Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: bastards, beginnings, buttocks, Chinthanaya, damned lies, even more fish, fish, identity, lies, more fish, more lies, patriotism, politics, religion, republic, sri lanka
One morning I woke up and found that I was evil. That all I had stood for was twisted and blackened. All I believed in was unclean, contaminated by a germ that had taken hold while I was asleep. No longer could I feel patriotic, share in the simple pride of a waved flag, of a crisp military parade. Words like honour and independence tasted bitter now. Altogether new synonyms had wormed their way into my mind. Unity meant conformism, discipline meant submission, patriotism was now racism. Pride had become hate, democracy a shapeless beast, terrorism an excuse and freedom meant absolutely fucking nothing.
But last night, I was an innocent. I knew but did not fear the “Patriotism” that was Shaw’s “… last refuge of the scoundrel”; for what is society with no shared purpose, with no pride, no symbols to rally around? Would it even endure? So I had sought out that which was clean and honourable and euphoric, what I could stand up tall and salute. There was a simple pleasure of the skybound firework on the day of Independence: its rushed journey heavenwards calling me to the giddy heights of citizenship in this great enterprise of this country. I grew to love the clean detergent smell of wearing my national dress, the raising of a flag so ornate and symbolic that other’s tri-colour flags seemed so stark, dry and childlike. I honoured the pioneers who had not long ago secured our independence from the clenched fist of colonial strength.
Then, last night, delirious fevered dreams flashed vivid technicolour corruptions of what was simple, beautiful and pure. I dreamt of a State that disenfranchised its own citizens with a single act of parliament. Of academics and the educated, who should know better, incite violence against those who had been my brothers before I slept. Of laws to punish a religion growing, of an Oxbridge educated elite spewing Sinhala Only. As the fever took hold, I saw hundreds of citizens horded into buses and driven into empty spaces. There were flashes of children severed by shells that we calculated to be an acceptable cost of political convenience. I mutely screamed at an electoral majority that could not see any other solution but War. And all the time, I saw hate, spilling like bile, mixed with spittle, running down the jowls of the politicians, gathering on the chins of bestial men and women who in their bloodlust cornered and attacked all that was different, alien and ‘para’ –‘other’.
And at that point, my weakest moment, the microbic invader struck, confusing me. In this confounded state it showed me that we had become the Nietzschean evil we set out to destroy, that our souls were tainted and it told me that the articles which I had shaken my head at before were true, we were monsters, the LTTE and I, two sides of the same coin. That morally, this nation and all we tried to preserve was exactly the same as a group of people who strapped bombs to themselves and blew up innocents.
In my shame, reader, I believed this all. I hated myself. I read comments, op-eds, and even the hysterical messages of trolls who painted my red door black. Shrill voices screamed out how we were no better than that which sought to destroy us. As the infection multiplied, as the moral lethargy replaced the will to act and cycles of cynicism and withdrawal lowered my expectations further till all I could do was tiptoe past my bruised conscience and better sense. I almost succumbed that night to the fever that gripped me ever harder, a final mocking image locked in my mind of hundreds of my brothers and sisters lined up for busses with no destination as men with grey faces and grey guns looked on.
Just like that, the image flickered and I remembered how the story actually ended that day: A single citizen filing a fundamental rights petition against the forced eviction. I felt the ground tremble as the judiciary like a waking giant, reached swiftly to stop and reverse the executive action, holding it unconstitutional. And there alone, in the calm at the eye of the cyclone, I saw clearly what ideal was left to us, what it is we were fighting for, why were different from the monsters we confronted. It never mattered how stupid, base or corrupt the people and their elected officials were, we are still a Republic, we are a representative democracy, we have institutions, a separation of powers and checks and balances. We have a constitution which is a covenant between every citizen and the state. We are greater than the sum of our parts. No matter how often the law is bent, broken or bought it will always be there, if nothing else but as a sullen reminder, and we will know it is wrong and it cannot be got rid of. No matter how many votes are stolen, coerced or rigged, every so many years every leader must endure the risk of being cast out. It will not matter how many journalists are silenced, the media can only be reined, never retired. A state of emergency that has lasted some of us, our whole lives and successively more brutal governments have not been able to completely do away with the freedoms that is the promise of our noble enterprise. The glass may only be half empty, but, damn it, there is a GLASS. It can always be filled. Are we appalled by a state sunk in debate, argument and compromise? Celebrate this. We talk, because we know the alternatives. We know their price.
There is NO comparison between this Republic which we are equal citizens of and a systemically violent, fascist personality cult. If I need something to hang on to, I will hang onto this. I don’t need to expect the best motivations of the leaders to ensure that my freedoms will survive. It will, battered and bruised, because that’s what it is built to do in a democracy.
