
in association wit intermational rcanisa-
tion(s), and (x) fo intervene militarily,
including the navalbiockade of Tincoma-
Jee. Although most ofthe partiamenta-
Fans urged fora retrained end firm res-
ponse, several of them were fai vocal
in imploring the Government of india to
invade Sti Lenke.%*" In fact, the over
‘mont had a contingency plan forinvasion
in 1983, raving puta brigade on alert for
the purpose.” Indeed, invasion had
always continued to be one of India's
‘options as Incianpolcy-makersatvarioustimos had contemplated military interven.
tions and even plans had been drawn up
to thatend."**
Sti Lanka appeals for foreign support.
‘Sri Lanka felt threatened by India’s con-
cems and he reportsolispossbiemilia-
ry inlevention. Sri Lankan Foreign Mini:
‘ler, who accused india of interfaring in
hiscounin’s intemalaffars, gravelynoted
the secunly dilemma of a small power by
‘saying thet “when India exproscoe con:
cceins, to us itis 2 threat".'** President
Jayewardene warned his Cabinet of pos-
sible Incian invasion. He said, "f india, by
some chance, decded fo invade us, we
‘wil fightandmay be lose, but with dignity”.
MH. Mohammed, a prominent UNP NP,
slated in Parliament that “if there is an
Invasion, 13 milion people will be destro-
‘ye and the invaders will hava nobody to.
tule... Let us die not as cowards nor as
traitors".
Unger the obtaining circumstances, ha
vayewardene goveriment soucht on 4
August 1983 military assistance from the
United States, the United Kingdom, Paki=
slan and Bangladesh. While this sense-
tional news was widely reporlad the folo-
wing day in most of the Indian national
dailies, Colombo denied the report end
‘expelled the reportar, Siawart Slavin, the
New Deli-besea West Asianmanagerfor
UPI (United Prose Intemational). *® Wa-
shington chose iis words cautiously while
denying the repor,, and the UK was re-
ported to have had received such
“soundings” irom SriLanka: Pakistan and
Bangladesh denied haying received a Sri
Lenken request for miltary assisiance 7
Colombo's call for this external halp was
apparently fraucht with dangers for both
Sri Lanka and India, but of course for
diferent raasons, ForSri Lanka, because
the “SOS" call outraged India beyond
tepair and for the response of those four
ecuntrieswas lukewarmtonegative which
was again due to ‘india factor. For india,
itvasso because the helo was askednot
from India but from two Western powers
and from two pro-Westem South Asian
nations,
Notes:
113, Di, Simappah Arasaiatiem, Si Lenka
‘Ate Independerce: Nationalism, Corrmu-
414
16.
116
417.
418
410.
129,
121,
alam and Nation Buidng, Univers of
acres, Madras, 1985, p. 81-85;Eic!
ver, “Soaking the oots ofthe Tregedy"in
dames Manor (ed)...p. $28; Edgar 0
Ballance, The Cyanide Wer. Taal insur
rection Si Lanka 1973-88, Brasseys,
Londen, 1969, p.23;Tho Daly Telograrh,
Londen, August 1263, Tires, London, 13
‘gust 1935,
Dy. Sianappah Arasareinar ibd.
‘Some esholare hold the view thatthe by
ots were provoced by the Amy mer and
that It was the Amy which Tneulged in
‘reon, lotng ard auturl vancalsm. S20
for dials, James Manor, “Sn. Lanka
ExplanhotbeDisastor, The Ward Tex,
Londen, Neveribor 1983, pp. 450-450;
TOSA. Ossarayata The Agony of St
Lanka, Colombo, 1984, pp.74,31,84:The
‘Gusrcien, Londen, 13 Avgus! 1983,
‘A. Amirolingam, the TULE (Tamil United
LLberation Front) leader, statodin an intr
view given to enindian newspaper thatthe
“July (ols hea been panned by somebody
in authori who coud have combined the
‘tion of ho srmod ‘rene along wilt thal
© groups ct cians who were acing In
aa very otganised way. See Tho Hi
Madras, 25 August 1969; Cyl Mathew,
govemment Mister, was aleged to nave
‘igarised the mayhom. See V.P. Vaidk
Ethnic Oris in Si Larka: india's Options,
atonal Publsning House, New Dehi
1986, p17
‘Nowewmek magasing, 18 August 1683, pp.
‘4-18; Dally News, Cobnbo, 29 Jul 1883
‘Sunday Observer, Colombo,31 July 1963:
the UN Report o 19 Auguet 1963 wae
‘uted in Egat O'Balance, The Cyan
Wer, op. cit p24
Dr. Ambalavanar Svarajah, “Inco-Si
Lanka Relaicns in the Conte f San:
a's Etwnic Crisis (1976-1983) in PV.
layarokera (ed), Secuity Dilemma of 2
‘Smal State: Sr Larks inthe South Asian
Gontex, Part One. South Asian Publshors
Puitid| Now Oalh, 1692, ». 516
“Tne i evidort rom the Lok Gabhs Dabo
les, 27 July 1988, Gols, 362-446, 4 August
4983... Cols, 325-368; 5 August 1983,
Ibe, Cal, 458.520: end 10 August 1095,
ihc, Cols 91-474, See alo The Hin,
Medias, 30. 1963
a
Forexample Subramariam Swamy, 0027
“ily 1983, bid, Col. 973 and on 1@August
4883, bid Col. 474, ra Ansharas.on 27
Juy 10883, id, Col 366; C7. Dhandepan,
fon $ August 1983, Did, Col, 4€0; KT.
Kesar, on Augus!1963,5d, Col 480
‘A. Anithalngam, who met India Garchi
land some other Indan laaders, also urged
{he Indian govemmentoinvace Srila
Ine wl eve lo send its
India wil have © guavan-
123
124,
15,
426.
127.
tee our safety. We have let fain Jaye:
wardove goverment we have felt caly
ininda”. Spe Sunday, Calcutta, 4 October
3983,
For doiate on tie 200 Dilip Bobb, “Sphora
of Suspicion’, India Today, Now Debi, 15
(October 1983, 9.36.
AJ. ison, his 1988 book, p.208 Subra-
mmeniam Swany repeated cal fer incon
vasienin 1964, See Lok Saba Debaies,
Severth Saves, 25 August 1964, Vo. Ll
No. 24, Col 148, Dr A, Kelis, bid, oh
Series, © Apil 1985, Vo. I, No. 18, Col
4319, The Nadrasbassd PROTEG (an
‘organisation called the Protecton of the
TemilE¢am irom genocide ander visl-
Gon of hurtan righe) also made a atong
plea 1964 or ina’ mltryinirverion.
Seo The Hindu, Matias, 17 September
HGRA, Ae the 1064 avents Uniokied thom-
salves the pressures on Mis Gans 10
mitalyinlevane were néeed mourting
and ohe appaered fo bo prepatedfer ena
ther phase on intervention in the tast
months of 1984. Sas Dr Sinnappan Arasa=
rainam, Se Lanka After independence. op
cit, p89,
Indian Express, New Deh, 24 uy 1986,
The Hindu, Macras, 26 July 1934 Dip
‘Bobb, "Spiers! Suspicions Isia Today,
New Dati, 15 Cctoter,p. 30; Telegapn,
Caleta, 2 August 1983 Patlemertay
Dobatsa, Sanka, Vol 20 No.1, 24 May
1884, Col 124; The Sun, Colombo, 1
August 1983,
Forihe repot sae Teloteph, Caleta. and
TheHindustan Taes, Hew Deli, 2AugLSt
1983, For Si Lanka Governments dena
se0 Timae of india, New Deh, 3 August
4903.
\Whie denying that SiiLanka government
hhad approached the United Stats for mil
lay aU, 2 Slate Department spokesinan
seid in Washington on 2 Aunist that is
‘county understood that he eitvaton in Sh
Lanka was improving and tet he govern
ent was fncreasingly tung is atlen
tion tothe protien} let Sce Ircian
Express, Now Dol, 3 August 1963. A
FForsign Offisa spokesman sic ia London
(on Agus he lanhed eceved "Sour
‘dings fom Si Lanka about possibe ass
‘tance, and thatthe informal request wae
being considered. He decinedo say whe
ther the assistance would be miliary or
hhumaniiaian, and stascod that no feral
requesthedtbeen mace. The New Nation,
[Bhaka, 3 August 1988. Qn tha dani by
Falisian and Bangladesh ee Patict, New
Debi, 9 August 1888. Athousn it was
ried atthatiime,ilatorbocame arrater
f commen knowledge tat the Sit Lark
‘cpvemmient dd soak sich assistance rom
‘tho four counties.
NEXT: INDIAN DOCTRINEREGION
A Solution to Karachi
Mani Shankar Alyar
in facing down an attempted coup
by the ermy. Benazir Bhutto has em-
erged as the first head of government in
Pakistan's history to have thwarted Pakl-
Stan's armed forces; she has also emar-
{ged as the one leader capable of taking
‘on Pakistan's biggeet politealpariy — the
Pakistan Amy. True, ii was nol the army
{as such but a smal cabal that was plan-
ring her overthrow, and truetoothatitwas
probably another cabal in the came army
that tipped her off, and, moreover, true
furthor that this coup was not in the tradit-
lons of Pakistan —where chief's of army
Siaff bottay thoir ttular masters — but
more In the traditions of the Middle-East
where colonels on white chargers bring
Off the revolution; nevertheless, all said
‘and done, shabash Benazir!
Yet, | cannot help the uncharitable
thought that Benazir has triumphed over
her false enemies. Hor real enemy ic
within. is Karachi bumiing,
Although Pakistan is but naxt door to
Us, and weighs dsoroponionately in our
foreign and dofonce poiicios (and even
‘mote dlsproportionately in our internal
‘socurity and secularism concerns), few
are the Indians who have an instinctive
‘empathy for domestic developments in
Pakistan — so cistenced have we.be-
come, a hall-century alter Partition, from
our disiant neighbour.
‘Yel, ask yourself how we would feel If,
say, the Bombay rio's of January 1993
had lasted not a few days but for all of
the last threa years, and you will gat an
inkling of the trauma Pakistan hes been
going through and is stil caught in, with
‘ot the least Its light shining at the end
‘of even the fongost funnel.
\Whatis he problem? Andis thera away
out?
‘THE PROBLEM oi Kerachi is a para-
digm oftheproblemofPakistan, However,
fissiparous the Indian state has soomed
since 1847, the nationhood ot india has
Tho atthor 3 formar diploma, was fret secretary
inthe Indian Hah Commission i Colembc,
8
seldom been under serious challonge.
The Indiannation exists asa greatbigfact
0f life because it predated by several
rnillannia the poltical convenience of a
slate called tho Union of India. Palésian,
fon the other hand, achieved statehood
long before it attained nationhood, Pekis-
tans are united over one propostion —
that the essence of being a Pakistani is
‘not being an Indian, Bayond that, the
problem of what does it mean to be a
Pakistani — end the related question of
why must one ke a Pakistani — rears is
unenswerable head,
A readymade opportuni, one woud
have imagined, foranindian witha reajpo-
fitkiineand hook to fish ntroubed waters.
