Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, September 8, 2017

Sri Lanka: Udagala Debokkawa: Lament of a Poor Remote Village

First house in Udagala Debokkawa according to Malaka-
Of course, clean water. Who is going to keep it clean? (Malaka)-Education of these kids is most important (Chaturanga)

Heenbanda has highlighted also the drinking water problem and lack of electricity. The village has several natural springs, but their clean maintenance is a requirement.

by Laksiri Fernando-

“No road, no proper housing or way of living. We live like frogs in a well between two rocks. We are born here and destined to die here.” – a villager
( September 8, 2017, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) What are these two rocks? To me, those are not about Yahangala (siesta rock) or Uthungala (sacred rock), but about poverty and lack of proper education. As admirably reported by Kandaketiya – G. Chaturanga (Divaina, 6 September), the above quote is the lament of the people in this poor and remote village in a far corner of the Central Province. Minipe is the relevant Pradeshiya Saba and the Divisional Secretariat in the Kandy District. The name of the village, Udagala Debokkawa, might translate as ‘upper-rock crevice.’ There is another village called Pallegala Debokkawa or ‘lower-rock crevice,’ with a distance of six kilometres.

The Forgotten Brew: The Struggle for rights and representation in Sri Lanka’s low-country estates 



Photos by Amalini De Sayrah
AMALINI DE SAYRAH AND RAISA WICKREMATUNGE on 09/08/2017
It is easy to forget that Deniyaya is located in the Matara district. Many people travel here in order to trek through the Sinharaja rainforest. Few people stop to notice the sprawling tea estates they pass en route, apart from the local community.
Throughout the hill country, especially in areas such as Nuwara Eliya or Hatton, estates border each other and most of the community is Tamil-speaking. While the characteristics of life in up-country estates are vastly different to that of the nearby towns, there still exists a sense of belonging to a larger community, owed in part to being able to converse with those who speak the same language.
In the South, the estates in the Galle and Matara district are sandwiched between settlements where the majority of residents are Sinhala speaking. The majority-minority dynamics at play in these two places affect the relationship that the Malaiyaha Tamils have with their surroundings.
View the full story, compiled on Adobe Spark, here, or scroll below.

Families of disappeared slam inaction of Sri Lankan govt and TNA on 200th day of protest

Home
07 Sep  2017
Families of the disappeared have slammed the Sri Lankan government and TNA leadership for ignoring their demands, on the 200th day of their protest in Kilinochchi, stating that they did not expect the Sri Lankan government to ever deliver justice.
“The government is not even slightly concerned about our struggle,” the association for relatives of the disappeared said in a statement, pointing out that five mothers had died since the protest started.
Sri Lankan president, Maithripala Sirisena, has failed to fulfil promises made to the families on releasing lists of surrendees and detention camps, the association said, criticising the President’s decision to hold a meeting yesterday with select families.
“By taking some of us to some meetings, and others to other meetings, many different narratives are taking place,” they said.
Stating that some families were taken to voice support for the Office of Missing Persons by Colombo civil society, the group said “we are being pulled in different directions by parties operating with different agendas.”
None of those agendas would help them find their disappeared loved ones, the families said.
The families claim that they have been getting the message from the government that they should support the OMP to find out about their relatives, but that there would be no accountability for their disappearances.
“This is what our Tamil leadership is endorsing. [They] do not care about our demands. They only care about the journey they have entered with this government,” the association said.
“We are being forced to choose between finding our relatives and the desire for justice for their disappearances,” the families said, “but the reality is that in the end we’ll be left out in the cold without having found our loved ones, nor having found justice for their disappearances.”
“The Sri Lankan government has asserted again and again that it will never give us the justice our struggle demands,” the statement concluded, stating that a hybrid court with international oversight, as mentioned in UNHRC resolutions, were a must.