I see now that we’ve quite missed the point by celebrating our independence. There is so little to gain recounting our release from an imperial rule, when you consider that the single most significant event that took place that day was the birth of the republic. The beginning of the hard work of building a nation. The metaphorical inking of the eternal contract between the state and all its citizens, even those yet unborn. This day something wonderful was birthed, a people with the mandate and opportunity to create their own destiny, to govern themselves, a prize that so many are denied elsewhere. As much as we’ve squandered it and made ourselves unworthy of it, it still there, silent, resourceful enough to swiftly counter even an act Executive excess and only needing a single citizen to call it into action. And that is what we need to do, we need to USE IT. To build on it. THIS is the ideology worth fighting for, THIS is worth standing up for. This is my pride. I have found myself to be an Idealist and I am NOT ashamed.
The fever is gone. I’m going to put up that flag now.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: bastards, buttocks, choices, colombo, even more fish, fear, fish, lard, more fish, risk, sri lanka, war
Rajiv joins us a few minutes late for dinner; having come straight from work. He slides into his chair quickly, crisply dressed despite the the humidity that has me sweating into my shirt. In the still night, the long fingered zephyrs turn the occassional flower this way and that, like a parent’s hand as it maneuvers a child’s face checking for dirt. At the table, conversations carry both opportunity and loss. Rajiv speaks of bad business conditions in his quiet voice precisely, without hyperbole, exaggeration or rant. In the same voice he ordered the salmon with. As he put it gently to me, “I don’t eat any meat.”
“So many are leaving,” he tells me; ”I am one of four, no, five from our class who are still in Sri Lanka. There were 48 of us.”
The salmon, exquisite in its coconut milk, served with cous-cous occupies us for a while. Rajiv picks at it unhurriedly and explains: “People leave because of the security situation”
I interrupt him. ”I think it’s more that our savings our worthless; there is no future we can prepare for, with 30% inflation.”
“No. It isn’t the lifestyle, the economic condition, people are now leaving simply out of fear.”
I listen politely.
“My wife used to work; we commuted together in our car. The kids would hear about a bomb in Colombo. They are young and would worry till we would come back home. Eventually we thought about that, how my wife and I would go to work together and come back together. If something happened while on the road, we’d both be there.” He looked at me sadly. “We agreed that at least she should stop work.”
I stare down at my plate; all I hear is the the unconcerned croaking of frogs.
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Chinthanaya, damned lies, ducks, fish, lars, lies, more lies, politics, scarf, sri lanka
Today if you went out to the street, you wouldn’t be able to find someone who voted for Mahinda Rajapakse and co. You’d sooner find out who shot Roger Rabbit. I would like to know the tuktuk driver numbers in Sri Lanka, because there’s a demographic who’ve withdrawn their once vocal support.
Trishaw drivers are small-businessmen and are exposed to the the Sri Lankan economy and their withdrawal of support is linked to commercial reasons. Colombo has less purchasing power, and is less secure than before. Less people travel at night, and those who do travel with taxis for safety. The exchange rate of the ruppee has reduced the government’s ability to subsidise fuel. Their half-thought out supportive slogans are replaced with sullenness.
I’m tired of small time thinking. Sri Lanka’s failures aren’t about the triumph of evil or even about great crimes. Our failure is thinking too small. We will not be the first country to lobotomise politics or set ourselves incredibly low intellectual standards but we are the worst country to do so. We’re not the comfortable middle class American living in a country with strong institutions, wealth and economic power. This is Sri Lanka, with it’s the scarcity of resources, dreadful alternatives.
Ours is huge number of serious problems that need debate and discourse. Opportunity, employability, economy, identity, governance,equality and the lack thereof should keep a young nation like ours up though the night. We need new solutions, we need to look at older ones too to see what to do and what not.
Instead, reaching for the easy opportunity, we have marginalised these issues to a point where an entire electorate discusses the price of bread, forced conversions and and how the masculinity of a candidate is eclipsed by the luxuriant growth on the other’s upper lip.
What is worth fighting for is certainly worth thinking for. Passive resistance in the Indian struggle for independence was less of a philosophy; more a gambit that as part of the wider strategy, outmanoeuvred the British. Britain, having cloaked their blatant commercial interest in India as welfare and civilisation, woke up to find themselves shooting unarmed protesters. Unable to sell this any more to their voters or to international onlookers, they were forced to leave. And it wasn’t passive resistance all the way: Critics of Gandhi have argued that some of his non-violent protests were also allowed to end in bloodshed. http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/articles/gandhi/index.html
The lesson: It wasn’t a triumph of non-violence; it was a win for the smarter player. Successes don’t come from simple doctrines, they are engineered. We should devise the steps leading to the outcomes we seek, not throw adolescent tantrums against what we see as unfairness.
I think we need to think out our plans if we are really going to live in Sri Lanka in the future. I don’t know about you, but I have no exit strategy. My only alternative is to work to make this a country I can and want to live in. I don’t expect it to be easy, and certainly don’t expect it to be quick, but i rather not leave the most important questions of the day to be addressed as they are now.
I’m going to pick questions I see as important and ruthlessly classify some as unworthy of activating my neurons. Debate is invited. I don’t expect to be right even most of the time and certainly will be arse deep in subjects that are outside my comfort zones and asking the stupidest questions. This activity stems from an idea that the answers we seek should be simple, clear and be derived from rational thinking and debate rather than the from the opaque advice of a professional elite.
More to follow.