Unfortunately for ourhwks, their hestiliy
to Pakistan, as a siale and as a nation,
has rendered India hors de coméat—that
is pushed usctfthebatteieidintheBatte
for Karachi
‘The Mohajir of Kerachi are the only
segment of the Indian despora for whom,
we can neither give concrata content to
our sympathy nor from whom we can
expect any call for succour. When it
comes’ to Indians under siege in Fi, or
apartheid in erstwhile South Afica, ortho
problems faced by the Indian comunity
'n East Alrica or the West Indies, or tho
‘Geo! Indians in Mauritius, orofthe Indian
Americans in the US, or of their counior-
pers in the Uniteo Kingdom, or, in recent
Yyeare, most dramatically of the Temils in
Sti Lenka, the Union of india springs to
the forefront of their dofonce — and =
generaly conceded by the n‘emational
‘community as having a legitimate say in
the matter.
‘The one place in the world where we
dono! appear io havein eny way legitiny
sed our concens — even in the eyes of
the victims — is in the province of Sind
Which is now home to milions of Pakista-
nis of Indian origin,
IT FOLLOWS thal there is no purchasa
for India in stirring the witches* brew in
Karachi. Anyincian hand perceived in ho
disturbances would be the best way of
discrediting those causing the disturban-
ces; hence, to demonstrate an Indian
hand would be the cuickest route to quel-
ngthe disturbances, That is why Benazir
closed the Consulate-Genaral o! India in
Karachi Itwasa desperateploy touiscre-
dit the MQM (Mchajir Qaurmi Maverent),
It backfired: Karachi has virtually not
known even 24 hours of peace end quiet
since our Post was shut down many
moons ago. What koope the MGM at the
barricades, with the suppor of the over
whalming majority of Karachiwallahs of
Indian origin, is the widespread know-
ledge and baliet that this is an intemal
problem of Pakistan, brought upon their
heads not by some foreign agency but by
Pakistan's continuing failure to. dafine
itself es anation,
The Indian nation exists — and has
survived as a nation for thousands of
years — because itis based on the quin-
tessontial Indian prince of untyin aver
sity. We can cach of us be ourselves and
yel besomethinglarger—called “indan':
1de8d, we can bo Indian only because
that does not siand in the way of our
asserting, cherishing and celebrating our
artculer identty as Hindus or Musims,
Tamils or Bengalis, dhotwallahs or lunge
wallahs,
In contradistinction, Pakistan's cain to
nationhood is based uricusly — and
esserlively — on an excluslvist relcicus
basis. Ironically, was croaiod not by the
Musiims in the Muslin-majoriy provinces
Cf Biitish india where Pakisian cama into
being, but by the Brish-patronised *lea-
ership" (mostly zamindarsand suchlike)
f the Muslims of the Musim-rinorty
Provinces — the breed from whom tie
beleaguered Nohajir of today's Karachi
gorminated. They haemonhaged from
Inciato Pakistan in theirmilionsas*Hajs”
(from which comes the Arabic plural
*Mohaiir’) in what they perceived to be
a replaying of the Prophets journey trom
‘Mecca of the Danil-Harb to Madina ofthe
Dar-ul-Ulcom,
AND FOR tho first 11 years or so of
Pakistan, their widest dreams and hopes
Were satiated. They gained power andwealth from Pakistan on a scale and in
aiime-frame they couldneverhave etain-
‘od by slaying beck in India. Being educa-
tionalyanc cthewisestreetsahead atthe
Sindhis. Baluch andPathans, they quickly.
established their dominance over Pakis-
tan, the only challenge coming from en
increasingly restive West Punjab that hac
bbeen under the illusion that it was they
Who hed absorbed the Gujarati Jnnal’s
movement, not the other way round
Goneral (later, Field Marshal) Ayub
Khan's coup of 1958 put the quietus to
tho Mohair dream of capturing Pakisten
in the name of Islam, The decline of the
Mohajirfrom dominant slomont to hunted
minonty between Ayud Khan and Zia~
ukHag is one of tho eaddest and most
piquant storias of the post-Partiton era
Pakistan was most emphaticaly notthe
Creation of the Muslims of the areas in
Which Pakistan was created. Bengalelur-
ed FazhulsHaque of the Krishak Proja
Party as chief minister in the eleciions of
4945-48; Punjab retumed Khizr Hayat
Khan of the Unionists: ihe Frontier plum
ped fer Bacshah Khan's Congress;
Baluchistan was denied a vate.
‘Only Sind — which had backed tho
(Congress-supporied Allan 3uxSoomroin
1997 (assassinated in 1943 for his pains)
= voted for the Musim League in
1945.48:tho viclor, Ayub Khuhro, olde:
quite frankiy in 1980 that he Nad rigged
the result in collaboration with the British
ICS officers of Karachi: and G.M. Syed,
the mostarticulate proponent of Pakistan
was fo emerge within two years as the
mast articulate opponent of Pakisian,
spending nearly 40 of the next 50 years
in incarceration for publicly regretting
having moved the fist “Pakistan Resolu-
tion’ in any provincial legslatuce. He died
inhis nineties a few weaks ago.
NO, PAKISTAN was ently the ani-
cial invention of the Muslim “leadors" of
that part of Inca inet was not perttioned:
i,, the Mohali of Karachi, who had no
compunctions about leeving behind othe
tendor moreios of "Hindu india the poor,
the iterate, the deprived milions oftheir
Muslimbrethren, Abouttwornilicn Muslin
Carpetbaggers (describing themselves —
falvously — es *Mohaji’) artved up in
Sind between 1947 and 1843 anc, witin
those wo years, completely obbed every
city of Sind — Karachi, Hyderabad, Suc
kur, Shikarpur, even decobabad — of is
Sindhi charactor.
They errogently refused to leain any
Singh, claiming that Urdu wasthe langua-
ge of Islam, a claim thal infuriatas the
Sindhi since the Sinchilanguega iswritien
in the Arebie soript (the script of the Holy
Koran) whila Urdu isbasedonthe Poreian
script, which was as foreign to the Holy
Prophet (Paco Be Upon Him!) as Tamil
‘or Telugu, What wasworse. theimmigrant
Mohajir used his superior eocnomic clout
andpoliical powerte completely margins
tise the indigenous Sindhi intisown Sing.
It was Ip the twe decades from the
‘advent of Ayub (1958) to tha advent of
Ziacubtag (1977) that the Mohajr was
delivered his comeuppance —not by tha
‘Sinchi (wo, despite the Sindhi Bautio's
fiso to eminanco, continued to remain
tolally marginalised in his own home) but
by West Punjab in collaboration with Paki-
star's virtually Punjab-Pathan amy. The
Parition of Pakistan in 1874 was the last
twist of the knife in the Mohaiir's soul: it
robbed himot his always bogus) ralionale
{or uprcoiing himself irom India lo move
asa “Hal” (hal hal) to Sind.
By the mel reached KarachiinDecem-
ber 1978, the pight of the Mohair was
patheiic: rootless, alienated, blatantly dis-
riminated against, and virtually under
siege in Fortess Kerachl, ne posi-Pert-
‘ton gonevation of Mehaiir wore paying for
the sins of ther fathers: and each of the
original “Hajis" as were sill alive were
bealing their breasts in vice and talking
— bizarrely — of the glories of Bans
Bereilly and Amrohal
IN MY period in Karachi (1978-82), the
palpable Mohajir anger was an impotent
anger — for thrse reascns. One, there
‘was for the Mohajr no going back on the
"Hal" which he and his immediate fore-
fathers had undertaken in 1947-48. Two,
the Mohaiir angor was subsumed in tho
general anger of the people at Zie-
tbHag’s usupaton of democracy.
And, third — above all — was the
absence of any poltical platiocm for the
ariculation of Mohair anger, despte Ke-
rach having dofeated Bhutto's candidates
in seven out of rine constituencies in the
1977 elections and having then brought
down the Bhutto government byreleniiess
MohajrdemonstietionsinKarachl's Lelu-
hat Chowk, the “Stalngrad’, as they
proudly proclained, of the Mohair move-
ment.
‘Thal politcal platform was supplied
few years alter | left Karachi by an NAP
(non-resident Pakistani) Altat Hussain
and his MQM, Kerachi today is an imore-
nable MOM oasisin the desert sands of
Pakistan's PPP/PML polity. Neither can
the MOM spread beyond Karachi and
Sind's other urban agglomerations, nor
‘can the PPP/PML ever breach the MGM.
bastions in urban Sind
Facec wth a similar situation in the
Dayjeeiing Hills, Prime Mirister Reliv
Gandhi rejected both Subash GHisingh's
Violence:prone extremism forthe parlto-
ring of West Bengal for tho creation of
new state of Gorkhaland (he exact
parallel of the MOMs Karachi demand)
as well as the blinkered chauvinistic
crackdown of Jyoti Basu's West Bengal
‘which termed Ghisingh’s demand fore
ce as “anti-national” (the exact paral io
the PPPIPMLIPak Army's responsetothe
NON),
Raiiv Gandhi found, instead, the
“middle way" of an Autonomous District
Council forthe Darjecting ils forestaling
the breakup of either West Bengal or
Incia, whilo giving the Gorkhas a real
‘share in the determination oftheirdesiiry.
ITIs the obvious example for Benazir
to follow in Karachi. But she cannct —
because the nationhood of Pakistan is
founded on the denial of the primordial
principleof unityin diversity. Sincereligion
Is held tobe the ralsona ‘etre of Pakisten,
and since virtually all Pakistanis profess
the same religion, consoidating the unita-
fy nature of the Pakistani stale hes beco-
me the raligious duty ofall sections of the
Pakistani leadership, whatever thelr ather
differences.
li Karachiisbuming, and the fre cannot
be put out, thet is because Pakistan is
paying the price for the atavisic equation
Of eligion with natianioad which lay.attne
root of the Two:Nation Theory.
‘Thete is honed for our Hindu commu
nalsis (‘ead the sangh parivar and ite
polticel organs, the BJP and ineir sisters
in-sin, the Shiv Sena) to gloat over the
Plight of the Mchaji. For, the real lesson
which Karachi has to teach India is that
Pakistan's fate will overtake Bharat Mata
if dharat Mata is ever overtaken by
“Hindutva.SW RD: Making of a scholar
Ananda Welihena
ne question for the second debate
oon India was "that the incefirite eont-
nuance of British sovereignty in India wes,
a violation of British Poliical Ideals", He
argued that Briish poltical ideals were
inspired byfreedom wthoutwhicn civiliza-
tion was not possible and such a nation
would become paralysed and nervous,
Ha concluded with this appeal to Erich
India."®
Mr. Bandaranaike was now known 2s
{a prodndaan advocete. His siandpoint on
“India and criticism drecied against the
British policy towed India pusad Fim 1o
‘an embarrassing situation. As he writes:
“Inow found myselfin rathoran embar-
rassing postion at Oxford. | was looked
upon, both at the Union andi outside as
the foremost spokesman of India.”
However, he explained that ne hed
never been to India and that his know-
ledge of India had been geined from
secondary sources. Nevertheless, he
interpreted the probiems of that country
Interms of those of his own:
", howover, intarproted the problems of
thatcountiy interms of hoseolmyown,
and the general similarity between
them, combined with the racial and
cultural Kinship between Gaylon and
her neighbour, enabled me to present
the Incian point of viewr wath sympathy
and faimess” (bid).
