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SRI LANKA - HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE
SRI LANKA'S HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE covers more than 2,000 years. Known as Lanka--the "resplendent land"--in the ancient Indian epic Ramayana, the island has numerous other references that testify to the island's natural beauty and wealth. Islamic folklore maintains that Adam and Eve were offered refuge on the island as solace for their expulsion from the Garden of Eden. Asian poets, noting the geographical location of the island and lauding its beauty, called it the "pearl upon the brow of India." A troubled nation in the 1980s, torn apart by communal violence, Sri Lanka has more recently been called India's "fallen tear."Sri Lanka claims a democratic tradition matched by few other developing countries, and since its independence in 1948, successive governments have been freely elected. Sri Lanka's citizens enjoy a long life expectancy, advanced health standards, and one of the highest literacy rates in the world despite the fact that the country has one of the lowest per capita incomes.In the years since independence, Sri Lanka has experienced severe communal clashes between its Buddhist Sinhalese majority-- approximately 74 percent of the population--and the country's largest minority group, the Sri Lankan Tamils, who are Hindus and comprise nearly 13 percent of the population. The communal violence that attracted the harsh scrutiny of the international media in the late 1980s can best be understood in the context of the island's complex historical development--its ancient and intricate relationship to India's civilization and its more than four centuries under colonial rule by European powers.
The Sinhalese claim to have been the earliest colonizers of Sri Lanka, first settling in the dry north-central regions as early as 500 B.C. Between the third century B.C. and the twelfth century A.D., they developed a great civilization centered around the cities of Anuradhapura and later Polonnaruwa, which was noted for its genius in hydraulic engineering--the construction of water tanks (reservoirs) and irrigation canals, for example--and its guardianship of Buddhism. State patronage gave Buddhism a heightened political importance that enabled the religion to escape the fate it had experienced in India, where it was eventually absorbed by Hinduism.The history of Buddhism in Sri Lanka, especially its extended period of glory, is for many Sinhalese a potent symbol that links the past with the present. An enduring ideology defined by two distinct elements--sinhaladipa (unity of the island with the Sinhalese) and dhammadipa (island of Buddhism)-- designates the Sinhalese as custodians of Sri Lankan society. This theme finds recurrent expression in the historical chronicles composed by Buddish monks over the centuries, from the mythological founding of the Sinhalese "lion" race around 300 B.C. to the capitulation of the Kingdom of Kandy, the last independent Sinhalese polity in the early nineteenth century.
The institutions of Buddhist-Sinhalese civilization in Sri Lanka came under attack during the colonial eras of the Portuguese, the Dutch and the British. During these centuries of colonialization, the state encouraged and supported Christianity- -first Roman Catholicism, then Protestantism. Most Sinhalese regard the entire period of European dominance as an unfortunate era, but most historians--Sri Lankan or otherwise--concede that British rule was relatively benign and progressive compared to that of the Dutch and Portuguese. Influenced by the ascendant philosophy of liberal reformism, the British were determined to anglicize the island, and in 1802, Sri Lanka (then called Ceylon) became Britain's first crown colony. The British gradually permitted native participation in the governmental process; and under the Donoughmore Constitution of 1931 and then the Soulbury Constitution of 1946, the franchise was dramatically extended, preparing the island for independence two years later.Under the statesmanship of Sri Lanka's first post independence leader, Don Stephen (D.S.) Senanayake, the country managed to rise above the bitterly divisive communal and religious emotions that later complicated the political agenda. Senanayake envisioned his country as a pluralist, multiethnic, secular state, in which minorities would be able to participate fully in government affairs. His vision for his nation soon faltered, however, and communal rivalry and confrontation appeared within the first decade of independence. Sinhalese nationalists aspired to recover the dominance in society they had lost during European rule, while Sri Lankan Tamils wanted to protect their minority community from domination or assimilation by the Sinhalese majority. No compromise was forthcoming, and as early as 1951, Tamil leaders stated that "the Tamil-speaking people in Ceylon constitute a nation distinct from that of the Sinhalese by every fundamental test of nationhood."Sinhalese nationalists did not have to wait long before they found an eloquent champion of their cause. Solomon West Ridgeway Dias (S.W.R.D.) Bandaranaike successfully challenged the nation's Westernized rulers who were alienated from Sinhalese culture; he became prime minister in 1956. A man particularly adept at harnessing Sinhalese communal passions, Bandaranaike vowed to make Sinhala the only language of administration and education and to restore Buddhism to its former glory. The violence unleashed by his policies directly threatened the unity of the nation, and communal riots rocked the country in 1956 and 1958. Bandaranaike became a victim of the passions he unleashed. In 1959 a Buddhist monk who felt that Bandaranaike had not pushed the Buddhist-Sinhalese cause far enough assassinated the Sri Lankan leader. Bandaranaike's widow, Sirimavo Ratwatte Dias (S.R.D.) Bandaranaike, ardently carried out many of his ideas. In 1960, she became the world's first woman prime minister.Communal tensions continued to rise over the following years. In 1972 the nation became a republic under a new constitution, which was a testimony to the ideology of Sirimavo Bandaranaike, and Buddhism was accorded special status. These reforms and new laws discriminating against Tamils in university admissions were a symbolic threat the Tamil community felt it could not ignore, and a vicious cycle of violence erupted that has plagued successive governments. Tamil agitation for separation became associated with gruesome and highly visible terrorist acts by extremists, triggering large communal riots in 1977, 1981, and 1983. During these riots, Sinhalese mobs retaliated against isolated and vulnerable Tamil communities. By the mid-1980s, the Tamil militant underground had grown in strength and posed a serious security threat to the government, and its combatants struggled for a Tamil nation--"Tamil Eelam"--by an increasing recourse to terrorism. The fundamental, unresolved problems facing society were surfacing with a previously unseen force. Foreign and domestic observers expressed concern for democratic procedures in a society driven by divisive symbols and divided by ethnic loyalties.
ORIGINS
Ancient Indian and Sri Lankan myths and chronicles have been studied intensively and interpreted widely for their insight into the human settlement and philosophical development of the island. Confirmation of the island's first colonizers--whether the Sinhalese or Sri Lankan Tamils--has been elusive, but evidence suggests that Sri Lanka has been, since earliest times, a multiethnic society. Sri Lankan historian K.M. de Silva believes that settlement and colonization by Indo-Aryan speakers may have preceded the arrival of Dravidian settlers by several centuries, but that early mixing rendered the two ethnic groups almost physically indistinct.
ANCIENT LEGENDS AND CHRONICLES
The first major legendary reference to the island is found in the great Indian epic, the Ramayana (Sacred Lake of the Deeds of Rama), thought to have been written around 500 B.C. The Ramayana tells of the conquest of Lanka in 3000 B.C. by Rama, an incarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu. Rama's quest to save his abducted wife, Sita, from Ravanna, the demon god of Lanka, and his demon hordes, is, according to some scholars, a poetic account of the early southward expansion of Brahmanic civilization.
BUDDHIST CHRONICLES
The most valuable source of knowledge for scholars probing the legends and historical heritage of Sri Lanka is still the Mahavamsa (Great Genealogy or Dynasty), a chronicle compiled in Pali, the language of Theravada Buddhism, in the sixth century. Buddhist monks composed the Mahavamsa, which was an adaptation of an earlier and cruder fourth century epic, the Dipavamsa (Island Genealogy or Dynasty). The latter account was compiled to glorify Buddhism and is not a comprehensive narrative of events. The Mahavamsa, however, relates the rise and fall of successive Buddhist kingdoms beginning with Vijaya, the legendary colonizer of Sri Lanka and primogenitor of the Sinhalese migrant group. In the Mahavamsa, Vijaya is described as having arrived on the island on the day of the Buddha's death (parinibbana) or, more precisely, his nirvana or nibbana (see Glossary), his release from the cycle of life and pain. The Mahavamsa also lavishes praise on the Sinhalese kings who repulsed attacks by Indian Tamils.Vijaya is the central legendary figure in the Mahavamsa. He was the grandson of an Indian princess from Vanga in northern India who had been abducted by an amorous lion, Simha, and son of their incestuous and half-leonine offspring. Along with 700 of his followers, Vijaya arrived in Lanka and established himself as ruler with the help of Kuveni, a local demon-worshiping princess. Although Kuveni had betrayed her own people and had given birth to two of Vijaya's children, she was banished by the ruler, who then arranged a marriage with a princess from Madurai in southeastern India. Kuveni's offspring are the folkloric ancestors of the present day Veddahs, an aboriginal people now living in scattered areas of eastern Sri Lanka (see Ethnic Groups ,ch. 2). Many scholars believe that the legend of Vijaya provides a glimpse into the early settlement of the island. Around the fifth century B.C., the first bands of Sri Lankan colonists are believed to have come from the coastal areas of northern India. The chronicles support evidence that the royal progeny of Vijaya often sought wives from the Pandyan and other Dravidian (Tamil) kingdoms of southern India. The chronicles also tell of an early and constant migration of artisan and mercantile Tamils to Sri Lanka.From the fifth century A.D onward, periodic palace intrigues and religious heresies weakened Buddhist institutions leaving Sinhalese-Buddhist culture increasingly vulnerable to successive and debilitating Tamil invasions. A chronicle, a continuation of the Mahavamsa, describes this decline. The main body of this chronicle, which assumed the less than grandiloquent title Culavamsa (Lesser Genealogy or Dynasty), was attributed to the thirteenth century poet-monk, Dhammakitti. The Culavamsa was later expanded by another monk the following century and, concluded by a third monk in the late eighteenth century.