#ReleaseTheList: campaign update

For approximately half a year, Tamil relatives of the disappeared have been protesting continuously at five sites across the North and East of Sri Lanka demanding that the government take action that could secure answers about the fate of their loved ones. Last month we launched a new campaign in support of them, calling on President Sirisena to fulfil his pledge to release a list of all those who surrendered or were detained by the Sri Lankan authorities during the final stages of the war (a point at which many were never seen or heard from again).
Photo Action 2Three weeks on and that pledge is yet to be fulfilled. But, with your help, the pressure to release this critical evidence has continued to mount: over 700 of you signed our petition, with many more clicking, posting and sharing in support of the protestors to mark the International Day for the Victims of Enforced Disappearances, which fell on 30th August. That day saw hundreds of affected individuals from all communities take to the streets across Sri Lanka to make their voices heard. In Colombo, members of the diplomatic community joined some of them to add their own. Yesterday, on the 200th day of continuous protest in Kilinochchi, a delegation from the European Union met with family members to listen to their concerns.
In contrast, the response of the government of Sri Lanka to the campaign, and these events, has been disappointing. Both an informal email reply to our campaign press release from Presidential Adviser Austin Fernando, and the official response from his staff which followed on 17th August, were marked by misinterpretation, obfuscation, and – at times – hostility towards our request.
While we have chosen not to publish that correspondence, we can reveal that the response was in line with what has been stated publicly by members of staff from the President’s Office since: that the call for the release of the list is redundant because the President has, they suggest, already fulfilled his pledge. To support this claim, they refer to the publication of a list, on 29th July, of all of the individuals with pending trials or cases against them under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).
Quite simply, this is not the list that protesting relatives of the disappeared are demanding. The list of all those who surrendered or detained during the end of the war that they seek is both distinct from, and far broader in scope than, the list of PTA detainees referred to above. The President himself appears to have acknowledged this when he made the pledge to families of the disappeared earlier this year. A press statement issued by his Office on 14th June clearly stated that: “[the President] promised that he would instruct the National Security Council to release lists of persons who surrendered to the Armed forces in the final phase of the war.” (emphasis added).
The latest line of defence from the President’s Office thus appears to be based on either a negligent, or wilfully disingenuous, reading of the campaign demand – one which we went to lengths to make clear in the ‘Explainer’ section of our appeal age. In our letter of reply to the President’s Office, we once again clarified the nature of the list being sought by the protesting families and invited further response. As of today, we have not received one.
Ignored. Now threatened.
mariyasuresh_easwary_cropped 2Meanwhile, the protestors have continued their struggle for truth and justice in an increasingly hostile climate of surveillance, intimidation and harassment. The most troubling incident concerns Mariyasuresh Easwary, a prominent activist at the Mullaithivu site whose husband disappeared in 2009 after being arrested by the Navy during the final stages of the war.
According to reports from Journalists from Democracy Sri Lanka (JDS), Easwary was stopped by two men travelling by motorbike as she travelled alone near Theethakarai cemetery, Mullaithivu, on the evening of 14th August. The unidentified men are alleged to have groped and slapped her, after threatening her with “severe consequences” should she continue with her activism. Subsequently, and after making a formal police statement, Easwary is reported to have been repeatedly visited by members of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID).
Left unchecked, this clear attempt to silence peaceful activism risks setting a chilling new precedent for the government of Sri Lanka’s recent treatment of protesting families of the disappeared. We have written to the President’s Office to ask them what action they are taking to ensure that this incident is urgently investigated. But you can help too: by signing this petition, or encouraging others to do the same, and sending a message to the government that the international community is watching – and that the only way it can bring these protests to a close is by listening to, and acting upon, the demands of the families.
Please click here to take action now.

Shani SL’s Sherlock Holmes appointed as Director CID defeating IGP Koloma’s conspiracy !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 07.Sep.2017, 10.45) A most reputed and respected police investigator SSP Shani Abeysekera of the CID dubbed Sherlock Holmes of Sri Lanka (SL) for his uncanny abilities as a detective  was appointed as the Director , CID .
The post of Director fell vacant following the promotion of B.R.S.R. Nagahamulla the former director as a DIG.  The attempts made by IGP Koloma to appoint Mevan Silva  a henchman of his proved unsuccessful with the appointment of Shani Abeysekera a more efficient and suitable officer for the post by the Constitutional Council , which appointment was ratified by the Police Commission today.
It is significant to note it was Shani who led the investigation into every controversial and unsolved crime in SL’s history. Unbelievably , every criminal who  was  at the center of those crimes was sentenced to death because of Shani’s meticulous and methodical investigations. Murder of assist. Customs Authority Sujith Prasanna , murder of Royal Park youth, Angulana murder committed by the police , Shyam’s murder committed by ex DIG Vaas Gunawardena and his son , Hasitha Madawala murder, attempted murder of former president Chandrika Bandaranaike at Town hall grounds by a suicide bomber , were some of the many heinous crimes which were investigated by Shani.
Shani who does not drink even a plain tea offered by an individual outside is so clean and uncorrupt  that he is  a  model worthy of emulation by other Police officers. 
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by     (2017-09-07 17:25:20)

