This is our country too and it is worth fighting for
In
memory of Father Tissa Balasuriya
| by
Tisaranee Gunasekara
“Never
to submit and never to oppress…”
(
January 20, 2013, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Last week Fr. Tissa
Balasuriya died. Fr. Balasuriya, in and through his life, personified what is
best and most humane about Christianity. ‘Come unto me, all ye that labour and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest’: that was Father Balasuriya in
thought and deed. In a previous repressive era, when many chose indifference or
equivocation, he stood up for democracy, provided a platform for dissent and
kept his doors ever open for those in need. He was reviled as a CIA Agent/a
Catholic conspirator by Sinhala fanatics and persecuted by the Vatican as a
heretic.
This
article is not about Fr. Tissa Balasuriya; it is for him, in memory of his
passion for justice, his rational progressivism, his commitment to sanity,
honesty, honour and decency in public life and, above all, his large-hearted
generosity which was incapable of discrimination. For all that and more, this
article is a very inadequate public ‘thank you’ to a priest, a fighter and a man
this country needs more than ever today.
***
In
a dishonourable hour, Rizana Nafik’s mother has reminded us what honour is. In
an unprincipled hour, Rizana Nafik’s mother has demonstrated that principles can
be found where they are most unlooked for.
None
would have thought that a poor woman, with a sick husband, two dependent
children, no steady source of income and a tumbledown shack for a home, would
refuse the money offered by Saudi Arabia. Who could have blamed her for
accepting that money? But she did not. And in her refusal to take the blood
money offered by her daughter’s murderers, she acted with a dignity which is
almost non-existent amongst our political, economic and religious elite, the
powerful, the influential and the rich of Sri Lanka who have made a creed out of
the most myopic and unenlightened self-interest.
If
we had parliamentarians like her, the impeachment would not have happened and we
would not be afflicted with the most supine and unprincipled ‘chief justice’ in
the history of Sri Lanka.
Mohan
Peiris epitomises the new Rajapaksa Man; he is the Model Subject for an enslaved
Sri Lanka. His willingness to worship the powerful and place
self-advancement/protection above all else symbolises the ‘ethos’ the Rajapaksas
want to inject into all Lankans.
Rizana
Nafik’s mother epitomises the values of a dying Sri Lanka, as did Father Tissa
Balasuriya. Mohan Peiris epitomises the values of the new Sri Lanka which is
being created by the Rajapaksas and for the Rajapaksas.
That
Rajapaksa Sri Lanka despises the poor and weak. It is unequal and discriminatory
and lacks all sense of common or garden decency. It is blustering and cowardly;
it is a haven to religion without morality; it criminalises independence and
freedom. It is unmoved by the plight of its malnourished, abused children. It
loves vulgar exhibitionism and opulent bad taste, gloats over the fallen foe and
seeks to keep its people shacked in ignorance and fear.
Do
we want Sri Lanka, our common home, to become that country?
Resisting
Rajapaksa Reality
Tyranny
is deceptive. It must be because it needs to hide its true nature from the eyes
of those on whose support/indifference its continued survival rests. Successful
tyrannies excel at hiding reality, turning the truth on its head and
criminalising its victims.
The
Rajapaksas too want us to believe in an alternate reality.
In
that make-believe world, Sri Lanka is a rapidly developing land - its debt
burden is not spiralling out of control; its poor are not been deprived of their
homes and livelihoods; its environment is not been degraded; its health and
education systems are in mint condition; its prices are falling; and its Central
Bank always tells the truth.
In
this make-believe world, the impeachment was an exercise in justice - the
Rajapaksas knew nothing about anything until 117 UPFA parliamentarians, renowned
for their independence, their zeal for good-governance and their crusading
efforts against corruption, prepared and signed the impeachment (on their
initiative) and presented it to President Rajapaksa and the Speaker Rajapaksa as
a fait accompli.
In
this make-believe world, a laissez faire judiciary is necessary to protect
democracy, promote human rights and ensure good governance.
The
Rajapaksas want us to accept this imagined reality as the real one. After all,
we did accept the twin myths of ‘humanitarian operation with zero-civilian
casualties’ and ‘welfare villages’. So why not Rajapaksa democracy, Rajapaksa
justice and Rajapaksa development?
The
Rajapaksas want us to become our own ‘Thought Police’, to suppress the truth we
know and to believe the lies they tell us.
They
do not want us to see nepotism in the elevation of Yoshita Rajapaksa as the new
captain of the national rugby team. They do not want us to discern signs of
megalomania in (or even be embarrassed by) ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa International
Challenge Football Championship’, ‘President Mahinda Rajapaksa T-20 Under 19
Triangular Cricket Tournament’, ‘Chamal Rajapaksa Challenge Trophy’, ‘Mahinda
Rajapaksa Theatre’, ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Tele Cinema Park’ and ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa
Vidyalaya’ (to mention a few).
If
the Rajapaksa-hatred of Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake has not been
appeased by her illegal ousting, if they decide to make her suffer more iniquity
and indignity, they want us not to be angered or appalled by it, but accept it
as justice.
Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa is to commence another programme ‘to totally eradicate the
underworld’, using ‘various tactics’, according to media reports. When
‘Suspects’ in their thousands are murdered, while ‘resisting arrest’ or ‘trying
to escape’, the Rajapaksas want us not be outraged, but to accept the
bloodletting as good and proper. (The Rajapaksa CJ will make it all
legal).
The
Rajapaksas are particularly interested in moulding the younger generation into
becoming ‘Perfect Subjects’. They want a younger generation which esteems power
and strength and despises physical and politico-economic weakness; a younger
generation incapable of being outraged by a society in which the powerful and
the rich will always have their way while the poor and the powerless are denied
even their ineffectual say; a younger generation habituated into regarding
intolerance as the moral-ethnical norm and violence as the optimum solution to
all problems/differences; a younger generation focused on ‘getting ahead’ and
incapable of resisting.
Had
Vellupillai Pirapaharan won the Eelam War, he would have created an enslaved
state in which the Tamils would have had only one freedom and one right – the
freedom to worship the ‘Sun God’ and the right to hate his enemies. The
Rajapaksas are no different. They focused on winning the Eelam War, so that they
can rule over Sri Lanka in perpetuity. In Rajapaksa Sri Lanka, we too have the
freedom to support the Siblings and the rights to oppose their enemies.
Everything else is crime or treachery. If the Rajapaksas have their way, this
country will become poisoned by violent mores and brutal deeds.
Sri
Lanka is not a Rajapaksa property. Not yet. It is our country too. We must
resist the Rajapaksa-plague, by thought, word and deed, because Sri Lanka is
worth fighting for.