THE IMPACT OF BUDDHISM
Buddhism was introduced to Sri Lanka in the third century B.C. from India, where it had been established by Siddartha Gautama three centuries earlier (see Buddhism ,ch. 2). The powerful Indian monarch, Asoka, nurtured the new comprehensive religio-philosophical system in the third century B.C. Asoka's conversion to Buddhism marks one of the turning points in religious history because at that time, Buddhism was elevated from a minor sect to an official religion enjoying all the advantages of royal patronage. Asoka's empire, which extended over most of India, supported one of the most vigorous missionary enterprises in history.The Buddhist tradition of chronicling events has aided the verification of historical figures. One of most important of these figures was King DevanampiyaTissa (250-c. 207 B.C.). According to the Mahavamsa, Asoka's son and emissary to Sri Lanka, Mahinda, introduced the monarch to Buddhism. DevanampiyaTissa became a powerful patron of Buddhism and established the monastery of Mahavihara, which became the historic center of Theravada Buddhism in Sri Lanka.Subsequent events also contributed to Sri Lanka's prestige in the Buddhist world. It was on the island, for example, that the oral teachings of the Buddha--the Tripitaka--were committed to writing for the first time.DevanampiyaTissa was said to have received Buddha's right collarbone and his revered alms bowl from Asoka and to have built the ThuparamaDagoba, or stupa (Buddhist shrine), to honor these highly revered relics. Another relic, Buddha's sacred tooth, had arrived in Sri Lanka in the fourth century A.D.. The possession of the Tooth Relic came to be regarded as essential for the legitimization of Sinhalese royalty and remained so until its capture and probable destruction by the Portuguese in 1560. The sacred Tooth Relic (thought by many to be a substitute) that is venerated in the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy links legendary Sri Lanka with the modern era. The annual procession of Perahera held in honor of the sacred Tooth Relic serves as a powerful unifying force for the Sinhalese in the twentieth century. Asoka's daughter, Sanghamitta, is recorded as having brought to the island a branch of the sacred bo tree under which the Buddha attained enlightenment. According to legend, the tree that grew from this branch is near the ruins of the ancient city of Anuradhapura in the north of Sri Lanka. The tree is said to be the oldest living thing in the world and is an object of great veneration.
The connection between religion, culture, language, and education and their combined influence on national identity have been an age-old pervasive force for the Sinhalese Buddhists. DevanampiyaTissa employed Asoka's strategy of merging the political state with Buddhism, supporting Buddhist institutions from the state's coffers, and locating temples close to the royal palace for greater control. With such patronage, Buddhism was positioned to evolve as the highest ethical and philosophical expression of Sinhalese culture and civilization. Buddhism appealed directly to the masses, leading to the growth of a collective Sinhalese cultural consciousness.In contrast to the theological exclusivity of Hindu Brahmanism, the Asokan missionary approach featured preaching and carried the principles of the Buddha directly to the common people. This proselytizing had even greater success in Sri Lanka than it had in India and could be said to be the island's first experiment in mass education.Buddhism also had a great effect on the literary development of the island. The Indo-Aryan dialect spoken by the early Sinhalese was comprehensible to missionaries from India and
facilitated early attempts at translating the scriptures. The Sinhalese literati studied Pali, the language of the Buddhist scriptures, thus influencing the development of Sinhala as a literary language.
THE CLASSICAL AGE, 200 B.C.-A.D. 1200
EARLY SETTLEMENTS
The first extensive Sinhalese settlements were along rivers in the dry northern zone of the island. Because early agricultural activity-- primarily the cultivation of wet rice-- was dependent on unreliable monsoon rains, the Sinhalese constructed canals, channels, water-storage tanks, and reservoirs to provide an elaborate irrigation system to counter the risks posed by periodic drought. Such early attempts at engineering reveal the brilliant understanding these ancient people had of hydraulic principles and trigonometry. The discovery of the principle of the valve tower, or valve pit, for regulating the escape of water is credited to Sinhalese ingenuity more than 2,000 years ago. By the first century A.D, several large-scale irrigation works had been completed.The mastery of hydraulic engineering and irrigated agriculture facilitated the concentration of large numbers of people in the northern dry zone, where early settlements appeared to be under the control of semi-independent rulers (see Land Use and Settlement Patterns ,ch. 2). In time, the mechanisms for political control became more refined, and the city-state of Anuradhapura emerged and attempted to gain sovereignty over the entire island. The state-sponsored flowering of Buddhist art and architecture and the construction of complex and extensive hydraulic works exemplify what is known as Sri Lanka's classical age, which roughly parallels the period between the rise and fall of Anuradhapura (from ca. 200 B.C. to ca. A.D. 993).The Sinhalese kingdom at Anuradhapura was in many ways typical of other ancient hydraulic societies because it lacked a rigid, authoritarian and heavily bureaucratic structure. Theorists have attributed Anuradhapura's decentralized character to its feudal basis, which was, however, a feudalism unlike that found in Europe. The institution of caste formed the basis of social stratification in ancient Sinhalese society and determined a person's social obligation, and position within the hierarchy.The caste system in Sri Lanka developed its own characteristics. Although it shared an occupational role with its Indian prototype, caste in Sri Lanka developed neither the exclusive Brahmanical social hierarchy nor, to any significant degree, the concept of defilement by contact with impure persons or substances that was central to the Indian caste system. The claims of the Kshatriya (warrior caste) to royalty were a moderating influence on caste, but more profound was the influence of Buddhism, which lessened the severity of the institution. The monarch theoretically held absolute powers but was nevertheless expected to conform to the rules of dharma, or universal laws governing human existence and conduct (see Religion ,ch. 2).
The king was traditionally entitled to land revenue equivalent to one-sixth of the produce in his domain. Furthermore, his subjects owed him a kind of caste-based compulsory labor (rajakariya in Sinhala) as a condition for holding land and were required to provide labor for road construction, irrigation projects, and other public works. During the later colonial period, the Europeans exploited the institution of rajakariya, which was destined to become an important moral and economic issue in the nineteenth century (see European Encroachment and Dominance, 1500-1948 , this ch.).Social divisions arose over the centuries between those engaged in agriculture and those engaged in nonagricultural occupations. The Govi (cultivators--see Glossary) belonged to the highest Sinhalese caste (Goyigama) and remained so in the late twentieth century. All Sri Lankan heads of state have, since independence, belonged to the Goyigama caste, as do about half of all Sinhalese. The importance of cultivation on the island is also reflected in the caste structure of the Hindu Tamils, among whom the Vellala (cultivator) is the highest caste.