He recounts his experiences with the
Majis, the club of the Indians modoled
fon the form and structure of the Union
The Melis provided a forum for distingui-
shed Indian personaitios among whom
T.C. Goswami and K.P.S. Meron have
been romombered. Mr. Bandarancike
was Ils President which accorded to him
opportuniies to knowindian personeliies
such as Sir Ali Imam, Lala Laipat Rei,
Sakiatvala, Srinivasa’ Sasi Of the
wornen, he recalled Leilamani Naidu and
Sarojini Naidu and Annie Besant, He
made a spociel reference io the last na-
med. nthe weekly debatesthat the Malis
organised, the issues ware more relevant
to Incle’s Struggles and aspiratons. He
has discussed the issue of Federation 2s
@ conflict tesolution strategy to ensure
India's unity in diversity
“recollect thet | euggosted Federation
3 the solution of india's dificulties at
this debate, Tho idea of fadoration for
India was new at he ime. and! cannot
‘ofrain rom taking pleasure at the sub-
sequent irend of everts” (Ibid, p48).
His wrlings included his enpressions
‘bout Indans:
“My memory of my Indian friends at
Oxford, with ail their weakness andi all
thelt Impulsive fnendliness and kind-
ness, isalernderone. For tey werevery
‘near to ma” (Iid..9.49)
OFFICES HELD AT OXFORD
Inthe summer of 1923, he was elected
Secteiary of the Union by 174 voles. aver
his nearest rival gaining 145, The roma
ning four candidates received fewer than
90; Some of them sutsequantly bocame
leaders of the Conservative, the Liberal
and the Labour political panies; two of
thembecameMembers of Parliament. For
‘twomonthshe suffered fram paratyphoid,
‘which deprivedim of ime end opportuni-
ties for work. He then, represented the
Union in a debate against Cambridga. In
4828, the centenary of the Oxford Union
was celebrated. A debate was orgarised
‘al which several expresifents spoke; it
‘was followed by a sumptuous dinner at
which he met several very important
Persons of diferent sccial status:
“i was an occasion that brought to me
an acule realization of the true impor
lanceotthe Union. The Church, the bar,
police, laters, in almost every impor-
‘antwalk of He, so many distinguished
men had boon oxofficers of tho
Union's"
He had by then spent jour years at
Oxford as an undergraduate, In the Mi-
chaelmas tei of 1923, he served as
Secretary. Inthe following Trinity term, ho
wes elected Junior Treasurer ofthe Union
in 1924. The duties ofthis post were not
‘arduous. He also contested the post of
President but vias defeated by
‘Scrymgscur Wedderburn, tho first
conservative President (Holls, 1965,
169). The reasons wore many. First, that
Wecderbum was contesiing for’ the
second time. Sacend, he was a defiantly
imperialistic conservative. Third, he was
@ junior librerian and fourthly, the old
life members of the Urion formed a block
tovote fora wnke Present. Mr. Bandara
nnaike was marked as an advocate of tho
Indien cause, despite the fect Wat in Fe-
bruary, 1923 he spoke against tie motion
“that development of the Eastem races
‘of the empire Ties in development on
‘aston and not en westem lines.
HIS LIFE OF SILENT REFLECTION
AND ACTIVE LISTENING
Mr. Bandaranaike was yearning to
practisa deep sient rellecion and active
listening, which are indispensable for a
busy sialesman and polfician
is omotional oxporiences of his suc
‘cess aller Success in tne debates revea-
led that he was “in the widening citcl of
4 ripple on the sutface of a pool’. How-
ever, he did not lose his balance but
leamed to retain his equanimity. He
longed for “ior ease and quiet’, He
expressed this yearning for silent reflec
tion:
“Sometimes. |yeamwihaiece yeam-
ing for tho caim content of a priest,
shelieredinhisciosierediemole, ortne
care-fiee happiness of some jungio
weller with the singing of the birds
about him and the blue sky above him,
‘oreven the hum-crum life of the avera:
‘geman with is smalloeighis anésmal
troubles. But alas! itcarnotbe’."*
(On wonders whether Mr-Bandarenaike
had specific techniques of mental cukure
(or meditation to gratify such a deep-felt
eed for fest ard relaxation. Perhaps, he
didnot His deste was notulfiled, Nover-
theless, he was not crtical or hostile 10-
wards those who practised this an of
relaxation. Asa poltically minded perscn,
he Was appreciating the power of an
alternative oratory (itdHferes from his ert)
which can emerge from the intense culti-
vation af a specif technique or practice
i transcendental meditative culture,
‘This becomes clear fromhsdescription
of the “remarkable woman” calied Anrio
Besant born on Ociover G1, The lady
whose e-husbend was an Anglican
clergyman, was formeily @ Fabian socia-
list in the company ot George Bernard
‘Shay. She subsequently becamea Theo-
sSophist and an indian independence jea-
dor who founded the Indian Home Rule
League in 1916, Siie was the President
Of the Theosophical Society unt! her
death. Theerrineatihinker J. Krishna
tticf india owes to Annie Besant what he
was able to achieve.
Mr Banderanake wrote aboutthis lady,
who visited Oxford in the course of a
lecturing tour on Indian affairs. In eppre-
lation of tier abiliies he wrote:“She was very old and frail, and one
sarfetimes had ihe shocking feeling of
listening fo a voice from a sepulchre.
But there was yet an echo oi the old
‘power, and much of he old consumma-
le skil. She stood cold and alco’, no
single gesture emphasized point, and
the words came deliberate and
passiorless. | understood for the frst
lime the ive meaning of Homer's
phrase regarding Odysseus, “words fel
from him liko thick flakes of snow" It
Was quiel and unabinusive, but rac
ually and relentlessly coveradiandovor-
whelmed everything. it was what might
be called 2 subjective, as opposed to
an objective, form of oratory: the spea-
‘kercommuning aloud withherown soul,
taihor then consciously speaking to an
audience that she wisied to con-
vines"
HIS NATIONAL POLITICAL OPTION
FOR THE COMMON MAN.
Asanundergraduate at Oxford, hewas
preparing Icr his future poitical career by
involving himesif in tho sciivitiss of the
University. The last moments prior to his
departura from Oxiord revealed his love
for is native county:
"The typically Englich scono, subdued
and meltow iy the evening light, feded
from my eyes, and the glare and dust
‘ofmy country tockits place: blue skies,
and dancng sunigh, with a while road
Winging amidst coconut groves and
green paddy jleids; dak. cool nights.
wit star be-iowolod skies, alive with
the cries of innunerable crickets; te
athalic, huddled vilage huts, the dint
the poverty, the disease. My county,
my people. Aye, ii was there that my
Werk lay , and Oxlord had revealed fo
‘me my ffe's mission’?!
He was critical ofthose who denigrated
the Oxiord University as a cenire forsiudy
‘only anda refuge from the world and its
claims” (Hollis, 1965, 105). But his view
Of Onford was different. It was a nursery
for aspiring stateemen:
“There is a View held by some people
that politics at Oxford means nothing
more than a ite relaxaiion fora set of
boys in their icle moments, it may be
realised from what has boon stated
-ebovethat erels farmore seriousness
and purpose in Oxford poltics than
these critics would ike to concede”
His speeches and wntings on Oxiord
life substaniiste the argument that hie
‘academic career had contibuied enor-
‘mausly to his political role in his native
ccouniry. He says:
“it may also perhaps be understood
how Oxtora, and paricularly te Union,
‘influenced profoundly my entire career
and outlook’ (Ibi).
On his retum home, the residents of
Udugahia Petluin Syanelorale, received
him respectfully. In his speech ho ox-
pressed his commiment to serving the
people’
“There is ono thing I would have you
remember, hat! consider mysefentire-
ly as one of yourselves, and if fate has
decreed for me a prominent place
among you, iis not that I may be your
masier bul that 1 may be your ser-
vant’?
He placed before them an alternative
vision. and mission which the: exsting
United National Party (UNP) had hitherto,
failed to do, As Prof A. Wilson has
emphasized
jandlaranaike was the Olympfan arie-
tocret who sought io ideniily hinselt
with the poor in his county. This was
quite unilke the UNP who perceived of
themselves as the natural rulers"**
According to certain witers Me. Banda-
renaike’s national poilteal option for the
‘commen man couldbe atiriutedtoinsu-
Jar prejucices” othe Union which preven-
ted him trom winning the post of Prosi
deney in 1924. Hallis recorded it ae ‘a
manceuvre of complete legality but of
douibful propriety” (Hols, 1965, 189).He
refers to the role played by a gioup of
life-members, who “iormed themsalves
into a block to vole against a candidate”
and certainly"... Bandaranaike balieved
that there was euch a block against
him..." (Ibid, 170)..As He wrote:
“and this belef was at any rate one
of the influences which caused him in
‘his closing months at Oxford to reject
hs father’s ‘loyalist’ poltical principles
to renounce Christianity for Buddhism
and to become a verystreng nationalist
His politcal career in Coylon was, of
‘course, bulton the nationalist principles
Of which he remained the champion
‘rightup toe ime of his nalassassina-
tions” (bid).
Evelyn Waugh endorsed this view
when he wecle of Mr. Bandaranaike:
“Certain, the ony oriental whom met,
the Cingalese (sic) Bandaranaike,
rolumed to Colombo fiercely ani-Bri-
lish, (This sentiment fd not save him
from assassinalion by his fellow coun-
trymen when fie lost tie protection of
the British Crown). At the Union these
‘emergent polticians made themselves
at home and inirodisced a vehemence
that was normally lacking in our deba-
tes" (Waugh, E. 1964, 184),
Chiistopher Halls who was a fermer
prasicent of the Union introduced Mr
Bandaranaiko as ‘theson of avery distin-
guished Ceylonese Christian of stroraiy
imperialist sympathies” (Holic, 1935,
169). He makes two Important remarks
about him: first,
“From his frst arval he threw himself
wuith onthusiasm into the Union deba~
(es. He was a pniiant speaker and
popular among the members of the
Union. He spoke at the beairning of is.
career, as was but natural, as his fa-
thers son, generally on conservaive
side” (Ibid),
‘Secondly, that he was far ahead of his
Indians undergraduates at Oxiord who
atiended the debates on molions con-
corning India and voted. Taey did not
*altempl lo play a prominent pan n its
debates", because of difficulties of lan-
‘guage. "Bul Bandarancike" he sliessed
"was by his upbringing less inhibited”
(bic).
Relerences
1. Hols, Chrscpher, 1955. The Gio Union
ondan Evans Bahars
2. Banca, SIRE, 1963 “My Fr speech at
A UnlonSc Dota" in Spoechas and Wiig:
Golomb: Inerraton Denson, Deparment ol
Brendeseing ane llormaton £27
3. 4, "Lien Debates’ 62
4. ei, My Fist poet ata Union Sony Debate,
par.
5, a, 1 Pogess raphy ate Urey” pot
8. Weuch. Evoyr 1954 4 Lite Leaning, Landon
Chapman ara
7. Op ot, "My Fistspsechatalinion Sort Debe-
8. id, “Union Aches ard Poi’ 23
8. Corken Daiy News, “en Anniversary of C,
Suiraingam Aig 1, 1865, p10
10. Wien, Ad. (1009) "SW ond Te se’
a Guarda, v.15, 908, Jy 1, 19985 9.15,
11, Op et, *ly Fitepossh ation Sosy Dobe
12, id. "Progress Rapity athe Ulm p23
13, bl, Urn Debs, p02
“eh nt Onto 5p 74-0,
“Lien Debates’ 68.
My san Fler a8
*lemFlactoe enor TvserorcU
“1 Progessrapidy athe Union, 921
“ADebale cn cap.