Literacy in a digital world


2017-09-08
Today is International Literacy Day and the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) says it will be celebrated across the world on the theme, ‘Literacy in a digital world’. At UNESCO’s Paris headquarters, a two-day global event is being held to look at what kind of literacy skills people need to navigate increasingly digitally-mediated societies and to explore effective literacy policies and programmes that can leverage the opportunities the digital world provides.  
 
According to UNESCO at a record speed, digital technologies are fundamentally changing the way people live, work, learn and socialise. Digital technologies are giving new possibilities to people to improve various areas of their lives including access to information, knowledge management, networking, social services, industrial production and mode of work. However, those who lack access to digital technologies and the knowledge, skills and competencies required to navigate them, can end up marginalised in increasingly digitally-driven societies, UNESCO warns, saying literacy is one such essential skill.  
 
Just as knowledge, skills and competencies evolve in the digital world, so does what it means to be literate. To close the literacy skills gap and reduce inequalities, this year’s International Literacy Day will highlight the challenges and opportunities in promoting literacy in the digital world, a world where, despite progress, at least 750 million adults and 264 million out-of-school children still lack basic literacy skills, UNESCO says.   

The UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) says that of the 750 million adults who are illiterate, most are women. This is a stark reminder of the work ahead to meet the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), especially, Target 4.6 to ensure that all youth and most adults achieve literacy and numeracy by 2030.   

In Sri Lanka also we need to see what we have to do to promote literacy in a digital world. a command of the English language is necessary to make maximum use of this, especially the search engines which are like smart text books for subjects ranging from mathematics to medicine. After 1956, when the English language was withdrawn as a medium of education, our standards today have dropped to low levels. The situation became worse with the introduction of television in 1978. It is widely accepted that the best way to improve our knowledge of English is by reading not only classics by Shakespeare but even detective fiction novels where the substance may not be deep but the language is powerful. Scholars say it is by reading that we improve our English knowledge in terms of spelling, grammar, syntax and other important aspects of writing skills. After 1956, surveys show that the reading habit began to drop and declined further when television came because most young people preferred to watch TV rather than read books in their spare time.
  
With the advent of the hi-tech era most young people have now switched from television to smart phones and tabs with high resolution pictures. As a result there are millions of young people who may be able to speak fairly good English and sometimes with an accent also. But they are unable to link the operative noun with the verb even in a simple sentence. Excessive use of American-made computer spell checkers has also led to the folly where many people use the word roll for role or site for sight or foul for fowl implying that we need to eat foul curry.   

The English medium of education has now been reintroduced but that may not be enough and Sri Lanka needs to find ways of promoting the reading habit especially among the young people. When they improve their knowledge of English it will pave the way for them to reach higher standards of literacy in this modern world and also grow in their knowledge and wisdom of what is evolving worldwide. To encourage children to get back to the habit of reading English books, whether they be printed or e-books the key role needs to be played by parents and teachers while the government could help by taking measures to reduce the prices of books.   

Stop selling 62,000 acres of lands from Uva – Wellassa

uva1
September 8, 2017
A protest march organized by the Uva – Wellassa Front to Protect People’s Rights to protest against the move to sell 62,500 acres of lands from eco sensitive, archaeological important and traditional lands of the people has commenced from Padiyathalaawa Hospital and is marching towards Padiyathalawa town centre.
The convener of Uva – Wellassa Front to Protect People’s Rights and JVP Member of Uva Provincial Council Samantha Vidyarathna says thousands of residents from the area together with Buddhist priests and leaders of other religions, environmentalists, scholars and university lecturers are participating in the protest march. A rally will be held when the March reaches the town centre.