RISE OF SINHALESE AND TAMIL ETHNIC AWARENESS
Because the Mahavamsa is essentially a chronicle of the early Sinhalese-Buddhist royalty on the island, it does not provide information on the island's early ethnic distributions. There is, for instance, only scant evidence as to when the first Tamil settlements were established. Tamil literary sources, however, speak of active trading centers in southern India as early as the third century B.C. and it is probable that these centers had at least some contact with settlements in northern Sri Lanka. There is some debate among historians as to whether settlement by Indo-Aryan speakers preceded settlement by Dravidian-speaking Tamils, but there is no dispute over the fact that Sri Lanka, from its earliest recorded history, was a multiethnic society. Evidence suggests that during the early centuries of Sri Lankan history there was considerable harmony between the Sinhalese and Tamils.The peace and stability of the island were first significantly affected around 237 B.C. when two adventurers from southern India, Sena and Guttika, usurped the Sinhalese throne at Anuradhapura. Their combined twenty-two-year rule marked the first time Sri Lanka was ruled by Tamils. The two were subsequently murdered, and the Sinhalese royal dynasty was restored. In 145 B.C., a Tamil general named Elara, of the Chola dynasty (which ruled much of India from the ninth to twelfth centuries A.D.), took over the throne at Anuradhapura and ruled for forty-four years. A Sinhalese king, Dutthagamani (or Duttugemunu), waged a fifteen-year campaign against the Tamil monarch and finally deposed him.Dutthagamani is the outstanding hero of the Mahavamsa, and his war against Elara is sometimes depicted in contemporary accounts as a major racial confrontation between Tamils and Sinhalese. A less biased and more factual interpretation, according to Sri Lankan historian K.M. de Silva, must take into consideration the large reserve of support Elara had among the Sinhalese. Furthermore, another Sri Lankan historian, SinnappahArasaratnam, argues that the war was a dynastic struggle that was purely political in nature. As a result of Dutthagamani's victory, Anuradhapura became the locus of power on the island. Arasaratnam suggests the conflict recorded in the Mahavamsa marked the beginning of Sinhalese nationalism and that Dutthagamani's victory is commonly interpreted as a confirmation that the island was a preserve for the Sinhalese and Buddhism. The historian maintains that the story is still capable of stirring the religio-communal passions of the Sinhalese.The Tamil threat to the Sinhalese Buddhist kingdoms had become very real in the fifth and sixth centuries A.D. Three Hindu empires in southern India--the Pandya, Pallava, and Chola-- were becoming more assertive. The Sinhalese perception of this threat intensified because in India, Buddhism--vulnerable to pressure and absorption by Hinduism--had already receded. Tamil ethnic and religious consciousness also matured during this period. In terms of culture, language, and religion, the Tamils had identified themselves as Dravidian, Tamil, and Hindu, respectively.Another Sinhalese king praised in the Mahavamsa is Dhatusena (459-77), who, in the fifth century A.D., liberated Anuradhapura from a quarter- century of Pandyan rule. The king was also honored as a generous patron of Buddhism and as a builder of water storage tanks. Dhatusena was killed by his son, Kasyapa (477-95), who is regarded as a great villain in Sri Lankan history. In fear of retribution from his exiled brother, the parricide moved the capital from Anuradhapura to Sigiriya, a fortress and palace perched on a monolithic rock 180 meters high. Although the capital was returned to Anuradhapura after Kasyapa was dethroned, Sigiriya is an architectural and engineering fete displayed in an inaccessible redoubt. The rock fortress eventually fell to Kasyapa's brother, who received help from an army of Indian mercenaries.In the seventh century A.D., Tamil influence became firmly embedded in the island's culture when Sinhalese Prince Manavamma seized the throne with Pallava assistance. The dynasty that Manavamma established was heavily indebted to Pallava patronage and continued for almost three centuries. During this time, Pallava influence extended to architecture and sculpture, both of which bear noticeable Hindu motifs.By the middle of the ninth century, the Pandyans had risen to a position of ascendancy in southern India, invaded northern Sri Lanka, and sacked Anuradhapura. The Pandyans demanded an indemnity as a price for their withdrawal. Shortly after the Pandyan departure, however, the Sinhalese invaded Pandya in support of a rival prince, and the Indian city of Madurai was sacked in the process.In the tenth century, the Sinhalese again sent an invading army to India, this time to aid the Pandyan king against the Cholas. The Pandyan king was defeated and fled to Sri Lanka, carrying with him the royal insignia. The Chola, initially under Rajaraja the Great (A.D 985-1018), were impatient to recapture the royal insignia; they sacked Anuradhapura in A.D. 993 and annexed Rajarata--the heartland of the Sinhalese kingdom--to the Chola Empire. King Mahinda V, the last of the Sinhalese monarchs to rule from Anuradhapura, fled to Rohana, where he reigned until 1017, when the Chola took him prisoner. He subsequently died in India in 1029.Under the rule of Rajaraja's son, Rajendra (1018-35), the Chola Empire grew stronger, to the extent that it posed a threat to states as far away as the empire of Sri Vijaya in modern Malaysia and Sumatra in Indonesia. For seventy-five years, Sri Lanka was ruled directly as a Chola province. During this period, Hinduism flourished, and Buddhism received a serious setback. After the destruction of Anuradhapura, the Chola set up their capital farther to the southeast, at Polonnaruwa, a strategically defensible location near the Mahaweli Ganga, a river that offered good protection against potential invaders from the southern Sinhalese kingdom of Ruhunu (see fig. 2). When the Sinhalese kings regained their dominance, they chose not to reestablish themselves at Anuradhapura because Polonnaruwa offered better geographical security from any future invasions from southern India. The area surrounding the new capital already had a well- developed irrigation system and a number of water storage tanks in the vicinity, including the great Minneriya Tank and its feeder canals built by King Mahasena (A.D. 274-301), the last of the Sinhalese monarchs mentioned in the Mahavamsa.King Vijayabahu I drove the Chola out of Sri Lanka in A.D. 1070. Considered by many as the author of Sinhalese freedom, the king recaptured Anuradhapura but ruled from Polonnaruwa, slightly less than 100 kilometers to the southeast. During his forty-year reign, Vijayabahu I (A.D. 1070-1110) concentrated on rebuilding the Buddhist temples and monasteries that had been neglected during Chola rule. He left no clearly designated successor to his throne, and a period of instability and civil war followed his rule until the rise of King Parakramabahu I, known as the Great (A.D. 1153-86).Parakramabahu is the greatest hero of the Culavamsa, and under his patronage, the city of Polonnaruwa grew to rival Anuradhapura in architectural diversity and as a repository of Buddhist art. Parakramabahu was a great patron of Buddhism and a reformer as well. He reorganized the sangha (community of monks) and healed a longstanding schism between Mahavihara--the Theravada Buddhist monastery--and Abhayagiri--the Mahayana Buddhist monastery. Parakramabahu's reign coincided with the last great period of Sinhalese hydraulic engineering; many remarkable irrigation works were constructed during his rule, including his crowning achievement, the massive ParakramaSamudra (Sea of Parakrama or Parakrama Tank). Polonnaruwa became one of the magnificent capitals of the ancient world, and nineteenth-century British historian Sir Emerson Tenant even estimated that during Parakramabahu's rule, the population of Polonnaruwa reached 3 million--a figure, however, that is considered to be too high by twentieth-century historians.Parakramabahu's reign was not only a time of Buddhist renaissance but also a period of religious expansionism abroad. Parakramabahu was powerful enough to send a punitive mission against the Burmese for their mistreatment of a Sri Lankan mission in 1164. The Sinhalese monarch also meddled extensively in Indian politics and invaded southern India in several unsuccessful expeditions to aid a Pandyan claimant to the throne.Although a revered figure in Sinhalese annals, Parakramabahu is believed to have greatly strained the royal treasury and contributed to the fall of the Sinhalese kingdom. The post- Parakramabahu history of Polonnaruwa describes the destruction of the city twenty-nine years after his death and fifteen rulers later. For the decade following Parakramabahu's death, however, a period of peace and stability ensued during the reign of King Nissankamalla (A.D. 1187-97). During Nissankamalla's rule, the Brahmanic legal system came to regulate the Sinhalese caste system. Henceforth, the highest caste stratum became identified with the cultivator caste, and land ownership conferred high status. Occupational caste became hereditary and regulated dietary and marriage codes. At the bottom of the caste strata was the Chandala, who corresponded roughly to the Indian untouchable. It was during this brief period that it became mandatory for the Sinhalese king to be a Buddhist.
DECLINE OF THE SINHALESE KINGDOM, 1200-1500
SINHALESE MIGRATION TO THE SOUTH
After Nissankamalla's death, a series of dynastic
disputes hastened the breakup of the kingdom of Polonnaruwa. Domestic
instability characterized the ensuing period, and incursions by
Chola and Pandyan invaders created greater turbulence, culminating in a
devastating campaign by the Kalinga, an eastern Indian dynasty. When Magha, the
Kalinga king, died in 1255,
another period of instability began, marking the beginning of the abandonment
of Polonnaruwa and the Sinhalese migration to the southwest from the northern
dry zone. The next three
kings after Magha ruled from rock fortresses to the west of Polonnaruwa. The
last king to rule from Polonnaruwa was Parakramabahu III (1278- 93). The
migration is one of the great
unsolved puzzles of South Asian history and is of considerable interest to academics because of the parallel abandonment of dry-zone civilizations in modern Cambodia, northern Thailand, and Burma.
unsolved puzzles of South Asian history and is of considerable interest to academics because of the parallel abandonment of dry-zone civilizations in modern Cambodia, northern Thailand, and Burma.
A WEAKENED STATE: INVASION, DISEASE, AND
SOCIAL INSTABILITY
The Sinhalese withdrawal from the north is
sometimes attributed to the cumulative effect of invasions from southern India
(a rationale that has been exploited against the Tamils in
modern Sinhalese politics). This interpretation has obvious weaknesses because
after each of the south Indian invasions of the preceding centuries, the
Sinhalese returned to the dry
zone from the hills and repaired and revived the ancient irrigation system.
K.M. de Silva suggests that the cumulative effects of repeated invasions
"ate into the vitals of a society already losing its vigour with
age." A civilization based on a dry-zone irrigation complex presupposes a
high degree of organization and a massive labor force to build and maintain the
works.
The decline of these public works mirrored the breakdown in the social order.