‘ie, Leave tne Pace Ly Namen p53
‘ic, “Unen Actes ad Pots 2.3.
ia, “our 83
Wikon, A, "SWRD" io Laks Cuan, ol36,
fo duy 15, 1988,p19
RREEEREE
RENRBESThe Return of the Multisaws
K, Palasanthiran
lerories shor. It may
have been foragotten by many,
‘even perhaps those direcily involved,
thal the Bibile-Wiekremasinche Report
‘on the correct use of drugs was stub-
bomly opposed by the Healih Ministry
officials atthat time, and much valuable
lime was wasled ai the outset in the
implementation of these reforms. Inthis
situation Dr. S.A, Wickremasinghe and
Professor Senala Bibilo ware compel
ledtotaketheirrecommendatiors tothe
Ministry of Industrios. Tho major thrust
0} the Bitile-Wickremasinghe reforms
was aimed at making a poor Third Wold
Country selt-sufficientin essential drugs
by implementing a well thought out plan
for their local manufacture the Ministry
Industries ected swiftly on allthemain
proposals,
are
‘The State Pharmaceutical's Corpora:
ion, sot up under the Ministry of In-
dustfies and the Formulary Commit:
tee, composed of the Country's foro:
most Pharmacologists timmed down
an Old Mather Goose mediay of Medi
nes under a myriad brand names to a
rational Formularyand a list of Essential
Drugs. The WHO which was following
Sri Lanka's adoption of ts Health policy
with great interest hailed this as the
World's First ist of Essential Drugs, The
Essential Drugs list is now an official
document of WHO and tems are ackied
to or deleied from it as scientific know-
ledge and practice edvances.
The SPCrnow movedintomonitorthe
import of drugs and the inconsistentand
irational waste of valuable foreign
exchange cauised by pseudo-scientiic
promotion of brands and unethical pre~
senbing.
10
The Bibile-Wickremasinghe report
had very pnidenily highichted the
countrys already existing potental and
knowhow in drug manufacture brought
Inby fourintemationally connected drug
fitms which were already in production
with locally subscrbed capital. One of
them, Dumex had commenced as early
as 1956, with 25% DFCC equity, Dumex
was a Danish Co-operative Pharmaceu-
tical venture with a wealth of knowhow
in the formulation of antibiotics, homo
nosand other biologicalsfororal,opthal
mic, and parenteral use. They had a
stefile products facility and fully equip-
ed laboratory including animal testing
‘and microbiology. With his usual charm
and pragmatism Professor Bible drew
all these Companies into a scheme of
manufacture under the new Drug
rationalization policies.
This was. scheme of ContractManu-
facturo of Essential Drugs whore each
firm's epecial knowhow was utilised to
make part of the Escontial Drugs list co
that together about forty essential items.
ware being producad locally within two
years of the establishment of the SPC.
‘The SPC purchased on Worldwide
tender all the raw material neaded for
this scheme, supplied them to cantract
fins free oj charge and purchased ali
the finished drugs backata very reeson-
able manufacturing fee.
Itoms that wore locally produced in
sufficent quantitios to mect the
country’s entire requirement could
not be imported undar disquised brand
names
‘The importers who were agents of
foreign brands sided by interested Mei
cal Practitioners manipulated a chonis
6f protest during this time exploiting the
ignorance of consumers who were told
tet absence of parvoular brands meant
a shortage of drugs.
Actuelly the new scheme apart from
solving the problem of periodic shorta-
‘9¢8 of drugs dueto erratic private inven-
tory control of Brands provided a cont-
‘uous supply of al needed crugs under
thelr genericnames. This sclttion how-
ever was not popular with those who
promotedbrends, Fortunately herewas
€ sclid phalanx of enlightened medical
men who backed Professor Bibile and
tumed the tide in favour of the reforms,
By 1976, though Senaka Fitile had
passed away in Guyana inactive follow-
pot his policies ona WHO assignment
Inthe Thitd World, Drugs Rationalization
in Lanka had proved to be a greet suc
cess, Apart from its Health aspect its
impact on a Third Worid economy was
significant. All the local manufacturers
were ulising their excess capacity in
producing Essential Drugs saving the
Country asubstantial Drug billandprovi
‘lng employment for many times the
work force they had original,
One ofthe comer sicries of the Bibile-
Wickremasinghe plan wes the prevision
‘of 2 Contra feclty for Quality Con-
trol of the Drugs that were produced
locally, This was a july equipped Phar-
maceutical Gontrol Laboratory functio~
ning under the direct supervision of the
Ceylon Hospital Formulary Committee
and the Medical Laboratory Services.
This laboratory had been donated by
Japan to serve Lanka’s swift march to
solf-suficiencyin ossontial Drugs Itwasafullyequipped Pharmaceutical Analyt
cal Leboralory, Al up-to-date instrume~
tation had been provided. This labora-
toryhad been placed under the direction
‘ofa Public Analyst seconded for service
{rom the Goverment Analysts! Depa-
‘Amant where all analyses of Pharma-
cetticals sampled under the Drug Act
had been performed til then.
Both Prof, Bbbile as well as the heed
ofthe Laboratory recommenced thatthe
Assistant Analysts be also recnited
from the Government Analyste’ Depat-
ment. This rule was followadfortheshort
timo that Prof. Bibile was able to keep
fiseyeson the working outot his propo-
sals. As soon as he had lett on his new
assignment, this laboratory which was
very vulnerably situated within the
Health Ministry domain of the Colombo
General Hospital was crammed full of
the overfow of Hospital Pharmacists
from tho Heslth Department. These
were certificated pharmacists trainedfor
Hospital Pharmacy workwith absolutely
no analytical experience, of theoretical
grounding in Chemical Analyses. They
were a total liability in a laboratory with
delicate instruments. The Head of tho
Leboralory resigned as tho staff provi-
ded was deliberately unsuited for the
work. However the Medical Laboratory
Services continued to supervise the
functioning of the laboratory.
When the local Drug Companies
participating in Government Tenders or
manufacturing directly under the con-
tract scheme completed a production
batch tho Company would pay in the
‘Analysis fee to Medical Laboratory Ser-
vices. And Officers from the Quality
Contra) Laboratary would come to the
feciory concerned, draw samples and
take them back to their leboratory for
analysis. Batches for the Public Sector
‘othe Private Sector had to await the
repott from tho Drug Quality Control
Laboratory. This laboratory was able to
craw samples end effect speedy ana.
Iysis of all drugs mado by the local drug
firms supplying drugs on contract to the
SPC. There were no delays and the
entire scheme operated smoothly.
There were no drug shortages and
Government tender supply of these
drugs was dependable.
Thus the operation of State Quality
Control enabled all local firms to supply
almost all tho bulk requirements of
essential crugs
In fact the scheme was working (00
smocthiy for Health Ministry liking. The
entire scheme collapsed under three
blows of Fale — Prof. Bible's tage
death in Guyana, the fall ofthe Govern-
ment thet had ushered in the new Drug
Reforms end the taking over ofthe SPC
by the Health Ministry,
‘These events signalled the beginning
of the endas far as Drug Rationalization
In Lanka was concemed.
Import Control and Price Control of
Drugs was stretched into moaring-
lessness. The Contract Manufacturing
Scheme was abolished, and local com-
panies manufacturing to full capacity
suddenly found themselves idle, To
‘save themselves manufacturers beca-
me importers overright, said their ma-
chines were idle and retrenched their
workforce.
With roimpott of Essential Drugs,
brand names flooded the market and
drug rationalization was cast fo the
winds.
However, some companies stuck
firmly to ocal maniulacture on tender, by
importing their own raw material. This
was nex! thwared by the State Control
LLaboratcry stating they wore unable to
cope with trelaige quantities of samples
from tender taiches, though they had
boon actually analysing al becily made
batches on Tender end Contract ust
previously. Ina classic case of the rant
handnot knowing what the iethandwas
doing, the Government sill insisted on
State Qualty Control release for all
Tende batches. Thus local Tendor
supplies were seriously delayed orcs.
trupted, On top of all this the staff atthe
Japan Gited State Contol Laboratory
succeeded within a short time in rence-
ring unfurctional neatly all the valuable
instruments inthis laboratory.
Chaos prevailed, and a Wester Aid
Agency ited a newLaboratory compie-
te with 2 foreign expert who said straight
‘away thataState Laboratoryshouldonly
ook into Quality Assurance by onlyran-
domly checking samples, Since Ten-
ders could not be serviced on random
batch reporting, local Tender supplies
collapsed, and nearly all Tenders were
awardedto importers. So much forlocal
manufacture
Thus wheress Rational Drug Policy
generated as a by-produst an entire
Pharmaceutical Industry much employ-
ment, and a reseaich backed industrial
sector the aflermath of its collapse in
Lanka has seen the retum of all the
evils that rationalization was meant to
combat.
Identifying the vileinsin this dramaas
the crug MNCS! and Free Market Eco-
nomics does not shift the bleme from
those who are most culpable — even
though they may prepare papers for
conferences on Health for All by 2000
AD.
With MNC monopoly, devaluation of
local currency imposediy the Free Mar-
kot, and the proliferation of agarassivoly
promoted drug brands the recipients cf
Health for allin our part of the world will
be in the eye of raging epidemics by
2000 A.D.
tfGeneric Drugs ?
The World Health Organization recommends that people should be
kept informed about the facts on medication and provided with the
knowledge and skills to protect themselves from the inappropriate use
of drugs.
Public education in drug use will increasingly become a part of mass
education via the mass media. The knowledge and skills thus acquired
will still not provide adequate protection to the public if the items in
doctor's preseriptions are effectively disguised by various Brand namos
and promoted for indications which have not been fully validated,
Generic Drugs are those known by their pharmacopocial
names and can be preseribed only for their established clinical
indications.
Most Pharmavopoeias now carry a section on Patient information
giving a brief account of the indications, benefits and risks in use ofa
particular drug. Thus Generic naming and identification of use is a vital
part of this public education programme advocated by WHO which aims
to prevent brand name promotion making medication revert to being one
of the Black Arts.
Generic Drugs from MSJT
FOR RATIONAL USE OF DRUGS
MSJ Industries (Ceylon) Limited
Factory and Laboratories,
P.O.Box 430,
Colombo.The Past in the Present in Sri Lanka
Jonathan Spencer
Steven Kemper, The Presence of the Past: Chronicles, Polit
History, and Culture). Tuhace: Cornell University Press, 1991.
Stanloy JeyarajaTambiah, Buddhiom Betrayed? Religion, Politics, and Violence in Sri Lanka. Forewordby Lal Jayawardena.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992.
and Culture in Stihala Life (Wilder House Series in Polities,
| happy netions are alke, but
jan unhappy nation is unhappy after
iis own fashion. Sri Lanka's own style of
unhappiness captured the ierld's atien-
tion briefly in the early 1990s but has now
slipped quietly out of the Imelight. Even
the assassinations of the country’s prosi-
dent and its leading opposition poltician,
within weeks of each otherin 1993, felled
tocaich the headine writers attention for
long. For many people, though, Sri Lanke
has become loosely but indeibly associa:
ted with intense sthnic conlict and very
high levels of poitical violence. Although
the history siretches further back, this
‘association was primarily established by
the antiTamil riotng of 1983, further
sirengthened by the subsequent civil war
between the majorty Sinhala dominatod
government and the miliants of the Libe
ration Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE, or
simply "te Tigers”), andthen fixed by the
‘iltary intervention fromindiain1987and
the appaliing death toll within the Sinhala
commurity dufing the anti-government
rising ofthe eftist Janata Vimukt Peremu-
na (JVP} in tho late 1980s.