Rs. 232 million supplementary estimate! 

Rs. 232 million supplementary estimate!

Sep 08, 2017

Pursuant to a cabinet decision, a supplementary estimate submitted by leader of the House Lakshman Kiriella to parliament yesterday (06) seeks additional Rs. 134 million to maintain offices for MPs, for which each is receiving Rs. 100,000.

A sum of Rs. 22.5 m is needed per month for this.

Kiriella submitted another supplementary estimate for Rs. 98.93 million to renovate the official residences of the state enterprise development minister (17.6 m) and the leader of the opposition (21.5 m) and to buy a new vehicle for the minister in charge of the project management and supervision department of the national policy and economic affairs ministry (Rs. 43 and Rs. 16 m).

It also seeks Rs. 7.54 m to meet the leasing allocation shortage for a vehicle obtained for the housing and construction ministry and Rs. 495,000 for a vehicle obtained for the president.

Ashika Brahmana

Government set example for selfish politicians: Thalatha

Wednesday, September 6, 2017
“Soon after establishing the ‘Yahapalana Government ‘, we eliminated hypocritical attitude from politics and set an example for selfish politicians,” Justice Minister Thalatha Atukorale said.
She was participating at a reception accorded to her by United National Party supporters and residents of Eheliyagoda at the Eheliyagoda PS Auditorium recently.
Minister Atukorale received blessings of the Maha Sangha at the Eheliyagoda Sri Madarasingharamaya Temple before attending the reception.
She said she has to handle two different ministries but she was committed to perform her duties honestly for the well-being of the people and the country.
“A group of narrow-minded persons say that the government did nothing for the past two years. Establishing peace and harmony throughout the country and taking steps to re-build the nation that the government committed in the past two years is admired by the citizens,” she said.
She said previous regime allowed their henchmen to cheat people and earn money.
“We will provide 10,000 land deeds for the landless and we are now paving the way to provide more and more employment opportunities for the youth and to supply electricity for the needy citizens,” Atukorale said.
She said garbage disposal issue in the Ehiliyagoda town would be resolved very soon and another land would be allocated from the Beruwana Estate in this regard.
Iddamalgoda Denagamuwa Viharadhipathi Ven. Pohorabawe Wimalatissa Thera, Sabargamuwa Provincial Councillors Siripala Kiriella, Nimal Wijenaike and K.L.Ratnaike spoke. 

If impartial trials held, half of MPs behind bars: VAC


2017-09-08
The Voice Against Corruption (VAC) said yesterday if 89 investigations were followed through by the Attorney General, half of the government members would be imprisoned.
Addressing a press briefing, VAC Convener Wasantha Samarasinghe said although it revealed many fraudulent activities involving parliamentarians, not a single case was filed against these individuals in court despite inquiries being held.
“The unity government came to power on the promise of taking legal action against corrupt individuals. This is not a united government but a government that is united in corruption,” he said.
Commenting about the unused building rented out by the Agriculture Ministry, Mr. Samarasinghe said the building owner had been paid Rs. 23 million including VAT as service charge.
“The transaction is an utter waste of public funds. The deal was made ignoring the guidelines set by the Auditor General. A total of Rs. 1,140 million has been paid as rental when the premises had not been used at least once in three years, and the agreement expires a year from now. However, the names of several ministers and their families surfaced on major corruption cases which we will expose in the coming weeks,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mr. Samarasinghe appealed to President Maithripala Sirisena and relevant authorities to take prompt action against those responsible for corruption.
“The VAC has already exposed corrupt government projects with justifiable evidence. If impartial trials were made on the accused, at least half of the government will have to be caged in the Welikada prison,” he said. (Thilanka Kanakarathna)