Another factor that seems to have retarded the resettlement of the dry zone was
the outbreak of malaria in
the thirteenth century. The mosquito found ideal breeding grounds in the
abandoned tanks and channels. (Malaria has often followed the destruction of
irrigation works in other parts of
Asia.) Indeed, all attempts at large-scale resettlement of the dry area in Sri
Lanka were thwarted until the introduction of modern pesticides.During the thirteenth century, the declining
Sinhalese kingdom faced threats of invasion from India and the expanding Tamil
kingdom of northern Sri Lanka. Taking advantage of
Sinhalese weakness, the Tamils secured control of the valuable pearl fisheries
around Jaffna Peninsula. During this time, the vast stretches of jungle that
cover north-central Sri Lanka
separated the Tamils and the Sinhalese. This geographical separation had
important psychological and cultural implications. The Tamils in the north
developed a more distinct and
confident culture, backed by a resurgent Hinduism that looked to the traditions
of southern India for its inspiration. Conversely, the Sinhalese were
increasingly restricted to the southern and central area of the island and were
fearful of the more numerous Tamils on the Indian mainland. The fact that the
Hindu kingdom at Jaffna was expending most of its military resources resisting
the advances of the expansionist Vijayanagara Empire (1336-1565) in India
enhanced the Sinhalese ability to resist further Tamil encroachments. Some
historians maintain that it
was the arrival of the Portuguese in the sixteenth century that prevented the
island from being overrun by south Indians.Foreign rulers took advantage of the disturbed
political state of the Sinhalese kingdom, and in the thirteenth century
Chandrabhanu, a Buddhist king from Malaya, invaded the island
twice. He attempted to seize the two most sacred relics of the Buddha in
Sinhalese custody, the Tooth Relic and the Alms Bowl. In the early fifteenth
century, the Ming dynasty Chinese
interceded on behalf of King Parakramabahu VI (1412-67), an enlightened monarch
who repulsed an invasion from the polity of Vijayanagara in southern India,
reunited Sri Lanka, and
earned renown as a patron of Buddhism and the arts. Parakramabahu VI was the
last Sinhalese king to rule the entire island.During this extended period of domestic
instability and frequent foreign invasion, Sinhalese culture experienced
fundamental change. Rice cultivation continued as the mainstay of
agriculture but was no longer dependent on an elaborate irrigation network. In
the wet zone, large-scale administrative cooperation was not as necessary as it
had been before. Foreign
trade was of increasing importance to the Sinhalese kings. In particular,
cinnamon--in great demand by Europeans--became a prime export commodity.
Because of the value of cinnamon,
the city of Kotte on the west coast (near modern Colombo) became the nominal
capital of the Sinhalese kingdom in the mid-fifteenth century. Still, the
Sinhalese kingdom remained
divided into numerous competing petty principalities.
EUROPEAN ENCROACHMENT AND DOMINANCE, 1500-1948
THE PORTUGUESE
By the late fifteenth century, Portugal, which
had already established its dominance as a maritime power in the Atlantic, was
exploring new waters. In 1497 Vasco da Gama sailed around
the Cape of Good Hope and discovered an ocean route connecting Europe with
India, thus inaugurating a new era of maritime supremacy for Portugal. The
Portuguese were consumed by two objectives in their empire-building efforts: to
convert followers of non-Christian religions to Roman Catholicism and to
capture the major share of the spice trade for the European
market. To carry out their goals, the Portuguese did not seek territorial
conquest, which would have been difficult given their small numbers. Instead,
they tried to dominate strategic
points through which trade passed. By virtue of their supremacy on the seas,
their knowledge of firearms, and by what has been called their "desperate
soldiering" on land, the
Portuguese gained an influence in South Asia that was far out of proportion to
their numerical strength.At the onset of the European period in Sri Lanka
in the sixteenth century, there were three native centers of political power:
the two Sinhalese kingdoms of Kotte and Kandy and the Tamil kingdom at Jaffna.
Kotte was the principal seat of Sinhalese power, and it claimed a largely
imaginary overlordship not only over Kandy but also over the entire island.
None of the three
kingdoms, however, had the strength to assert itself over the other two and
reunify the island.In 1505 Don Lourenço de Almeida, son of the
Portuguese viceroy in India, was sailing off the southwestern coast of Sri
Lanka looking for Moorish ships to attack when stormy weather
forced his fleet to dock at Galle. Word of these strangers who "eat hunks
of white stone and drink blood (presumably wine). . . and have guns with a
noise louder than thunder. . ." spread quickly and reached King
Parakramabahu VIII of Kotte (1484-1508), who offered gifts of cinnamon and
elephants to the Portuguese to take back to their home port at Cochin on the
Malabar Coast of southwestern India. The king also gave the Portuguese
permission to build a residence in Colombo for trade purposes. Within a short
time, however, Portuguese
militaristic and monopolistic intentions became apparent. Their heavily
fortified "trading post" at Colombo and open hostility toward the
island's Muslim traders aroused Sinhalese
suspicions.Following the decline of the Chola as a maritime
power in the twelfth century, Muslim trading communities in South Asia claimed
a major share of commerce in the Indian Ocean and
developed extensive east-west, as well as Indo-Sri Lankan, commercial trade
routes. As the Portuguese expanded into the region, this flourishing Muslim
trade became an irresistible
target for European interlopers. The sixteenth-century Roman Catholic Church
was intolerant of Islam and encouraged the Portuguese to take over the
profitable shipping trade
monopolized by the Moors. In addition, the Portuguese would later have another
strong motive for hostility toward the Moors because the latter played an
important role in the Kandyan
economy, one that enabled the kingdom successfully to resist the Portuguese.The Portuguese soon decided that the island,
which they called Cilao, conveyed a strategic advantage that was necessary for
protecting their coastal establishments in India and
increasing Lisbon's potential for dominating Indian Ocean trade. These
incentives proved irresistible, and, the Portuguese, with only a limited number
of personnel, sought to extend their power over the island. They had not long
to wait. Palace intrigue and then revolution in Kotte threatened the survival
of the kingdom. The Portuguese skillfully exploited these
developments. In 1521 Bhuvanekabahu, the ruler of Kotte, requested Portuguese
aid against his brother, Mayadunne, the more able rival king who had
established his independence from the Portuguese at Sitawake, a domain in the
Kotte kingdom. Powerless on his own, King Bhuvanekabahu became a puppet of the
Portuguese. But shortly before his death in 1551, the
king successfully obtained Portuguese recognition of his grandson, Dharmapala,
as his successor. Portugal pledged to protect Dharmapala from attack in return
for privileges, including a continuous payment in cinnamon and permission to
rebuild the fort at Colombo on a grander scale. When Bhuvanekabahu died,
Dharmapala, still a child, was entrusted to the
Franciscans for his education, and, in 1557, he converted to Roman Catholicism.
His conversion broke the centuries-old connection between Buddhism and the
state, and a great majority
of Sinhalese immediately disqualified the young monarch from any claim to the
throne. The rival king at Sitawake exploited the issue of the prince's
conversion and accused Dharmapala
of being a puppet of a foreign power.Before long, rival King Mayadunne had annexed
much of the Kotte kingdom and was threatening the security of the capital city
itself. The Portuguese were obliged to defend
Dharmapala (and their own credibility) because the ruler lacked a popular
following. They were subsequently forced to abandon Kotte and retreat to
Colombo, taking the despised puppet king with them. Mayadunne and, later, his
son, Rajasinha, besieged Colombo many times. The latter was so successful that
the Portuguese were once even forced to eat the flesh of their
dead to avoid starvation. The Portuguese would probably have lost their holdings in Sri Lanka had they not had maritime superiority and been able to send reinforcements by sea from their base at Goa on the western coast of India.The Kingdom of Sitawake put up the most vigorous opposition to Western imperialism in the island's history. For the seventy- three-year period of its existence, Sitawake (1521-94) rose to become the predominant power on the island, with only the Tamil kingdom at Jaffna and the Portuguese fort at Colombo beyond its control. When Rajasinha died in 1593, no effective successors were left to consolidate his gains, and the kingdom collapsed as quickly as it had arisen.Dharmapala, despised by his countrymen and totally compromised by the Portuguese, was deprived of all his royal duties and became completely manipulated by the Portuguese advisers surrounding him. In 1580 the Franciscans persuaded him to make out a deed donating his dominions to the king of Portugal. When Dharmapala died in 1597, the Portuguese emissary, the captain-general, took formal possession of the kingdom.Portuguese missionaries had also been busily involving themselves in the affairs of the Tamil kingdom at Jaffna, converting almost the entire island of Mannar to Roman Catholicism by 1544. The reaction of Sangily, king of Jaffna, however, was to lead an expedition to Mannar and decapitate the resident priest and about 600 of his congregation. The king of Portugal took this as a personal affront and sent several expeditions against Jaffna. The Portuguese, having disposed of the Tamil king who fled south, installed one of the Tamil princes on the throne, obliging him to pay an annual tribute. In 1619 Lisbon annexed the Kingdom of Jaffna.After the annexation of Jaffna, only the central highland Kingdom of Kandy--the last remnant of Buddhist Sinhalese power-- remained independent of Portuguese control. The kingdom acquired a new significance as custodian of Sinhalese nationalism. The Portuguese attempted the same strategy they had used successfully at Kotte and Jaffna and set up a puppet on the throne. They were able to put a queen on the Kandyan throne and even to have her baptized. But despite considerable Portuguese help, she was not able to retain power. The Portuguese spent the next half century trying in vain to expand their control over the Kingdom of Kandy. In one expedition in 1630, the Kandyans ambushed and massacred the whole Portuguese force, including the captain-general. The Kandyans fomented rebellion and consistently frustrated Portuguese attempts to expand into the interior.The areas the Portuguese claimed to control in Sri Lanka were part of what they majestically called the Estado da India and were governed in name by the viceroy in Goa, who represented the king. But in actuality, from headquarters in Colombo, the captain-general, a subordinate of the viceroy, directly ruled Sri Lanka with all the affectations of royalty once reserved for the Sinhalese kings.The Portuguese did not try to alter the existing basic structure of native administration. Although Portuguese governors were put in charge of each province, the customary hierarchy, determined by caste and land ownership, remained unchanged. Traditional Sinhalese institutions were maintained and placed at the service of the new rulers. Portuguese administrators offered land grants to Europeans and Sinhalese in place of salaries, and the traditional compulsory labor obligation was used for construction and military purposes.The Portuguese tried vigorously, if not fanatically, to force religious and, to a lesser extent, educational, change in Sri Lanka. They discriminated against other religions with a vengeance, destroyed Buddhist and Hindu temples, and gave the temple lands to Roman Catholic religious orders. Buddhist monks fled to Kandy, which became a refuge for people disaffected with colonial rule. One of the most durable legacies of the Portuguese was the conversion of a large number of Sinhalese and Tamils to Roman Catholicism. Although small pockets of Nestorian Christianity had existed in Sri Lanka, the Portuguese were the first to propagate Christianity on a mass scale.