‘These two important books both offer
the promise of new interpretations of tie
confict, as well as suggesting comparati-
ve lessons that mey be drawn out of tie
atticuleriies of the S7 Lanican tragedy.
They both dscuss the allegeddeep histo-
‘eal roots of ethnic identiy in Sri Lanka
‘nd the place of Theravada Buddhism in
madam poitics. The important general
‘question behind these conceins —which
is of relevance forthastudy ofall pasteclo-
nel polties — is the extent to which
poitical choices and poitical practces in
the present are constrained by collective
Understandings derived insome way rom
the past Put most simply and most gene-
raly!he questionisthis: Wnat da wemean
by a politcal culure? Just hhow unique,
‘cuturally,isSril-anka’s unhappiness; and
how much of this unhapoiness can we
explain in cultural terms?
As tho Sri Lankan conflict has intonsi-
fied, s0 the centre of interpretive activity
hhas shifted greduclly rem political scion
‘ce, which has had less and less of value
to ay in tho pact decade, fo history, and
thence to anthropology. The authors of
these two books are both cultural anthro-
pologisis, and their work also allows an
‘opportunity to ascoss the strongths and
Weaknesses of anthropological epproa-
‘hos to postcolonial politics. Tambiah is
a StiLanken Tamiiby bith, wih anAmen-
cen PRD and a cictinguiched rocord as
etnnographer and interpreter of Therava-
da Buddhism, especially in Thailand
(Tambiah 1970, 1976, 1984). One of the
most important themes in his work on
Thelland has been the Identification of a
distinctive worldly project in Theravada
‘Buddhism, based on the symbiolc rela-
tionship between tha order of monks, the
sangha ard the figuie of the king. The
41983 violoncoin SriLanka drow his atten-
lion back to his homeland, and this is the
second of two useful books in which he
has provided a judicious end accessibie
syrthasis of recant scholaily work on the
Conflict. The fiisi concentrated on the
poltics ofethnicty, whereas the newvolu-
Me looks at the tole of Buddhism in the
conflic.' Komparis an American anthro-
pologist whose earlier publications focu-
‘sed particularly on the institutional history
of the order of Buddhist monks in Sri
Lanka, the sangha. His monograph is
more obviously addressed to specialists,
(and some of its most important themes
are summarized by Tamblah in his book).
It races the history of a history — the
version of the past recorded by Budchist
‘monks in the chronicles of tha Mahava-
msa — through the twists and tuins of
‘pre-colonial,colonial,nationalist, and arti-
hraiionalist inleipretation. It stands out
from other recent anthropological workin
tie qually ois empiiical evidence, much
fi Cerived from Sinhala books andpam-
phlets unearthed and translated by the
author The two books together provide
‘fascinating example ofthe accommoda:
tions and changes Buddhisin has tied to
make, 35 a poltical force, in order to
sulvive in. an fa of mass polilics and
populer sovareignty
‘Scholarship and conflict
The Mahavamsa exerts a particular
faccination in Sri Lanka. tt forms a conti
uous chrontcle of the island from the
coming of the Sinhala peorle, Viava, up
{oiha present day. The frstsection of the
hronisla was writen in the fifth contury
GE, although i purnor's to descrba
‘evants up to 1,000 years eatlier Subse
‘quent sections were axided at intervals in
the years hat followed. always composed
by members ofthe sangha, usvally atthe
behest of a unifying and reforming king
‘The colonial government commissioned
an update in the late nineteenth century,
and a monk ackled @ funher section in the
4880s on his own initiatva. In the late
1870s the govemment of President UR.
Jayawarcene, in self-conscious emula~
tion ofthe precotonial kings, comission
eda furhermajor updating. The chrcnicle
itself {uifis two explicit functions: It dis-
plays an exemplary model ofthe relation-
ship between religion, as embodied in the
‘sangha. and poity, 25 emmbocied in the
king; anditprovides.a structureot cuthor-
tyforpresentpractcesby inking themand
thoir agents through a line of descent to
the practicesand teachingsot the Buddha
himself.
Many scholars have gone somewhat
further than this. The German ofienialst,
Heinz Bechert, for example, nas argued:
‘A ‘orm of nationalism criginated in
ancien! Ceylon which was rather close
‘to modem nationalism with ts concep-
tiors of a united nation with common
linguistic, cultural and religious traci-
tiors. The chronicles served as educa-
tional works to cultivate this conscious-
‘ness of nalicnal identry (Bechert
10788).
13While no one would deny that the chro=
ides, or certain episodes from them,
have been used for this purposo in the
rineteonth and twentieth centuries, this
‘ort of interpretation (widely accepted in
Sri Lanka itself, which identifies con-
‘ScioUS processes of nation-buildingin the
cistant past, hes recenily been chal-
lenged by liberal histonans and social
sciontists in Sri Lanka,
‘The problem for Kemper isto allow for
cultural diference witout succumbing to
uitural determinism. Despite the misiea-
ding claims of his publishers’ jacket des-
Gription,* he swifly and deftly sidestens
the unacceptable choice between the ra-
ical primordialst claim for a 2,000-year-
did Sinhala naticnalism and the equally
facical constructionist version in which
Nafionalism is a pure praduct of the colo.
Tal peiiod, He is concermedic rescue ine
culural pecularites of Sinhala naliona-
lism without felling inio the trap of cescri-
bing the presents an inevitable cutcome
of the past He chides writers Ike Geller,
Anderson, and Kedoure for falling to take
seriously the rolo of “culture and consti
‘ousniess” in natonalist movements while
distancing himsolf from the controversial
detemminisn of Bruce Kapterer, who
claims to have located a common pre-t0-
flective “ontology” behind the surfacs ma-
festaiions of nationalist myth, political
violence, and selisious ritual (Kapferer
1988). Insiead, nationalism is presented
as “a conversation thal the present holds
with ine past” (Kemper 1991-7); this equl-
Fes the appearance in nationalist arqu-
ment of both continuity with the past (for
theauthorityit provides) and disparity fom
that same past (inorderto motwate aciors
to restore what once was there) (Kemper
1991.17),
This felicitous perspective opons up a
remarkably broed and interesting area for
investigation, Kemper moves from a dis-
cussion of the coniext end purposes of
the original chroricies to an interpretive
teasing out of key themes, particularly the
Central place accorded to herces andthe
concern wih unity. He then eiscussesthe
colonial discovery of the island's history,
a thome recontly explored by other
authors (Nissan 1985; Rogers 1980), and
tho fatal effect of ideas of raco forsutea-
quent readings of the chronice. His clo-
sing chapters weave together the issues
already explored wilh more material fom
the speeches and writings of ceniemipora-
1y politicians and monks. These are the
Most in‘eresting and challenging sactions
of the book, not least because he uses
many Sinhala sources for the first time,
i4
a sad novelty in an area of academic
argument sill dominated by English-ian-
‘quage scholarship, Moreover, Kemper's
Command of modem literary Sinhala
allows him groator interpretive freedom
with this material; his argument in the
sections on procolonial historiography is
inevitably constiainad byhsdependence
‘Onsacondary sources (ikatheworkafthe
sScholar-monk, Rahula) often writen from
apointo! viewhe isattempiingto criciza.
Novertheless, this book represents a
major advance in our understanding, not
just of Sif Lanke but also of the historical
Constraints cn all postcolonial politics,
Asinhis previous book, Tamban takes
‘a more direct line on the primordialist
claims for an ancient Sinhialanationalism,
reflected and promoted in the chronicles,
Alter the 1883 violence, these daimswere
‘opened up to public cnticism oy a small
group of Colombo-based liberal intellec-
tals. The most imooriantrevisionistinter-
pretation of tho history of Sinhala identity
was proviced by the distinguished histo-
rian of medieval Budchism, RAH, Gu.
nawardana, Gunawerdana’s Woik Was
the centrepiece of 2 group of assaye
Published by the Colombo Soslal Scien-
tists! Association (SSA 1984) in the wake
of the 1988 violence. This velume aitrac-
‘ed a great deal of entiesmin the Sinhala
press (Tennekoon 1990), although a de-
jalled Scholarly response to Gunawarda-
‘na's argumanthas only rocenily appeared
in Sti Lanka (Dharmadasa 1992).° Tem-
biah ands his bock with an epileguo,
reviewing the controversybetweenGuna-
wardena and Dharmadasa before, polte-
ly but firmly, questioning the historical
assumplionsin Kaplerer’s werk. Sadly, at
the time of wring, Tambich’s book has
itself become the subject of controversy
in Sri Lanka, with como Sinhala zealots
‘apparently calling for it to be banned, and
a east cf distnguichad academics defen-
ding Tamibiah’s right to speak on these
matters
Tambieh’s review of the arguments
abouittha historicaldopth of Sinhalaidont-
ly is possibly the most interesting section
of his book for specialists, for wnom (as
‘Tembial himself acknowledges) much of
the rest of the volume will be slready
familiar. Nevertholess, Tambiah has per
formed a valuable service in assembling
4 lucid account of the role of Buddhism
in twentieth-century poitics. bringing to-
gether matotial from 9 wide range of
‘Secondary Sources, many of them inac-
cessible to readers outside SriLanka. Tho
bbook wil provide a useful complement to
Gombrich and Obeyasekere's magrif=
cent Buaghism Transformed (Gembiich
and Obeyceokere 1986), which forall is
empirical richness largely eschewed the
cussion of religion, poitics, and ethni-
city.“ Togetier, Tamblah's tivo booksform
‘Our best intractuction to the complexities
of the Sri Lankan siuaicn and to the
growing academic litersture it has
atirecied.
Modernity, buddhism, and democracy
Both Tambiah, discussing ‘policar”
Buddhism, and Kemper, more narrowly
focusing on the interpretation of the chro-
ticles, bow tothenesdto recegnize some
sortof rupture inthe passage frompreco-
{onial opostcoionial in animportantargu=
met, Tambiah detecis @ change in the
development of Buddhism on the island,
He descrises modem political Budshisrn,
‘with ils allendant outbreaks of collective
viclenee, as a transformation of an oarier
‘doctrinal Buddhism in which the “ati
mation of collectivity” replaces ‘the rel-
gious core and inspiration” (Tembiah
1992:58), Tambiah is nat alone here:
Another distinguished Sri Larkan anthro
pologist, Ganenath Obeyesekere, has
advanced the similar argument that mo-
demisi Buddhism, over-abstract and inde
Vidualistc, has lost its "Buddhist eon:
cicnoe” of compassion and loving kind
ess, a conscience which used to be
‘ransmittedin now forgotten felk talesand
ebandoned vilage riva's (Obeyssekere
1984: 158).° This may betrucend certainly
would repay closer empiiicalaitertion, but
itfposes two problems. For Tambiah, any
talk of an escentia| “doctrinal Budchism”
Wouldseemto puthimin the campoithase
hedesciibos ac"Palitextpuritans’ whose
version of Buddhism he has so long and
eloquenily contested. For ObeyesoKere,
the argument implcily gives causal pri
mecy to religionin assessingtheaeticiogy
{f violence. Yet we know from abundant
evidence, in the chronicles ard else-
where, that hora was violencein Buddhist
societies beiore Buddhist modernism
‘ever appeared anditha! there wouldsocm
to be no necessary ceason to explain its
modem menifesiation as a product of
religious change.