Bond Scam: Rosy Uses PM Privileges, Does A Ravi K

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Former MP and Ex- COPE member Rosy Senanayake following the style of Ravi Karunanayake, who is also now directly a part of the Prime Ministers retinue denied “having knowledge” of anything to do with her name surfacing during the Bond Commission revelations.
In a letter addressed to the media, under the letterhead of the Prime Ministers office Senanayake said she denies all inferences drawn against her.
The conversation which involved her son, Kanishka Senanayake was in reference to him in his personal capacity.
Senanayake instead of setting out the facts straight before the public on a matter that was personal in nature, used the Prime MInister’s office to lambast the media and its conduct.
She failed to point out as to if Arjun Aloysius and her son knew each other. Commenting on the nexus between the two, Commissioner Justice Jayawardena said that they had a common meeting point which was the “infamous international school in Colombo”.
Senanayake’s son was a student of Colombo International School, the same school at which Arjun Aloysius, Anika Wijesuriya and Ravi Karunanayakes daughters studied.
She failed to say how ethical it was for her to sit on a committee investigating her son’s friend, who had made a startling 40 billion rupee profit in the years after the new Government took over.
Earlier, Ravi Karunanayake despite living in the house paid by Arjun Aloysius for over 9 months and thereafter purchasing the house from Anika Wijesuriya, denied having any knowledge of the conflict of interest or allegations of bribery.
He also attacked the media of tarnishing him.
Senanayake followed the same line of defence, targeting the media, in what was only a reported conversation, during which her name surfaced.

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Convicted for misusing TRC funds Weeratunga, Palpita get 3 Years RI


By K.S. Udaya Kumar-2017-09-08

Former Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga and former Director General of the Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (TRC) Anusha Palpita were convicted, in the so-called 'Sil-cloth' case, by the Colombo High Court and sentenced to three-year prison terms yesterday.

They were found guilty of misusing Rs 600 million of the TRC State funds to distribute the material.
Weeratunga had served as the Chairman of the TRC during that period.

High Court judge Gihan Kulatunge found the duo guilty and sentenced them to three years rigorous imprisonment.

He also imposed a Rs 2 million fine on each and ordered them to pay Rs 50 million each to the TRC as compensation.

They were also warned that an additional year of imprisonment would be slapped on them if they failed to pay the fines.

This is the first conviction obtained by the AG's Department in a case investigated by the Financial Crimes Investigation Department set up by the current Government.

Announcing his verdict, over a one-and-a-half-hour span, Justice Kulatunga noted that the then TRC Chairman Weeratunga had made a request in writing to then TRC Director General Palpita to release
Rs 600 million from the TRC coffers to facilitate the distribution of 700,000 sil clothes to temples countrywide.

The Judge noted that having received the said request, accused Palpita, issuing a grade circular, had deposited a sum of Rs 600 million on 5 December 2014 to the account of the President's Secretary at the Presidential Secretariat.

The Judge said, before depositing the said amount, the TRC Director General had not obtained prior approval from the TRC's Board of Directors and that evidence gathered had noted that approval for doing so had only been obtained on 15 December 2015.

The Judge observed, the decision taken by Palpita to add Rs 100 million from the social service expenditure of the TRC to the Rs 600 million and then depositing it in the account of the Presidential Secretariat was a blatant violation of TRC regulations.

High Court Judge Kulatunga stated that even though the TRC tender board approval may have been there, for the depositing of said amount, there were no legal provisions to submit such an amount and he termed it an offence which should be severely punished.

Explaining his verdict, the Judge stated that during the Court case, accused Weeratunga had insisted that the said incident (distribution of sil clothes) had nothing to do with the 2015 Presidential election.
The Judge then asked if the project was getting delayed due to the financial constraints, as claimed by Weeratunga during the case, what reasons had prompted him to initiate the programme at a time when a presidential election campaign was on.

The Judge noted that setting aside such a sum to initiate the project, without having submitted a supplementary estimate to Parliament, was also an illegal act by Weeratunga.

The former President's Secretary, during the Court case, had claimed that he had set aside the sum for the distribution of sil clothes following a request made to him by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

The Judge pointed out that both Weeratunga and Palpita had been appointed to their respective portfolios by the former President and that they were hence serving him.

Judge Kulathunga stated that the suspects had carried out the said acts with the aim of providing political gain for their master, evidence given by them during the case had proved so.

Before the final verdict was announced, Deputy Solicitor General Thusith Mudalige, addressing the Court, stated that due to the acts of the accused, the sum of Rs 600 million belonging to the public had been robbed.

Mudalige later requested the Court to hand out a punishment to the suspects that could serve as a stern deterrent to those in the State sector from committing such fraudulent acts in the future.