dead to avoid starvation. The Portuguese would probably have lost their holdings in Sri Lanka had they not had maritime superiority and been able to send reinforcements by sea from their base at Goa on the western coast of India.The Kingdom of Sitawake put up the most vigorous opposition to Western imperialism in the island's history. For the seventy- three-year period of its existence, Sitawake (1521-94) rose to become the predominant power on the island, with only the Tamil kingdom at Jaffna and the Portuguese fort at Colombo beyond its control. When Rajasinha died in 1593, no effective successors were left to consolidate his gains, and the kingdom collapsed as quickly as it had arisen.Dharmapala, despised by his countrymen and totally compromised by the Portuguese, was deprived of all his royal duties and became completely manipulated by the Portuguese advisers surrounding him. In 1580 the Franciscans persuaded him to make out a deed donating his dominions to the king of Portugal. When Dharmapala died in 1597, the Portuguese emissary, the captain-general, took formal possession of the kingdom.Portuguese missionaries had also been busily involving themselves in the affairs of the Tamil kingdom at Jaffna, converting almost the entire island of Mannar to Roman Catholicism by 1544. The reaction of Sangily, king of Jaffna, however, was to lead an expedition to Mannar and decapitate the resident priest and about 600 of his congregation. The king of Portugal took this as a personal affront and sent several expeditions against Jaffna. The Portuguese, having disposed of the Tamil king who fled south, installed one of the Tamil princes on the throne, obliging him to pay an annual tribute. In 1619 Lisbon annexed the Kingdom of Jaffna.After the annexation of Jaffna, only the central highland Kingdom of Kandy--the last remnant of Buddhist Sinhalese power-- remained independent of Portuguese control. The kingdom acquired a new significance as custodian of Sinhalese nationalism. The Portuguese attempted the same strategy they had used successfully at Kotte and Jaffna and set up a puppet on the throne. They were able to put a queen on the Kandyan throne and even to have her baptized. But despite considerable Portuguese help, she was not able to retain power. The Portuguese spent the next half century trying in vain to expand their control over the Kingdom of Kandy. In one expedition in 1630, the Kandyans ambushed and massacred the whole Portuguese force, including the captain-general. The Kandyans fomented rebellion and consistently frustrated Portuguese attempts to expand into the interior.The areas the Portuguese claimed to control in Sri Lanka were part of what they majestically called the Estado da India and were governed in name by the viceroy in Goa, who represented the king. But in actuality, from headquarters in Colombo, the captain-general, a subordinate of the viceroy, directly ruled Sri Lanka with all the affectations of royalty once reserved for the Sinhalese kings.The Portuguese did not try to alter the existing basic structure of native administration. Although Portuguese governors were put in charge of each province, the customary hierarchy, determined by caste and land ownership, remained unchanged. Traditional Sinhalese institutions were maintained and placed at the service of the new rulers. Portuguese administrators offered land grants to Europeans and Sinhalese in place of salaries, and the traditional compulsory labor obligation was used for construction and military purposes.The Portuguese tried vigorously, if not fanatically, to force religious and, to a lesser extent, educational, change in Sri Lanka. They discriminated against other religions with a vengeance, destroyed Buddhist and Hindu temples, and gave the temple lands to Roman Catholic religious orders. Buddhist monks fled to Kandy, which became a refuge for people disaffected with colonial rule. One of the most durable legacies of the Portuguese was the conversion of a large number of Sinhalese and Tamils to Roman Catholicism. Although small pockets of Nestorian Christianity had existed in Sri Lanka, the Portuguese were the first to propagate Christianity on a mass scale.
Sixteenth-century Portuguese Catholicism was
intolerant. But perhaps because it caught Buddhism at its nadir, it
nevertheless became rooted firmly enough on the island to survive the
subsequent persecutions of the Protestant Dutch Reformists. The Roman Catholic
Church was especially effective in fishing communities--both Sinhalese and
Tamil--and contributed to
the upward mobility of the castes associated with this occupation. Portuguese
emphasis on proselytization spurred the development and standardization of
educational institutions. In
order to convert the masses, mission schools were opened, with instruction in
Portuguese and Sinhalese or Tamil. Many Sinhalese converts assumed Portuguese
names. The rise of
many families influential in the twentieth century dates from this period. For
a while, Portuguese became not only the language of the upper classes of Sri
Lanka but also the lingua franca
of prominence in the Asian maritime world.
THE DUTCH
THE DUTCH
The Dutch became involved in the politics of the
Indian Ocean in the beginning of the seventeenth century. Headquartered at
Batavia in modern Indonesia, the Dutch moved to wrest
control of the highly profitable spice trade from the Portuguese. The Dutch
began negotiations with King Rajasinha II of Kandy in 1638. A treaty assured
the king assistance in his war
against the Portuguese in exchange for a monopoly of the island's major trade
goods, particularly cinnamon. Rajasinha also promised to pay the Dutch's
war-related expenses. The
Portuguese fiercely resisted the Dutch and the Kandyans and were expelled only
gradually from their strongholds. The Dutch captured the eastern ports of
Trincomalee and Batticaloa in
1639 and restored them to the Sinhalese. But when the southwestern and western
ports of Galle and Negombo fell in 1640, the Dutch refused to turn them over to
the king of Kandy. The
Dutch claimed that Rajasinha had not reimbursed them for their vastly inflated
claims for military expenditures. This pretext allowed the Dutch to control the
island's richest cinnamon
lands. The Dutch ultimately presented the king of Kandy with such a large bill
for help against the Portuguese that the king could never hope to repay it.
After extensive fighting, the
Portuguese surrendered Colombo in 1656 and Jaffna, their last stronghold, in
1658. Superior economic resources and greater naval power enabled the Dutch to
dominate the Indian
Ocean. They attacked Portuguese positions throughout South Asia and in the end
allowed their adversaries to keep only their settlement at Goa.The king of Kandy soon realized that he had
replaced one foe with another and proceeded to incite rebellion in the lowlands
where the Dutch held sway. He even attempted to ally the
British in Madras in his struggle to oust the Dutch. These efforts ended with a
serious rebellion against his rule in 1664. The Dutch profited from this period
of instability and extended
the territory under their control. They took over the remaining harbors and
completely cordoned off Kandy, thereby making the highland kingdom landlocked
and preventing it from
allying itself with another foreign power (see fig. 2). This strategy, combined
with a concerted Dutch display of force, subdued the Kandyan kings. Henceforth,
Kandy was unable to offer
significant resistance except in its internal frontier regions. The Dutch and
the Kingdom of Kandy eventually settled down to an uneasy modus vivendi, partly
because the Dutch became
less aggressive. Despite underlying hostility between Kandy and the Dutch, open
warfare between them occurred only once--in 1762--when the Dutch, exasperated
by Kandy's
provocation of riots in the lowlands, launched a punitive expedition. The
expedition met with disaster, but a better-planned second expedition in 1765
forced the Kandyans to sign a
treaty that gave the Dutch sovereignty over the lowlands. The Dutch, however,
maintained their pretension that they administered the territories under their
control as agents of the
Kandyan ruler.After taking political control of the island, the
Dutch proceeded to monopolize trade. This monopoly was at first limited to
cinnamon and elephants but later extended to other goods.