Kemper also recognizes immoriantds-
continuities inthe modern reaponsetothe
past. The most important of these Is the
Victorian notion of raco, which recurs
through the middie section of his book as
‘a kind of deus ex machina to explain
‘changes in Sinhala understendiagsoi the
ppast. His examples of race talk” from Si
Lanka are striking and alarming butdeno}
in themselves explain wity Viciorian racial
theorywas enthusiastically adoptediay Sr
Lankans (and otner South Asans) andcontinues tothrve, ong after ts scemtitc
domise in Europe, At ono point he sug
gests that Westem ideas of race cave
added iogiimacy iothatracitonal practice
of deriving descent fom some ancestral
{group in order to claim status (Kemper
1991.28). Even so, itis hard to accept
the impli force in Fis statement that “a
‘modern language of rece has eppropria-
ted end changed a verialy of genuinely
ancient practices in Si Lanka” (Cemper
4991: 135). Again we are confronted with
aconitrastbetweenatcundational past —
“genuinely ancient praciices’, “coctina
Budchism! —anda recent ceviaton rom
it, Both cases demonstraie how dffcul
itis to tel story of nationalism outside the
reassuring femework of the traditon —
modernity dichotomy.
Nevertheless, Tambiah is careful to
avoid the tap of nostalgia for ¢ lost,
Budchis! tolerance. Alonaside iis empha:
sis on collective idenity, peloal Bud
hism has also a more “postive” side, as
ideologists have drawn on historical and
textual models in order to consiruct
ideas of Buddhist democracy or Buddhist
socielisin (Tamblah 1992:60). Both Tam-
biah anc Kemper oxplors those attempts
30 build a distinctively Buddhist poltical
culture within the insiitutional frame-
Work of the postcolonial state, and thelr
discussions converge on a few important
themes: the need{fer unity, theimportance
of sovereignty, and dismay atthe divisive
‘consequences of parly polites.
Kemper devotes an early chapter cf his
book to the analysis of ideals of unity and
commurity in premodern Buddhism,
From the chronicies he identifies a stiong
emphasis on unity as embodied in the
figure of he conquering hero who establi
‘shesa unitary sovereionty over the whole
island. But he also discovers a second,
‘somewhatcifferent, modelof unty, based
on consensus and the power ofcollactive
aston. This is described in one of the
popular Jataka stories of the Buddha's
past lives and is concieiely embodied in
the instituional order of the sangha with
its emphasis on regular coleciive mee-
igs. Tambiah, using material from the
Giisis years of the 1360s, describes the
insistenceon unity andsovereigntyinone
recent Buddhist politcal movement. The
problemishow ioassas the causal pawer
‘of such apoarent continuities, Modern
Budchis| activists certainly refer back to
the same texiual models as Kemper —
thehero-kings DutthagaminiandParakea-
‘mabahu are raraly fa from the frontpage
ofthe Sinhalanevspapers—butare thay
‘eferting to tho same thing as the chroni
clers when they talk of unity? And how
are modom Sinhala discussions of unity
diferent fromthose, say, UlsterProtestant
or Hindu nationalists in india?
Whatever else, a nationalism that
brates the warrior Kings who brought the
island under the “umbrella of a singe
soveraignty”, wil have difficulties accom-
madating calls for devolution or seces-
sion, such as those made hy the Tamil
population of the North and the East. But
oth Tambiah and Kemper draw out fur
damental differences between the poli
cal context cf the chroniclers and that of
modern Buddhist activists. In his erique
of Kapferer, Tambiah queries the promi
Scuous use of the term, site, to describe
alke the precolonialand postcolonial pol-
8 in Sri Lanke, Precolonial kingship
followed ihe pattem ofthe" galacic polity”
ho has decositod olsowhoro in Southeast
Asia: Fooused on the king al the ritual
centre but with fuzzy boundaries, i is
based on the hlerarchical replication of
ower at lower-level, paripharal centres,
with only spasmodic capacity for mobli-
zing the population (Tambiah 1992:173,
compare Nissan and Stirat 1980), Notthe
least of the features of this sor f palitcal
organization was ils abllly to incoporaie
new, often culturally diverse, groups
within is framework,
‘The cnicial diference with the colonial
‘and postcolonial state can be ilustrated
by the changes in historical writing which
Kompor discusses. When the chronicio
was Updated bya monkin the mid-1930s,
the “common pcoala” cmorge for tho first
lime as a caiegory worthy of attention
(Kemper 1991:100). In tho version com-
‘missioned by tie Jayawardene govern-
‘ment, the “heroes” of ho past have cleap-
peared 10 be replaced by “ordinary
people":
Sri Lanka has become a democracy,
and the ara ofthe ordinary person has
arrived. That ordinary person is assu-
med tobe male, Sinhala, Buddhist, and
middle-class, but the chronicle begins
from the assumption oj the derrinance
cf such people in the national culture.
Participatory politcs creates a cultural
shiit as well as a poliical one, and with
its emphasis on equality. nationalism
itself assumes the same cultural tans-
formaton (Kemper 1991:190)
It thore is a decisive momont in the
history of Sinhala natonalism, itis 1931,
the yearin which the Colonial Ofice intro:
duced elections based on universal adult
suffrage, to the dismay of the ccaition of
ambitous elite figures thal passed for a
focal nationalist movement. But ideas of
popular representation had been built into
the framevicrk of the late-nineteenth-
Contry colonial etete, andthe enthusiasm
for tne idea of race Was in large part a
pproduet of colonial divisionsof the popula-
tion into “natural” communities to be
addressod through tho medium of thoir
equally natural leaders,
So those contemporary manks, whose
visions of a properly Buddhist polticel
‘order are described andanelysed by both
Kemper and Tambiah, are not so much
eproducing a political cuture as altemp-
ting to create one to fit changing cireurn-
stances. in this process, tne chroncies
Jostlo alongside other lose obvious eour-
‘ces of inspiration, such as Soviet exoer-
ments in planning or popular discalic-
faction with modem elected pollicans.
Party politics areseenas a crippling sour
ce of disunity, while the sangha attempts
to represent itself as a source of cisinte-
rested unity, rising above the interested
squabbling othe poliicaans. The themes
may soundiamiliar enough, buttheirimpl-
cations In Sri Lanka have been quite
distinctive. Both the JVP, whose sirugglo
against the government cast the Ives of
thousands of young Sinhala people in tha
late 1960s, and the LTTE, whoseguerilla
\Wwar continues infoits second decade, ara
movements based on a strong cult of
leadership, the expressive use of exem-
plary violonc, end the moral force of a
Yyoungconstituency wnofeeisbetravedby
the polis of ts elders. In como sense,
both movements ectiothe monks’ visions
ofa radical egalitarian democracy, based
ina strong sense of collective identity but
somehow purged of the moral falings of
“normal” politics ®
Itis too early to expect thase authors
todeal with thepolties of he JVP uprising
(See Moore 1993), while Tamil politics ara
obviously outside theirrernit. Butte con
‘nuing lack of attention to the pathelogical
poles of the LTTE is the greatest weake
Ness in the literature on the Sri Lankan
conilct. Our eceacicnal euphemistic allu-
sion to Tamil miltants fais to do justce
tothe extraordinary palticalferce that has
‘been buil in nortiem Sn Lanka since ihe
mid-1970s. Perhaps because of tho valu
me and accessibily of iis various state-
merts, Sinhalanationalismhasnow recol.
veda relatively large amount ofacademic
attention, Comparison with the differing
styles and fortunes of Tamil nationalism,
in Si Lanka and India is long overdue,
‘sis renewed attoniion to the simiarites
‘and differences belween the Buddhist
poltics of Si Lanka, Burma, Thailand,
Cambodia, and Laos,
19‘And to understand these phenomena
Wa need rather more than the anclysis of
*natlonalst discourse” (he tite of Kem-
pers concluding chapter). Wa alco nood
more, and beter, analyses of nationalist:
polis. In parieular, since the demise of
tmodemization theory, anthropolociss
have beenvery slow toassessthecultural
implications of democecy, whelher as
poiiical theory or institutional compe. It
isteling that Tambiah ends his book wih
some brief comments on the polical
structures of the Si Lankan state, while
in his foreword, ine dsinquished econo
mist, Lal Jayawardena, draws attentonto
the Stagnation of lis economy. Kemper
poriomeavaluablosoriceinpciningout
ihe close connection between democracy
and nationalism, butifthereis sweakness
inhisexcelentsiudy,lisarelave inatien-
3 to the social and pcliical contaxt of
the arguments he is analysing. in this he
isfollowing amore generalirendin racent
‘American anthropology in which naiiona~
lism has been analysed as an ideational
structure, or "decureive formation’ and
Post-Foucaviciens have enthusiastically
dissected tho polities and postios of
afrost everina, except mass poles
themselves.
‘rat anthropologists lie Tembiah and
Kemper bring to the understancing of Sr
Lanka's unique unhappiness, parado:
cally, a remarkably sophisticated and
subtle sense of the historical. This now
needs to be complemented by a return
to the old anthropological strengih of an
Understanding basedon deteilec familari-
fy with the everyday lives of the ordinary
people who are at once heroes and vic-
timsin thisstory” Nevertheless, arevived
ethnography of the political wil have to
escape from the dead hand of 1960s
poltical scienceandpolical anthropoiogy
to build, instead, upon the historically
‘sophisticated work of anthropologistslike
Kemper and Tambiah,
Notes
4. The atleybocewae Sanka: Etne Ferien and
the Blemerting of Darcerag/ Tamoih 103), Fo!
De elorantarcis nth specal Saul Cannas
‘ons onsen Soclogy desea othe Woot St
Lankan anropoedss Madan 1957)
2. The fiche! caine "By thing up te cntnson tat
‘Sthsa natoraism aredseseriso otnetents
moverats in Europe by over a Rosa oars,
Kernpa'sarales dersctalerohairoleaiensio
tut trata a amcor Erepoun prone:
now Unloruratay, he argument ints tom dros
olevensunvekempe=prlaceinmbicitvecatr
8 cea nt Kerpor oces notoeive rat Seals
*atonalsmarlelaie” Euepeannatonaism by
a thousand years (Kemper 19913).
3. Gnawardanas essay oigatyapovacadin a St
ani acai ural ene vas reprited in he
16
Sosal Seema’ Astciten colton: raveed
‘arson wae susishe Seta ft is ota Si
Link 1003 |Gunawardane 1000), The pubes”
Ys ole SGA, a5 wel asthe excolont pura
raraga, canbe eearestrem fa Sosa seers
fAssocaton, 12304 Navala Feed, Claro 5 Sh
Lanka, Oharmades's rey 0 Gunowarcara has
ben ercultha or sme yearsie Npesert buts
row apposed In ta oural of fe intraoral
Gert for Ete Studs (Dhurmacase 1990) Bs
‘sgerort alias on tsoominering, pol
‘ay nane, econ nog (amadasa 120).
Chr retsart natal can be feundin vo cet,
fied cclecens (Senavrane EBC, Spencer
‘soa
4. Fary breause th research for he volume was
nosy carta eatbelaihe cxcalein althe cies
Ite ay 180s: seathe athe’ arent ont
(Gombich ara Oboyctotors 100209).