Making submissions to Court, on behalf of the accused, PC Kalinga Indatissa stated that by having undertaken the said distribution of sil clothes, the suspects had not even earned a cent or a rupee and that not a single sil cloth had been taken to their homes.

PC Indatissa also requested the Court to hand out mild prison terms to the duo as they were esteemed State officials during their respective careers.

Before announcing the verdict, Judge Kulathunga noted that he would be taking into consideration the requests on behalf of the accused, made by their lawyers, as well as the impact the acts of the accused have had on society.

The Judge stated that though the accused had not used the said sum for their personal gain, as had been proved from the evidence given by them, he noted still there had been a tendency for State officials to engage in such acts during that period.

Having considered all facts, the Judge announced his verdict before setting 20 September for them to pay the ordered fines and compensation.

PC Indatissa told the Court, in the wake of the announcement of the verdict, that an appeal will be submitted on behalf of his clients.

Let us resolve to read


  • Most of them usually come, not to purchase or even peruse the books on display
  • No nation, and no community, can keep up with modernity unless it gets its people to flip through a page and learn something
  • We are a nation of memorisers: we throw out what is taught to us, word to word
2017-09-08
Reading is an easy discipline. It requires discipline, yes, but the sort that’s tempered less by coercion than by interest, energy, and enthusiasm. In Sri Lanka, September is demarcated as the Literary Month. That’s Sahithye Masaya in Sinhala. Now in a world where mothers, fathers, and children are celebrated on certain days and nearly every animal, from dogs to cats to pigs, have entire years dedicated to them, this isn’t cause for wonderment. There are of course many ways of talking about a month. Many ways of talking about the habit of reading. This piece isn’t about September or reading, though. It’s about a bigger issue. The fact that we don’t read enough.  
This piece isn’t about September or reading. It’s about the fact that we don’t read enough  
Three years ago, scanning through various editorials in the Sunday papers (because on Sundays back then, that’s what I liked to do), I was entranced by one which delved into an unlikely issue. Back then (September 2014) the Uva Elections had come and gone, Harin Fernando had upset those who had expected the United National Party to lose outright, and Maithripala Sirisena, if we are to believe those who’ve written on the “before” and “after” of the January 8 upheaval, was sketching out his defection (though we’d have to wait two months before he walked out). This editorial wasn’t bothered about the elections, however, in Uva or elsewhere. Titled (“Books? Or Noodles?”) it contended, rather convincingly I should think, that despite the massive crowds which throng at the Colombo International Book Fair (which will be held, this year, from September 15), most of them usually come, not to purchase or even peruse the books on display, but to have the time of their lives, take some pictures, and eat noodles. Interesting. Pertinent. True. And telling.  

Sri Lanka prides on itself as a purveyor of free education. Statistics are quoted, being the dazzling figures that they are, in defence of what commentators feel to be an optimistic future, primarily with respect to our literacy rates. What is often forgotten is that the ability to write your name is less a qualification to be proud of than one which would have got a person to become an incongruous leader: the jack among the illiterates, the sighted among the blind. That’s what happens in Woolf’s Village in the Jungle: Babehami, the antagonist, becomes a headman because he’s the only man who was taught by a monk to write his own name. Not exactly an achievement, is it?  

The Book Fair, and of course the organisers behind it, have done everything to ensure that it tries to achieve its objective: getting more people to read. To be fair, not everyone who visits it does so to have a good time. And to be fair, the Exhibition has grown in popularity over the years, despite those inevitable price hikes. But even with the rising numbers, the indifference to those hikes, and the various events organised at the Fair to inculcate a love for reading (last year, for instance, the Writers’ Organisation of Sri Lanka held several workshops, while Sampath Bank sponsored a “Katapath Pawura” to promote Sinhala poetry), the fact is that fewer people, particularly younger people, want to read. Why is this a problem?  