Control was vested in the Dutch East India Company, a joint-stock corporation,
which had been established for the purpose of carrying out trade with the
islands of Indonesia but was
later called upon to exercise sovereign responsibilities in many parts of Asia.The Dutch tried with little success to supplant
Roman Catholicism with Protestantism. They rewarded native conversion to the
Dutch Reformed Church with promises of upward mobility,
but Catholicism was too deeply rooted. (In the 1980s, the majority of Sri
Lankan Christians remained Roman Catholics.) The Dutch were far more tolerant
of the indigenous religions than
the Portuguese; they prohibited open Buddhist and Hindu religious observance in
urban areas, but did not interfere with these practices in rural areas. The
Dutch banned Roman Catholic
practices, however. They regarded Portuguese power and Catholicism as mutually
interdependent and strove to safeguard against the reemergence of the former by
persecuting the
latter. They harassed Catholics and constructed Protestant chapels on
confiscated church property.The Dutch contributed significantly to the
evolution of the judicial, and, to a lesser extent, administrative systems on
the island. They codified indigenous law and customs that did not
conflict directly with Dutch-Roman jurisprudence. The outstanding example was
Dutch codification of the Tamil legal code of Jaffna- -the Thesavalamai. To a
small degree, the Dutch
altered the traditional land grant and tenure system, but they usually followed
the Portuguese pattern of minimal interference with indigenous social and
cultural institutions. The
provincial governors of the territories of Jaffnapatam, Colombo, and
Trincomalee were Dutch. These rulers also supervised various local officials,
most of whom were the traditional
mudaliyar (headmen).
The Dutch, like the Portuguese before them, tried
to entice their fellow countrymen to settle in Sri Lanka, but attempts to lure
members of the upper class, especially women, were not very
successful. Lower-ranking military recruits, however, responded to the
incentive of free land, and their marriages to local women added another group
to the island's already small but
established population of Eurasians--the Portuguese Burghers. The Dutch
Burghers formed a separate and privileged ethnic group on the island in the
twentieth century.During the Dutch period, social differences
between lowland and highland Sinhalese hardened, forming two culturally and
politically distinct groups. Western customs and laws
increasingly influenced the lowland Sinhalese, who generally enjoyed a higher
standard of living and greater literacy. Despite their relative economic and
political decline, the highland
Sinhalese were nonetheless proud to have retained their political independence
from the Europeans and thus considered themselves superior to the lowland
Sinhalese.
THE BRITISH
EARLY CONTACTS
In 1592 an English privateer attacked the
Portuguese off the southwestern port of Galle. This action was England's first
recorded contact with Sri Lanka. A decade later, Ralph Fitch,
traveling from India, became the first known English visitor to Sri Lanka. The
English did not record their first in-depth impressions of the island until the
mid-seventeenth century, when
Robert Knox, a sailor, was captured when his ship docked for repairs near
Trincomalee. The Kandyans kept him prisoner between 1660 and 1680. After his
escape, Knox wrote a popular
book entitled An Historical Relation of the Island of Ceylon in which he
described his years among his "decadent" captors.By the mid-eighteenth century, it was apparent
that the Mughal Empire (1526-1757) in India faced imminent collapse, and the
major European powers were positioning themselves to fill
the power vacuum in the subcontinent. Dutch holdings on Sri Lanka were
challenged in time by the British, who had an interest in the excellent harbor
at Trincomalee. The British interest
in procuring an all-weather port was whetted when they almost lost the Indian
port of Madras to the French in 1758. The Dutch refused to grant the British
permission to dock ships at
Trincomalee (after The Netherlands's decision to support the French in the
American War of Independence), goading the British into action. After
skirmishing with both the Dutch and
French, the British took Trincomalee in 1796 and proceeded to expel the Dutch
from the island.
THE BRITISH REPLACE THE DUTCH
In 1766 the Dutch had forced the Kandyans to sign
a treaty, which the Kandyans later considered so harsh that they immediately
began searching for foreign assistance in expelling their
foes. They approached the British in 1762, 1782, and 1795. The first Kandyan
missions failed, but in 1795, British emissaries offered a draft treaty that
would extend military aid in return
for control of the seacoast and a monopoly of the cinnamon trade. The Kandyan
king unsuccessfully sought better terms, and the British managed to oust the
Dutch without significant
help in 1796.
The Kandyans' search for foreign assistance
against the Dutch was a mistake because they simply replaced a relatively weak
master with a powerful one. Britain was emerging as the
unchallenged leader in the new age of the Industrial Revolution, a time of
technological invention, economic innovations, and imperialist expansion. The
nations that had launched the
first phase of European imperialism in Asia--the Portuguese and the Dutch--had
already exhausted themselves.While peace negotiations were under way in Europe
in 1796, the British assumed Sri Lanka would eventually be restored to the
Dutch. By 1797 however, London had decided to retain the
island as a British possession. The government compelled the British East India
Company to share in the administration of the island and guaranteed the company
a monopoly of trade,
especially the moderately profitable--but no longer robust--cinnamon trade. The
governor of the island was responsible for law and order, but financial and
commercial matters were under
the control of the director of the East India Company. This system of
"dual control" lasted from 1798 to 1802. After the Dutch formally
ceded the island to the British in the 1801 Peace of
Amiens, Sri Lanka became Britain's first crown colony. Following Lord Nelson's
naval victory over the French at Trafalgar in 1805, British superiority on the
seas was unchallenged and
provided new security for the British colonies in Asia.Once the British had established themselves in
Sri Lanka, they aggressively expanded their territorial possessions by a
combination of annexation and intervention, a policy that
paralleled the approach pursued by Lord Wellesley in India in the early
nineteenth century. This strategy directly threatened the continued existence
of the Kingdom of Kandy. Unrest at
the Kandyan court between a ruling dynasty of alien, southern Indian
antecedents and powerful, indigenous Sinhalese chieftains provided
opportunities for British interference. The
intrigue of the king's chief minister precipitated the first Kandyan war
(1803). With the minister's knowledge, a British force marched on Kandy, but
the force was ill prepared for such an
ambitious venture and its leaders were misinformed of the extent of the king's
unpopularity. The British expedition was at first successful, but on the return
march, it was plagued by
disease, and the garrison left behind was decimated. During the next decade, no
concerted attempt was made to take Kandy. But in 1815 the British had another
opportunity. The king had
antagonized local Sinhalese chiefs and further alienated the Sinhalese people
by actions against Buddhist monks and temple property. In 1815, the Kandyan
rebels invited the British to
intervene. The governor quickly responded by sending a well-prepared force to
Kandy; the king fled with hardly a shot fired.Kandyan headmen and the British signed a treaty
known as the Kandyan Convention in March 1815. The treaty decreed that the
Kandyan provinces be brought under British
sovereignty and that all the traditional privileges of the chiefs be
maintained. The Kingdom of Kandy was also to be governed according to its
customary Buddhist laws and institutions
but would be under the administration of a British "resident" at
Kandy, who would, in all but name, take the place of the monarch.In general, the old system was allowed to
continue, but its future was bleak because of the great incongruity between the
principles on which the British administration was based and
the principles of the Kandyan hierarchy. Because the changes under the treaty
tended to diminish the power and influence of the chiefs, the British
introduced the new procedures with
great caution. The monks, in particular, resented the virtual disappearance of the monarchy, which was their traditional source of support. They also resented the monarchy's replacement by a foreign and impartial government. Troubled by the corresponding decline in their status, the monks began to stir up political and religious discontent among the Kandyans almost immediately following the British annexation. The popular and widespread rebellion that followed was suppressed with great severity. When hostilities ended in 1818, the British issued a proclamation that brought the Kandyan provinces under closer control. British agents usurped the powers and privileges of the chiefs and became the arbitrators of provincial authority. Finally, the British reduced the institutional privileges accorded Buddhism, in effect placing the religion on an equal footing with other religions. With the final British consolidation over Kandy, the country fell under the control of a single power--for the first time since the twelfth-century rule of Parakramabahu I and Nissankamalla.
great caution. The monks, in particular, resented the virtual disappearance of the monarchy, which was their traditional source of support. They also resented the monarchy's replacement by a foreign and impartial government. Troubled by the corresponding decline in their status, the monks began to stir up political and religious discontent among the Kandyans almost immediately following the British annexation. The popular and widespread rebellion that followed was suppressed with great severity. When hostilities ended in 1818, the British issued a proclamation that brought the Kandyan provinces under closer control. British agents usurped the powers and privileges of the chiefs and became the arbitrators of provincial authority. Finally, the British reduced the institutional privileges accorded Buddhism, in effect placing the religion on an equal footing with other religions. With the final British consolidation over Kandy, the country fell under the control of a single power--for the first time since the twelfth-century rule of Parakramabahu I and Nissankamalla.
