Things Fall Apart

a history of ideas - mainly my ideas

Showing posts with label Sri Lanka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sri Lanka. Show all posts

Monday, February 4, 2013

65 Years Ago Today

Hoisting the Lion Flag at Independence Square in 1948 

65 years ago, today, hands were shaken, the ink dried on the paper and one flag fell as another was raised. Proud smiles, excited smiles, smiles of relief for some - this was not going to be another nightmare of partition, countless lives wouldn't end dramatically as one country became two. No, that was for another time, another age. And the men of 65 years ago could not foresee the future. Lucky them. They got to make the decisions. We got to suffer the consequences. The fate of millions decided by a few men, as always.

 'Ceylon' - 'free'?

Yes. At last! Her people no longer colonized. No longer othered. No longer demeaned? After 400 years she believes that she is free. 

65 years later Ceylon is no more. She has evolved. She has grown. She has scars - she can show you. Some say she is more beautiful than ever, paradise regained - paradise found. Others say - she is in ruins. She has failed the expectations of 65 years ago.

Sri Lanka, full of new roads and highways, hotels and ports. "Every verdant village" and "every palmy coast", milked for all it is worth. Her people have betrayed her. They look alike but are mostly divided. They speak of justice but practice injustice. All that is right has become wrong. The wise have made way for the mad. 

Sri Lanka robbed, pillaged and plundered. This was not what they envisioned 65 years ago.

65 years ago, Independence was celebrated but today, 65 years later, her people are still in chains. 


Friday, January 4, 2013

Sri Lanka: 2012 in Pictures



Rugam Tank? maybe

The Dalada Maligawa



Pool at Cinnamon

Jesus' little lambs: Street Vendor in Slave Island


View from one of the last overhead pedestrian bridges left in the Colombo Fort


Cargills Building in the Fort


Age of Technology


Independence Square at night


Kandyan Dancers at the Vesak Perahera 


In Passing: Express to Vavuniya


T20 World Cup Match


Sri Lankan supporters at the T20


Student Leader at the FUTA Rally

Willie Blake at 90: Renowned Sri Lankan cinematographer of vintage movies such as Rekava and Gamperaliya


Dessert - Yum


Thursday, November 1, 2012

Who will Stand in the Gap? Country underwater but the Government and the People happily swim along

A midst the troubles that Cyclone Nilam brought to the island, life in Sri Lanka continues on as usual and by usual I mean the usual nonsense of bad governance, worsening human rights and deteriorating social and economic conditions. We are true blue islanders because at the end of the day none of the events that are systematically ending the rule of law in this country affects any of us (myself included) seriously. How many of us are actually concerned about the fact that the judiciary is being crippled and we cannot expect the media in the country to report it properly because the media has been crippled and that actually happened a long time ago. Do we worry about the fact that if someone gets abducted in Sri Lanka (and as we all know abductions are not a rare occurrence over here) you probably cannot rely on the police to help solve the crime. Free education is on a downward spiral and its the Urban and Defense Ministry that continues to get the biggest share of the financial budgetary pie.

Why-o-why do we not CARE? We the public, the people of this country, the so called patriots, who carry citizenship cards and proudly proclaim that Lonely Planet has named Sri Lanka the No: 01 destination in the World to visit in 2013! Why do these issues not dominate our day to day conversations and plague our subconscious when we go to sleep. More importantly why is it that even if we talk about the issues and gripe about all the corruption and inadequate leadership we are still not motivated to personally take on the challenge of doing something to change the status quo. Instead we are happy to complain, to gripe and to draw cartoons but we are not willing to actively take a stand and fight corruption at the micro level, stand up for the rights of the poor and the downtrodden, highlight injustice and speak up against violence, intimidation and hate rhetoric that have become very much part of Sri Lanka's socio-political culture. Instead we buy into all the defamatory rubbish re-hashed by politicians and the media alike that replaces the serious issues with character assassinations and demonizes anyone or anything that stands in their path. Because we have bought into the propaganda of the powers that be, we do not even realize it, but we have begun to associate terms like 'dissent' with traitor and 'foreign conspiracies' with civil society, NGOs and people movements.

Basically we are an apathetic nation and when our apathy ends it usually takes the form of violence, racism and chauvinism  This is why we  had an ethnic conflict that begun not in 1983 but probably in 1956 and 1958 and beyond as its history spans back to the end of the 19th century and some will argue to the beginning of time. This is also why we have had two youth insurrections in the south. The boil eventually comes to ahead and then bursts and in Sri Lanka when it bursts it has so far not ushered in an era of good will and peace whatever they may have you believe. Instead it has ushered in more evil and more violence and more impunity even if it can be temporarily hidden under slogans such as "Miracle of Asia", "Suba Anagathayak" and "Land like no other".

Today the Daily Mirror and Groundviews carried Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu's article on the proposed impeachment of the Chief Justice. He points out the lack of interest the public have in issues that do not directly affect their lives.

"the public at large were unmoved by the dismantling of the Seventeenth Amendment and its unseemly replacement by the Eighteenth.  The slow death of the Thirteenth is very much on the agenda and now the possibility if not the probability of a frontal assault on founding principles of democratic governance - the separation of power and the independence of the judiciary.

It has been argued that the public-at-large is unmoved by constitutional issues or indeed any outside the cost of living that directly impacts their daily lives. The regime knows this and through its extensive apparatus of propaganda, coercion and intimidation it will have its way.

L'etat, c'est moi, - The state, it is I

It is time to show the regime otherwise and that time is surely now!"

Like he said the time is surely now but will we rise up to the challenge or will we mirror these words, written by the prophet Ezekiel for another time, place and nation but yet capable of striking a chord within me

"I looked for a man among them who would build up the wall and stand before me in the gap on behalf of the land ............ but I found none"

Friday, August 24, 2012

Save State Education in Sri Lanka: The FUTA Rally on the 23rd of August 2012


Mr. Bala Tampoe at 90

Ishan's dad adds his name to the petition to save Sri Lankan Universities
more signatories

Student hostels were closed down by the government prior to the rally probably as part of their effort to restrict student participation on the 23rd




Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thero

When the rains came down the umbrellas also came out

Looks like every cloud does have its silver lining






The Union Place road was closed down

Monday, August 13, 2012

Lionel Wendt in Popular Limerick

Lionel Wendt photographed by  W.J.G Beling probably during the 1930s  in Colombo, Ceylon
(writer's private collection. All Rights Reserved)

My 93 year old grand-aunt, [Kathleen Deutrom], is a wealth of information and a walking encyclopedia in her own right. In the middle of a conversation she might suddenly break off into a  poem or verse which she remembers from her youth. Yesterday she provided me with a little gem of a limerick on Lionel Wendt (1900 - 1944), Sri Lanka's art connoisseur par excellence during the early 20th century. According to Aunty Kathleen this appeared in the papers a long time ago. My guess is that it was perhaps published during Wendt's lifetime as its tongue in cheek lyrics seem to suggest. I am not sure how the original was spelled so have taken the added liberty of writing it the way I think it may have been originally written. 

Lionel went to the cinema to witness Citizen Kane
Lionel went not only once he also went again
Lionel went on business and not on pleasure bent
I'm sure the new Olympia is glad that Lionel Wendt

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