Because of the fact that no nation, and no community, can keep up with modernity unless it gets its people to flip through a page and learn something. Not just learn, but comprehend, apply, and if possible, add to. Let’s not forget the meaning of literacy as per UNESCO: the ability to identify, understand, interpret, create, communicate, and compute based on printed and written material. We are a nation of memorisers: we throw out what is taught to us, word to word. What makes this even more pathetic, then, is that even within its limited parameters we don’t take in enough. Modernity is coterminous with looking to the future by anchoring oneself in the past, by understanding that the past is neither praiseworthy nor blameworthy in its entirety. If we haven’t learnt to process a text, though, exactly how are we going to do that?  

If we don’t become a nation of readers we don’t and can’t become a nation of novelists, poets, critics, and thinkers. It’s as easy as that. We grow to simply be content with what’s there, available for everyone, preferring ease of access to forward-looking intelligence. Three distinct points, or problems, emerge from this.  

One, we end up becoming a repository, and not a disseminator, of information. Two, we become sterile, content in living for the moment, not processing what is heard and seen everywhere (especially with respect to popular culture, which is so rampant that its influence is widespread, inescapable), and blindly accepting of what is without thinking of what was and will be. Three, and most poignantly, we let go of the need to sustain a national literature, and thereby neglect what’s already and historically ours. Of these three the first two have been elaborated by others, while the third has not. I will sweep through the first two, and delve into the third later on.  

The contemporary world is (apparently) divided into two cultures: high and low. This dichotomy, so convenient to some, is actually a farce. A corollary of this is the separation of that same culture into the popular and the serious. That too is a farce, evasive, careless. My contention is that culture is derived from what is seen and heard, and by that I include everything: Amaradeva and Khemadasa played on your radio at home; H. R. Jothipala and Sangeeth Wijesuriya played on the bus on your way home.  

There’s really nothing different between these two categories, come to think of it; if at all, the former is closeted, the domain of those who go for refined tastes, while the latter is the preserve of you and me, middle-of-the-road public transport users.  

But this is irrelevant: one can listen to Khemadasa on the bus and one can listen to Sangeeth Wijesuriya at home. What brings the highbrow and the lowbrow here together is the fact that culture is, at its inception, popular: it is heard, processed, and more often than not sensually felt. And when it is digested, it becomes an influence, shaping one’s ideas, tastes, and prejudices. What then tempers popular culture – the cinema, the theatre, music, even pornography – is our ability to process it, to explain what is heard, seen, and felt. To a considerable extent, reading aids this: criticism and judgments are essential in a country where a popular culture exists and is pervasive, and without reading, there can be no judgments, no criticisms, and no criterion of aesthetic and cultural value. In other words, no ascertainable value, period.  

The reason why reading is so important is the reason why criticism is so important: it helps us rationalise our senses, what they feel. One can’t rationalise what is felt that easily, of course, and neither should one take this as an excuse to intellectualise emotions (which is what makes so much of contemporary criticism so sterile, so stopgap). Criticism is basically the transformation of felt matter into discerned matter: communicating a culture to its consumers, cogently and cohesively.
Without reading, without getting in what others have written elsewhere, we can’t produce a community of critics. This, and not what puritans and moralists consider as the death knell of our society, is what ails us: our inability to take in and explain. The puritan will argue that it is the profusion of what he considers as a lowbrow culture which has resulted in us not reading, not understanding. My contention is different: I believe that even that which is misconceived by the puritans as “lowbrow” (H. R. Jothipala’s songs, Sunil Soma Peiris’ movies, Sujeewa Prasannaarachchi’s novels) can be transformed into deserving art, if one reads into it enough. Without the sort of culture of discernment this necessitates, however, what can we hope for?  

Needless to say, one can infer with all this that our growing inability and lack of interest in reading is a corollary of our growing inability at reading between the lines. Without a culture of reading there can’t be a culture of writing, to put it simply.  

When I revisit that editorial I read three years ago, therefore, what comes to my mind is that all those noodle-eating folk, who wish to have the time of their lives at an exhibition that is supposed to confer something of value to those who pay the 20 rupee admission and patronise it, are missing the point. By a wide margin. So wide that from those sobering reflections I’ve sketched out above, a third comes out: our neglect of our own literature, our own culture. I leave that for a later article, but for now, here are my two cents: without resorting to and nourishing our literature, the written word, we will find it difficult to replenish every other art-form in this country, from drama to music to film. How and why so, I will explore eventually. And soon.