MODERNIZATION AND REFORM
According to Sri Lankan historian Zeylanicus,
each of the three epochs of European rule on the island lasted roughly 150
years, but rather than being assessed separately, these epochs
should be thought of collectively as a "mighty cantilever of time with the
Pax Britannica as the central pillar." Many British institutions have
survived and currently have a direct and
lasting influence on cultural and political events. Historian E.F.C. Ludowyck
concurs, stating that whatever the Portuguese and Dutch did, the British
improved upon. He attributed this
accomplishment to British grounding in liberalism, a belief in the emancipation
of slaves, the absence of religious persecution, and conscious attempts to
maintain good relations between
the rulers and the ruled.When the British first conquered the maritime
provinces of Sri Lanka, the indigenous population of the island was estimated
at only 800,000. When the British left a century and a half
later, the population had grown to more than 7 million. Over a relatively short
period, the island had developed an economy capable of supporting the
burgeoning population. Roads,
railways, schools, hospitals, hydroelectric projects, and large welloperated
agricultural plantations provided the infrastructure for a viable national
economy.In the early years of British colonization, Sri
Lanka was not considered a great economic asset but was viewed instead almost
exclusively in terms of its strategic value. By the 1820s,
however, this perception was changing. As governor, Sir Edward Barnes was
responsible for consolidating British military control over the Kandyan
provinces through a program of
vigorous road construction. He also began experimenting with a variety of
commercial crops, such as coffee. These experiments provided the foundation of
the plantation system that
was launched a decade later. In administrative matters, the British were
initially careful not to change the existing social order too quickly and were
not inclined to mingle socially. A sharp
distinction was made between the rulers and the ruled, but in time the
distinction became less defined. The governor, who held all executive and
legislative power, had an advisory
council made up of colonial officials with top posts filled by members of a
civil service recruited in Britain. The governor was under the director of the
Colonial Office in London but was
given whatever discretionary powers he needed to balance the colony's budget
and to make sure that the colony brought in enough revenue to cover its
military and administrative
expenses.
By the early 1830s, the British had almost
finished consolidating their position in Sri Lanka and began to take more of an
interest in securing the island's political stability and economic
profitability. A new wave of thought, influenced by the reformist political
ideology articulated by Jeremy Bentham and James Mill, promised to change
fundamentally Britain's relationship
to its colonies. Known as utilitarianism, and later as philosophical
radicalism, it promoted the idea of democracy and individual liberty. This
philosophy sponsored the idea of the
trusteeship, i.e., that new territories would be considered trusts and would
receive all the benefits of British liberalism. These philosophical
abstractions were put into practical use with
the recommendations of a commission led by W.M.G. Colebrooke and C.H. Cameron.
Their Colebrooke Report (1831-32) was an important document in the history of
the island. G.C.
Mendis, considered by many to be the doyen of modern Sri Lankan history,
considers the Colebrooke-Cameron reforms to be the dividing line between the
past and present in Sri Lanka.
THE COLEBROOKE-CAMERON REFORMS
In 1829 the British Colonial Office sent a Royal
Commission of Eastern Inquiry--the Colebrooke-Cameron Commission--to assess the
administration of the island. The legal and economic
proposals made by the commission in 1833 were innovative and radical. The
proposed reforms opposed mercantilism, state monopolies, discriminatory
administrative regulations, and, in
general, any interference in the economy. Many of the proposals were adopted
and helped set a pattern of administrative, economic, judicial, and educational
development that continued
into the next century.The commission worked to end the protested
administrative division of the country along ethnic and cultural lines into
lowcountry Sinhalese, Kandyan Sinhalese, and Tamil areas. The
commission proposed instead that the country be put under one uniform administrative
system, which was to be divided into five provinces. Colebrooke believed that
in the past,
separate administrative systems had encouraged social and cultural divisions,
and that the first step toward the creation of a modern nation was the administrative
unification of the
country. Cameron applied the same principle to the judicial system, which he
proposed be unified into one system and be extended to all classes of people,
offering everyone equal rights
in the eyes of the law. His recommendations were adopted and enforced under the
Charter of Justice in 1833.
The commissioners also favored the
decentralization of executive power in the government. They stripped away many
of the autocratic powers vested in the governor, replacing his
advisory council with an Executive Council, which included both official and
unofficial nominees. The Executive Council appointed the members of the
Legislative Council, which
functioned as a forum for discussion of legislative matters. The Legislative
Council placed special emphasis on Sri Lankan membership, and in 1833 three of
the fifteen members were Sri
Lankans. The governor nominated them to represent low-country Sinhalese,
Burghers, and Tamils, respectively. The commissioners also voted to change the
exclusively British character
of the administrative services and recommended that the civil service include
local citizens. These proposed constitutional reforms were revolutionary--far
more liberal than the legal
systems of any other European colony.The opening of the Ceylon Civil Service to Sri
Lankans required that a new emphasis be placed on English education. In time,
the opening contributed to the creation of a Westernized
elite, whose members would spearhead the drive for independence in the
twentieth century. The Colebrooke-Cameron Commission emphasized the
standardization of educational
curriculum and advocated the substitution of English for local languages. Local
English schools were established, and the missionary schools that had
previously taught in the
vernacular also adopted English.
ECONOMIC INNOVATIONS
The Colebrooke-Cameron reforms had an immediate
impact on the economic development of the island. Many features of the economic
structure the reforms helped put into place still
exist. The commission advocated a laissez-faire economy. To encourage free
trade, the government monopolies over cinnamon cultivation and trade were
abolished. Traditional
institutions, such as land tenure by accommodessan (the granting of land for
cultivation, as opposed to its outright sale), was abolished, as was the
rajakariya system. Rajakariya was
opposed not only on moral grounds but also because it slowed the growth of
private enterprise, impeded the creation of a land market, and interfered with
the free movement of labor.In the mid-1830s, the British began to experiment
with a variety of plantation crops in Sri Lanka, using many of the
technological innovations developed earlier from their experience in
Jamaica. Within fifteen years, one of these crops, coffee, became so successful
that it transformed the island's economy from reliance upon subsistence crops
to plantation agriculture.
The first coffee plantation was opened in the Kandyan hill region in 1827, but
it was not until the mid-1830s that a number of favorable factors combined to
make the widespread
cultivation of the crop a highly profitable enterprise. Governor Edward Barnes
(1824-31) foresaw the possibilities of coffee cultivation and introduced
various incentives for its cultivation,
particularly the lifting of coffee export duties and exemption from the land
produce tax. When slavery was abolished in the West Indies and coffee
production there declined, Sri Lankan
coffee exports soared, filling the gap in the world market. The problem of
limited availability of land for coffee estates was solved when the British
government sold lands that it had
acquired from the Kandyan kings.
The coffee plantation system faced a serious
labor shortage. Among the Sinhalese, a peasant cultivator of paddy land held a
much higher status than a landless laborer. In addition, the
low wages paid to hired workers failed to attract the Kandyan peasant, and the
peak season for harvesting plantation coffee usually coincided with the
peasant's own harvest. Moreover,
population pressure and underemployment were not acute until the twentieth
century. To compensate for this scarcity of native workers, an inexpensive and
almost inexhaustible supply
of labor was found among the Tamils in southern India. They were recruited for
the coffee-harvesting season and migrated to and from Sri Lanka, often amid
great hardships. The
immigration of these Indian Tamils began as a trickle in the 1830s and became a
regular flow a decade later, when the government of India removed all
restrictions on the migration of labor
to Sri Lanka.British civilian and military officials resident
in Kandy provided initial capital for coffee cultivation, provoking
contemporary observations in the 1840s that they behaved more like coffee
planters than government employees. This private capitalization led to serious
abuses, however, culminating in an 1840 ordinance that made it virtually
impossible for a Kandyan peasant
to prove that his land was not truly crown land and thus subject to
expropriation and resale to coffee interests. In this period, more than 80,000
hectares of Kandyan land were
appropriated and sold as crown lands.Between 1830 and 1850, coffee held the preeminent place in the economy and became a catalyst for the island's modernization. The greater availability of capital and the increase in export trade brought the rudiments of capitalist organization to the country. The Ceylon Bank opened in 1841 to finance the rapid expansion of coffee plantations. Since the main center of coffee production was in the Kandyan provinces, the expansion of coffee and the network of roads and railroads ended the isolation of the old Kandyan kingdom. The coffee plantation system had served as the economic foundation for the unification of the island while reinforcing the administrative and judicial reforms of the Colebrooke-Cameron Commission.The plantation system dominated the economy in Sri Lanka to such an extent that one observer described the government as an "appendage of the estates (plantations)." Worldwide depression in 1846 temporarily checked the rapid development of the plantation system. Falling coffee prices caused financial disruption, aggravating the friction that had been developing between the static traditional feudal economy and modernized commercial agriculture. In order to make up for lost revenue, the government imposed a series of new taxes on firearms, dogs, shops, boats, carriages, and bullock carts. All of these taxes affected Sinhalese farmers. Other measures that further alienated the Kandyans included a land tax and a road ordinance in 1848 that reintroduced a form of rajakariya by requiring six days' free labor on roads or the payment of a cash equivalent. But the measure that most antagonized the Kandyans (especially those associated with the Buddhist sangha) was the alienation of temple lands for coffee plantations.British troops so severely repressed a rebellion that broke out among the Kandyans in 1848 that the House of Commons in London commissioned an investigation to look into the matter.
