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“You can bend it and twist it... You can misuse and abuse it... But even God cannot change the Truth.” |
The Mad Men of Dambulla
“Ordered disorder, planned caprice, And dehumanised humanity…”
Brecht (The Exception and the Rule)
Brecht (The Exception and the Rule)
By Tisaranee Gunasekara
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Had the people of Dambulla been as virulent as the anti-Mosque/anti-Kovil demonstrators, had the STF and police personnel been as supine as the government, a religious conflagration would have engulfed the area and beyond.
Mobs have no sense; religious-frenzy is unconcerned about consequences. But governments need to count the cost of fanaticism, especially in a pluralist country which is yet to recover from the wounds of a 30 year war. The manner in which the Rajapaksa administration responded to the Mad Men of Dambulla indicates that the self-destructively myopic mindset, which created a linguistic issue and facilitated its evolution into an ethnic war, flourishes still, in the highest echelons of the Lankan state.
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