‘5. Aas al comments rromnize portant chan-
isin Si Lasian Budism a5 a reat clonal
‘Smee! and missonan) tek a he rneearh
tury The oauling arise rlermed Busan
a
fist au recat pos-rraosins (Gombech ara
(Cheyeskere 1908 1 Spencer 18%)
15 Thocunnostonis, oleate, en dretin tho cate
7. Thar have ben sere roert tarot prod
rors eal seurced stage ol ratociam
ie Lana though ose ave mst concontes
ted on porperal reo, ete nator Godoxy
sconnpanes govig Sate penetator we Know
noch les ato a aoc at of rata ong
Inrreno cota areas. Soe. Brow (1383 19802
{Be Wace! (188, 1860) enneeon (125)
Spenene (060),
Reterences
Bechet, H. 1876, “Ihe Beginnings o! Buchs
Historiograoty: Maftevamsa and Patel Thin.
Ing’ In B. L Smith, od, Fligion and Lociina.
an of Power hi Si Lanka, Ghenbersbut, PA:
anima.
io¥, J, 1980, In Pusu of Hegemony: Rep
sentalions of Authoy and.lusiceina SriLankan
Vilage”. Amorsan Ehrrolgie, 152, 311.27
1990a. "The Incorporation cf a Marginal
‘arimurity within the Sinhalese Nation". Antiro-
ological Guarior, 63:1, 7-17
19000. ‘Nationalst Ahotris and Local
Pradige: The Fate of fe Vilage Community in
‘ulalowa," in J. Sponcer, of. Sd Lanta: History
Aardie Reots of Cort. Landen: Fouledse.
Dharmacasa, KN.O, 19528, “The People ofthe
Lon’ Eth dort, Weology ard HistoialPaw-
Sonsni i Gonenporay Si Lanka Elnne Stu-
cies Repor, 10:1, 3758,
19920, Language, Reliion_ and Etinic
Asserivensss: The Grow! of Snfabse Netiona-
lieminSh Lanka, Am Aroor UrivariyofMiehgen
Press,
Gombyich, Fi and G Obeyesekere 1088. Bud
dhisn Trensforted: Relgous Change in Sri
Lanka, Princeton: Peincston Universty Press.
Gurawardana, RALH. 1990."Tho People ol the
Lore The Sinhala ently and ideology in History
ardHisteiography" in. Spencer ed, SLanka:
Hatary end the Roots of Conct. Londen: Fout-
ledge.
Keplerer, Bruce. 1008, Logends ol Pooplo, Mya
ofSiate Violence, inalerance.ardPolitcalGutire
in 87 Lanka and Austria. Wastingtor, D.C.
Smitrecnian.
Natan.T, ed 1987 “Special sue en tho Work
of Sri Larken Anthropologists." Contbutos fo
Incian Socioeay (.8) 21
Noore, MP. 1003. "Thoroughly Medam evalu
tionaiés: The JVP 1 Si Lanka.” Modem Asan
Studies 273, 583.642,
‘Nissan, 1985, ‘The Sacreacityoi Anuedhapl
Te Aspetis of Sirhalese Buschism and Nation-
hood." Londen: Ph.D Theses, Unie of
London,
_ ang PLL Steat, 1900, “The Ganeration
‘SF Cemmanal identtes In J. Spencer, ec, Si
Lanka: History and tne Foots of Conict London
outed.
‘Obeyesohere, G. 1984. “The Origins and nsttur
tioralsationolPotial Velence."n. Manat, et
ii Lanka in Charge and Crais. Londen: Croom
Hon
gers 0.1990, "iisteriallmagesintheOritsh
Foie id. Spercer,e8, Si Lanka: Hsteryand
the Roots of Covfic. London: Rutlesce.
Sonovirang, H.L, ed, 1968. “Toenuty, Cansciou-
ness And the Paslin South Asia” Social Ane-
‘hi, Sportal sus, 25
Socal Sols: Association (SSA), 1884. thn
{ty nd Soria Change in Sr Lark. Colac:
Sodal Sciontat! Acsecation.
Spence, J, 19808. SiiLanta: Hstovardthe
Poole of Conic. London: Rosledga,
.- 19800. A Sinhala Vilage in 2 Time of
TrevBle Police Changin Rura/SrLarka, Dah:
Cxiord Universy Press.
10902. "Traction and Trarstomatior:
Fscent Writng on the Anthrepology of Buchs
In'SfLenka’ Joumalor me Aninrepologeal Soce-
tof Orford 21:2, 128-40
“Taian, SJ. 1979, Bucstismardihe sprtCurs
in Nerin-East Thalland. Cambridge: Camtniéae
Unversty Prese
1978, Word GongueroranaWiondFlenou-
‘ear Cambridge: Cambro Unversity Press,
_ 1364. The Bucchst Saints cf he Forest
Bri fie Cub of the Amulet, Cambridge: Camon-
{ge Unvery Prece.
1986. Si Lanka: Ethnic Fate arte
Dizmarting of Democracy. Chicago: Urivaciy of
Chicego Press.
Tennalocn, N.S, 1988, “Rake of Devalopment:
‘The Accelerates Neheveli Development Program
at SiiLanca.” Ameren Etinobeist, 15234310.
1690, *Newepapet Nationalism: Siala
iden as Historcal Discourse,” n J. Spencer,
i, SiLanka: History and tie Roots ef Conte
London: Reutedgo
‘Weoost, M1986. “Rural AWakenincs: Grassroots
Development and tha Culivaion of # Nsicnal
Past in Fural Si Lanka” in J. Spencer, ed,
Lanka: History and the Roots of Gann: Loncoe:
Routecce.
1965, “Netionaling tha Local Pastin Si
Takai Hetores of Nation and Davebpment na
Sinhalese Vilaga”" Amorcan Ehnclesie 20:3,
50221
= Compare States ty. Society ant History
April 55CORRESPONDENCE
Prabhakaran
s a Prabhakaran-wateher, | thank
H.LD. Mahindapala for bringng to
myaitention, the New York Times feature
(Way 28, 1995) of John Burrs on Prabha-
karan (LG, Oct. 15). Ini, Prabhokaran's
bblood-thirtiness in dealing with oppo-
rents has been stated es comparable to
that of "some of the crustest figures in
rocent Asian history, inclucing Po} Pot”
Even if one takes this opinion on its face
value, one wonders who ara the other
cruelest figures in racant Asian history.
‘whom Jofin Bums had ir mind. If ene
‘takes a body eountofinnocentvictims (not
military opponents), Mao Ze Dona, Incira
Gandhi, Suhaito, and Rlanasinghe Pre~
madasa should enter this crus} leaders
Hall of Fame without any dif cuty. Ist
Prabhiakeran, then in good company?
Unlike Mahindapala, | do not consider
the Naw York Times.as the oracle of the
‘wenteth century. | provide a few exam-
pleewhorethic vonerablenawspaperhad
to eat crow. These are culled from the
book, The Experts Speak; The Definitive
Compendium of Auihoritative Misirfor-
‘maton, by Cris Cerf and Victor Navasky
(1984)
Compared
A New York Times editorial iiculed in
1921 the attempts on rocket propelling by
space science ploneer Robert Goddard
‘as one who “seemsto lack the knowledge
ladied out daly in high schools’ in Nov.
5, 1932, the same ‘unimpeachable sour-
cool Mahindapala, predicted the te-elec-
tion of the ihn President Herbert Hoover
‘over Franklin Dalano Roosevelt. On July
14, 1972, the same New York Times
commented that Senator Thomas Eagls-
ton as a “casting directors ideal for &
turning male", Few weeks later it was
revealed that he had undergone psychia-
tilc shock therapy and was dropped by
the Democratic Presidential candidate
George McGovern. the New York Times
could nat prodict developments correctly
about the events within the USA, nov
rolable ils assessment on events in Sti
Lanka?
{As to verbal abuse from opponents,
Prabhakaran is net the first rebel leader
to be snaored at by his contemporaries.
‘Almost 200 yeers ego, thefethie: of Amer
ca George Washington was roasied by
Philade\phla Aurora as follows: “if ever a
nation was debauched by a man, the
‘American nation has bean debauched by
Washington. Ifever2 nalionwasdoceived
byaman, the Amercan nation has been
deceived by Washington. Let t serve to
boawaming thatroman may be an idol”
Does Mahindapala know thatquitea laige
segment of American citizens who wore
loyal to the British Crown ware chased by
Washington's patriotic gang to Canada
‘andWestIndies? Onewno cites New York
Times for support should also bether to
eam the revolutionary history of America.
| applaud you for providing a proper
balance by publishingMahindapala’s erii~
que to Bramagnani and the Galle ethric
violence committee report in the seme
igsue. Makindapala's legitimate question,
“Who 2re the oppressors of Tamils?" has
been eloquently answered in the report
you have published on the Galle ethnic
Violence. Those who suffered at Gallehad
fo links to Prabhakarar's dictum. They
suffered becausethey had themisfortune
to have an ethnic identity as Tamils.
Sechi Sri Kantha
Sapar lsitute for Contra of Agr,
Fula Cty, Sh2uoka,
Japan.
Ajith: The Enlightened Pen
Ties tis Ah Sararnavae's
father gave him a cip on the er, I
was over Lake House, Ajth had defied
‘Samaranayake Senior and bought the
Daily Nows ata timo when J.R. Jayawar-
‘dene was leacinga boyoottot Lake House
newspapers. This wasin the heady days
of 1973 when issues Ike press freedom
were on everyones lips. Itwes fortunate
that Ajth began his writing career in this
period when the inielleciual space for
dissent was sil available
He was sila schoolboy when his mind
‘and his pen began to roam the whole
‘gamutof contemporary issues. Ajth’swri-
ting hes been proliic; covering literature,
generational ‘ssues, poltical events and
eoncepts of cuiture. His writings always
Teflect his wide reading and his serious
reflection on issues of profound social
significance. His access to the bes! mate-
fial in English and Sinhala make him one
ofan increasingly rare breed —abilingual
ditttante.
He Inherited the best of Anglicised
middle class values, Not only did he like
his fether attend Tinity College Kandy,
but he iterally grew up inits shadow. His
Doynood home was adjacen! to the colle
{g0, overlocking he playing elds of Trinity
Consequently he acquired a sensitivity io
liberal valuss, tothe best inEnglsh Litera
{ure and the more enduring aspects of
Westem cullure end valuss. It bostowod
on him the modesty, rectude end belief
infeieplay thateots himapartfrom others.
Nevertheless in his writings he strives
to recapture all that is rich and beautiful
in our oriental cuture; he searches for
deppor moaning in tho works of contem-
porary Sinhala Literal. And he wenis to
be part of the reaching prospacts for
change thal fe dorment in the womb of
‘our sociaty.
Alth survived the traumatic Eighties
when the freadom to think, fo speak, to
write were fraught with danger. when
violence consumed the tolerant, the gif-
ed, the different, And now he is back at
Lake House, at the helm of the oldest
English newspapers east of Suez — the
Ceylon Observer. Ath has bean a cor
mentetor on the major issues thal his
socialy has confronted in the last two
decades, Now may be he will be more
than an observer — perhaps a player
himself
Jayantha Somasundaram,
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-— -Avullableat all Supermarkets W leading groceriesGananath Obeyesekere and Captain Cook
Ron Brunton
How “Natives” Think: About
Captain Cook, For Example
by Marshall Sahlins
[Uc en mest cscs, conten
porary anthropology seems suscep-
tible to moral posturing and its atiendant
Vice, moralconfusion, The pesiuringfocu-
ses on predictable suspects — colonia-
lism, Eurocenirisin, racism, the rights of
indigenous peoples. Litlocan mtigatethe
Outtage the virtuous anthropologist feels
when she considers the brutal excesses.
white men have perpetrated on the nali-
ves of Asia, Alrica, the Americas and the
Pacific. The excesses these netives fre-
‘quently inficied on each otherare another
matter, however. Even when acknowied-
ged, thoy aro usually explained in terms
f Venerable cultural imperatives, or as
dopaitures fiom traditonal practices
‘occasioned by the horrors of contact with
white men,
Certainly, this selective outrage might
be parily justified by arguing that Euro-
peans’ ostensible commitment to a uni-
versalist moral code mado their barbarity
more reprehensible than similar — or
worse — behaviour from members of
cultures whose moral horizons wore far
moreimited. But such anargument would
depend on the idea that in a significant
way the cultures of tho West are superior
tothese other cultures. is hereforeruled
outfrom the tart.
‘SowhenGananathOoeyesekara pubi-
shed The Apotheosis Of Captain Cookin
4992, which asserted that European
myths about indigenous people and their
propensity to nor-ratonal thought were
being parpatuated in tho writings of Mar-
shail Sablins, a cistinguished American
anthropologist with lofist views, the
(ground was prepared for a nasty battle,
The revieworiea senioraccociate hanthopoogy
atthe Universit of Mabou
Obeyesekere, a Princeton-based SriLan-
kan anthopologs, claimed that his own,
“native” background gave him a better
insight into Pacific cultures, The stuation
jas made worse —and moral confusion
‘mado manifest — by a bizarre insinuation
thatSahlins was somehow compictiniha
“culture of ter” European explorers
such as Captain Cock unleashed upon
the world, and which had claimed one of
Obeyesekere's friends in Sii Lenka, kiled
becauss he would not reveal the where-
abouts ofhis son, anateged terrorist. How
"Natives" Think is Sablins's crashing
response.
The central empirical question between
‘Sahlins and Obeyesekere is whether Ha-
wallans saw Captain Gook as 2 god. in
a corios of books and articles dating from.
the late 19703, Sahlnshas developed ihe
thesis that Cook's death el Kealakekua
Bay on February 14, 1779, was a conse-
quence ol ne Hawaiian bolt that he was
a manifestation of Lono, a major god
associated with human and agricultural
feniity,
‘Accoiding 60 Sablins, Cook arived off
the mainisiand of Hawaii aroundthe time
of the annual Makehiki rival cycle, The
Makahiki tock place over a fourmmonty
perlod and invoved 2 cosmclogical
strugglein whichtheking eporopriated the
powersofLonoforihe benefitofhumarity,
thus renewing his ownsovereigntyas vel
asrevialsing nature and tho secal order.
‘Atone phase of the cycle, a wood, tapa-
cloth and bird-skin image embodying
Llono was carried on a 23-day circuit of
the isand, This phase was a tme of
Popular celebration marked by tebocs on
fighting and certain othar activites. The
climax ofthe Makehikiwas a ritual bate,
the kal; bdtweon Leno andthe king. Ater
the king defeated tha god, he reinstalled
the worship of the miltary god Ku, with
whom he was personally idenified, and
the Image embodying Lono was dismer-
bered ond hidden, fo reepear the folo-
wing year
Schine argues that Cooke arival
began a remarkable saries of coinciden-
28 which led the Hawalans 10 beleve
that he was @ manifestation of Lono.
‘Though thase coincidences did not
always involve an exact comespondence
o the events and expectations of the
Makaili,they were clase enough to llow
the Hewalians to assimilate Cook creatl-
oly to the Malcaniki tradition. The sails of
fis ships, Resolution and Discovery, re-
sembled the image of Leno. Cook carrisd
‘ut a right-ircumnavigation of the isiand
forseven waeks before lancing folowing
the same direction thatLono's mage took
Cn ils Mekahiki circuit, when he finelly
anchored — to the tumultuous vielcome
of at least 10,000 Hawalians — he inno-
cently chose a place opposite the major
temple of Lano, from where the image
usually left on ts joumey around the
island, and to where'itretumed. And when
Cook oft loss than three wocks later, on
February 3,he'made anear-perfect tual
exit”, as the Makahiki rituals would have
ended a day or 0 carlior.
Out al sea, however, 2 severe sioim
disabled Resolution’sforemast, and Cook
limped back to Kealakekua Bay on Feb-
Tuary 11 for repai's. in retuming, Cook
Upset the ritual eyclo, The time of Lono
was over; it was the time of Ku's ascen-
dancy. The Hawaiians’ atiludes had
changed, and on thonightof February 72,
the cutter irom Discovery wassiolen. The
next morning, Cook itfed to take the king
hostage against the retum ofthe boat. As
Sahlins telsit,this was tke kalflin reverse,
with Lono “wading ashore with his war-
Fiors to confront the king”. Cook's death
was a ritual murder enacted ky a large
umber of Hawaians, who snatched the
iron dagger from each other so thet they
could all play @ part. But even after his
body had been dismembered, he was
‘expected to come back: priests and other
Hawaiians asxed the British when Lono
‘would retum, and what he would do to
thom when he dig.In The Apotheosis of Captain Cook,
‘Obeyesexere eccepied that the Ha-
waiians called Cook “ono, although he
said that this was meraly a name. He also
acknowledged that they prostrated them-
selves before Cook, but claimed thet this
was because they made him a chief 10
incorporate him and his officers into the
Havaiian political siuciure, and thus
bring orderinto the relatonships between
Hawaiian commoners and the British,
Obeyesekere argued that Sahlins was
Lunwitingly continuing the long-standing
Western myth — going back to the time:
of Cortes, and perhaps even Columbus
= of "the redoubtable European who is
a god to savage peoples’. In opposition
{o this supposed slander, Obeyesekere
presented a literals criiqua in which the
practical rallonally” of the Hawellans
Would have quick mado thom recogrics
that someone who cid not speak their
language orlookiikethemwas no manife-
station of Lono. He further accused Sa-
hilins of scholariysins, including anuncrit-
cal atitude towards eoutcse, tho celective
Use of information according to iis agree-
‘ment with his overall argument, and the
maripulationof evidence. (Sinsthese cer-
tainly are; nevertheless, they are wide-
spread among anthropologist and thoir
‘colleagues in related ciscpiines.] Obeye-
ssekere also made clear his disiaste for
Cook. Far from being the humane ombo-
iment of the Entightenment, by his third
voyage the great man had supposedly
‘become Ike Kurtz in Conrad's Heart of
Darkness.
Sablins’s rejoinder is a relentess and
compeling work, presented with wit and
panache. Obeyesekere’s view thal the
Hawaiians were “consistentlypreciisinga
bourgosie rationality” whilo Europeans
have been reproducing “ihe myth that
‘natives takethemfor gods’ formmorethan
200 years is an inversion of comrron
understandings that has a certain poitical
appeal tha contemporary academy, But
it can be susianad only by failures of
‘scholarship thet are far worse and more
‘extensivethan thosahe supposedly found
in Sahlins's work. Sahiins demonstates
the contradictions, the misrepresenta-
tions, the selective use of avidence, the
unwarranted speculations and the cons
dorabie ethnographic ignorance thatcha-
racterise Obeyesekere's took. Andin any
case, he showsthat Obeyesekere's whole
20
project is futlo. For in claiming that Cook
was installed as a chief, Obeyascxere
slated that Hewalian chiels possessed
“divine quaities", and he argued that tho
Hawaiians deified Cook affer nis death,
‘So whai has happoned to “the certainty
that making gods out of European explo-
‘ersis a European myth"?
Sahiinswillnotlet his edversaryimpugn
his progressive credentials anc jeopardi-
sehis moralsiandinginanthropology. The
tables of virtie are tumed arourd, The Sri
Lankan proiector cf Hawaiian dignity, ne
‘championo’the' nor inorate poopleswio
‘cannot strike back’, has himself silanced
the Hawaiian by dismissing the indige-
Nous testimonies about the perception of
book because they were callected uncer
the auspices of a Christian Missionary.
‘And by basing his defence of the Ha-
weiians on their supposed experise in
practising the Wasternintellectual viruas
cf a cilical ratfonalily, Obeyesekere has
actually dalvored thom “intellectually to
the imperialism that has been afflicting
them economically ané polilcally". So
there
However, though Obeyesekere's work
is beset by moral paradox, hore is some
Intellectual irony in Sahlinss book. The
original intertion behind Sablin's 10
search on early Hawailan — and other
Polynesian — encounters with Euro-
pears was to develop a theory which
‘Would introduce human action ard cult
ral change into structural anthropology,
which hadhtherto assumedautonomous,
formal end relatively stably sysiems of
‘cultural classification, Recognising that
uilural systems ate the products of
human actions over te —actionswihich
are themselves. informed by cultural
‘values and undersiancings — he wanted
to reconcie etructuralism with history by
‘Showing how peoples’ attempts to repro-
‘duce theircultures could bring aboutcultu-
raltransformation. Sut Sablins scores his
knockout biow against Obeyesekere be-
‘calico of his fino-grained historical and
fehinographe analysis of the Hawaiian
tmeteral, ard this analysis is essentially
independent of he thoory thatitis possible
to oblain accurate knowledge about the
past and about other cultures throughout
scholarship, a postion that is not easily
Feconciled wity his espousalotthecultural
‘construction of experience and his rele
cance to priviege Wastern forme of kno
wledge.
Sahins jusiifably citcised Obeyess-
kere for intellectual ad hoary, and for his
inabiity to provide consistent theoreiical
explanations of the croumstances. in
which “common sense” or “mystical” dis-
Positions might predominate in any pati-
Cularpeopie Sbelieis. Yet Sahinshmseli
isnot immune from this kind of attack. To
show that Hawaifans were not unique in
placing a supemnatural Interpretation on
the advent of Europeans, he presents
many simler cases from other Paciic
isiands, ospocialy ‘rom New Guinea.
However, as is also the case for Hawsi
he hes icacknowledgethal theres evide-
Nee thatindividualsinseveralNowGuinea
societies were sceptical aboul the divinity
of Europeans, averin tho early stages of
Contact. Nevertheless, ins sceplicismdd
notreadily become paito' these sccieties!
collective understancings, and when Sa-
hins attempis to explain this, he fals inio
ahole. InNew Guinea, scepticism suppo-
sedy falled because of the lack of a
"centralised orhiorarchical order’, Butthis
{stheexactopposte othe reasonhegave
‘earier inthe bookforwhy sceplicism was
margnalsed in Hawaii, where ‘the
poviers-that-be had unique possbiliies of
Dbjectifying their own interpretations",
This inconsistency points io a wider
problem. Althe heart of Sahlins's theorell-
‘ral endeavours lie difficult and interesting
anthropological questions about the rala-
tion between Indvidual cocitations and
collective cultural categories, These
questions have important implications for
the concept of culture, particularly the
Matter of whether cultures aro as echo-
feni, encompassing and perssient 2s
Sahline wants to belleve, and on which
Fs theoretcal position depends, Gut the
bockpasses overthese issues, anddoes
not really enhance cur comparative un-
derstanding of cultural influenices on how
“natives” — including ourselvee — thin,
despite what the ite might be thought io
promise.Inthese terms, the bookis disap-
Pointing. But as an account of what Ha-
waiian thought about Captain Cook, and
how these thoughts led to his death, as
well as @ putdown of solf-ighieous
advoreary, How “Natives!” Thinks a tour
deforce,BB exrcHING RURAL LFESTYLE
Why there’s sound of laughter
in this rustic tobacco barn...
84 Ceylon Tobacco Co. Lid.
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