appropriated and sold as crown lands.Between 1830 and 1850, coffee held the preeminent place in the economy and became a catalyst for the island's modernization. The greater availability of capital and the increase in export trade brought the rudiments of capitalist organization to the country. The Ceylon Bank opened in 1841 to finance the rapid expansion of coffee plantations. Since the main center of coffee production was in the Kandyan provinces, the expansion of coffee and the network of roads and railroads ended the isolation of the old Kandyan kingdom. The coffee plantation system had served as the economic foundation for the unification of the island while reinforcing the administrative and judicial reforms of the Colebrooke-Cameron Commission.The plantation system dominated the economy in Sri Lanka to such an extent that one observer described the government as an "appendage of the estates (plantations)." Worldwide depression in 1846 temporarily checked the rapid development of the plantation system. Falling coffee prices caused financial disruption, aggravating the friction that had been developing between the static traditional feudal economy and modernized commercial agriculture. In order to make up for lost revenue, the government imposed a series of new taxes on firearms, dogs, shops, boats, carriages, and bullock carts. All of these taxes affected Sinhalese farmers. Other measures that further alienated the Kandyans included a land tax and a road ordinance in 1848 that reintroduced a form of rajakariya by requiring six days' free labor on roads or the payment of a cash equivalent. But the measure that most antagonized the Kandyans (especially those associated with the Buddhist sangha) was the alienation of temple lands for coffee plantations.British troops so severely repressed a rebellion that broke out among the Kandyans in 1848 that the House of Commons in London commissioned an investigation to look into the matter.
The governor and his chief secretary were subsequently dismissed, and all new
taxes, except the road ordinance, were repealed. The government adopted a new
policy toward Buddhism
after the rebellion, recognizing the importance of Buddhist monks as leaders of
Kandyan public opinion.The plantation era transformed the island's
economy. This was most evident in the growth of the export sector at the
expense of the traditional agricultural sector. The colonial
predilection for growing commercial instead of subsistence crops later was
considered by Sri Lankan nationalists to be one of the unfortunate legacies of
European domination. Late
nineteenth- century official documents that recorded famines and chronic rural
poverty support the nationalists' argument. Other issues, notably the British
policy of selling state land to
planters for conversion into plantations, are equally controversial, even
though some members of the indigenous population participated in all stages of
plantation agriculture. Sri
Lankans, for example, controlled over one-third of the area under coffee
cultivation and most of the land in coconut production. They also owned
significant interests in rubber.In 1869 a devastating leaf
disease--hemleiavastratrix struck the coffee plantations and spread quickly
throughout the plantation district, destroying the coffee industry within
fifteen
years. Planters desperately searched for a substitute crop. One crop that showed promise was chinchona (quinine). After an initial appearance of success, however, the market price of the crop fell and never fully recovered. Cinnamon, which had suffered a setback in the beginning of the century, was revived at this time, but only to become an important minor crop.Among all of the crops experimented with during the decline of coffee, only tea showed any real promise of success. A decline in the demand for Chinese tea in Britain opened up possibilities for Indian tea, especially the fine variety indigenous to Assam. Climatic conditions for the cultivation of tea were excellent in Sri Lanka, especially in the hill country. By the end of the century, tea production on the island had risen enormously. Because of the inelasticity of the market, however, British outlets soon became saturated. Attempts to develop other markets, especially in the United States, were largely unsuccessful, and a glut emerged after World War II.The tea estates needed a completely different type of labor force than had been required during the coffee era. Tea was harvested throughout the year and required a permanent labor force. Waves of Indian Tamil immigrants settled on the estates and eventually became a large and permanent underclass that endured abominable working conditions and squalid housing. The census of 1911 recorded the number of Indian laborers in Sri Lanka at about 500,000--about 12 percent of the island's total population. In the 1980s, the Indian Tamils made up almost 6 percent of the island's population (see Population ,ch. 2.)The Tamil laborers emigrated to Sri Lanka from India not as individuals but as part of family units or groups of interrelated families. Thus, they tended to maintain their native cultural patterns on the estates where they settled. Although the Indian Tamils spoke the same language as the Sri Lankan Tamils, were Hindus, and traced their cultural origins to southern India, they considered themselves to be culturally distinct from the Sri Lankan Tamils. Their distinctiveness as a group and their cultural differences from the Sinhalese and the Sri Lankan Tamils were recognized in the constitutional reforms of 1924, when two members of the Indian Tamil community were nominated to the Legislative Council.As the nineteenth century drew to a close, experimentation in crop diversification, on a moderate level in the years before the collapse of the coffee market, became of greater importance. Responding to international market trends, planters attempted to diversify the crops they produced to insulate their revenues from world price fluctuations. Not all their experiments were successful. The first sugar plantation was established in 1837, but sugar cultivation was not well-suited to the island and has never been very successful. Cocoa was also tried for a time and has continued as one of the lesser exports. Rubber, which was introduced in 1837, became a major export during the slump in the tea export market in the 1900s. The rubber export trade exceeded that of tea during World War I. But after suffering severe losses during the depression of the 1930s, rubber exports never again regained their preeminent position.
years. Planters desperately searched for a substitute crop. One crop that showed promise was chinchona (quinine). After an initial appearance of success, however, the market price of the crop fell and never fully recovered. Cinnamon, which had suffered a setback in the beginning of the century, was revived at this time, but only to become an important minor crop.Among all of the crops experimented with during the decline of coffee, only tea showed any real promise of success. A decline in the demand for Chinese tea in Britain opened up possibilities for Indian tea, especially the fine variety indigenous to Assam. Climatic conditions for the cultivation of tea were excellent in Sri Lanka, especially in the hill country. By the end of the century, tea production on the island had risen enormously. Because of the inelasticity of the market, however, British outlets soon became saturated. Attempts to develop other markets, especially in the United States, were largely unsuccessful, and a glut emerged after World War II.The tea estates needed a completely different type of labor force than had been required during the coffee era. Tea was harvested throughout the year and required a permanent labor force. Waves of Indian Tamil immigrants settled on the estates and eventually became a large and permanent underclass that endured abominable working conditions and squalid housing. The census of 1911 recorded the number of Indian laborers in Sri Lanka at about 500,000--about 12 percent of the island's total population. In the 1980s, the Indian Tamils made up almost 6 percent of the island's population (see Population ,ch. 2.)The Tamil laborers emigrated to Sri Lanka from India not as individuals but as part of family units or groups of interrelated families. Thus, they tended to maintain their native cultural patterns on the estates where they settled. Although the Indian Tamils spoke the same language as the Sri Lankan Tamils, were Hindus, and traced their cultural origins to southern India, they considered themselves to be culturally distinct from the Sri Lankan Tamils. Their distinctiveness as a group and their cultural differences from the Sinhalese and the Sri Lankan Tamils were recognized in the constitutional reforms of 1924, when two members of the Indian Tamil community were nominated to the Legislative Council.As the nineteenth century drew to a close, experimentation in crop diversification, on a moderate level in the years before the collapse of the coffee market, became of greater importance. Responding to international market trends, planters attempted to diversify the crops they produced to insulate their revenues from world price fluctuations. Not all their experiments were successful. The first sugar plantation was established in 1837, but sugar cultivation was not well-suited to the island and has never been very successful. Cocoa was also tried for a time and has continued as one of the lesser exports. Rubber, which was introduced in 1837, became a major export during the slump in the tea export market in the 1900s. The rubber export trade exceeded that of tea during World War I. But after suffering severe losses during the depression of the 1930s, rubber exports never again regained their preeminent position.
RISE OF THE SRI LANKAN MIDDLE CLASS
By the nineteenth century, a new society was
emerging--a product of East and West. It was a society with strict rules
separating the rulers from the ruled, and most social association
between the British and Sri Lankans was taboo. The British community was
largely a microcosm of English society with all its class divisions. At the top
of the social pyramid were the
British officials of the Ceylon Civil Service. Elaborate social conventions
regulated the conduct of the service's members and served to distinguish them
as an exclusive caste. This
situation, however, changed slowly in the latter part of the nineteenth century
and quite rapidly in the next century.In Sri Lanka as in India, the British created an
educated class to provide administrative and professional services in the
colony. By the late nineteenth century, most members of this
emerging class were associated directly or indirectly with the government.
Increased Sri Lankan participation in government affairs demanded the creation
of a legal profession; the need
for state health services required a corps of medical professionals; and the
spread of education provided an impetus to develop the teaching profession. In
addition, the expansion of
commercial plantations created a legion of new trades and occupations:
landowners, planters, transport agents, contractors, and businessmen. Certain
Sinhalese caste groups, such as
the fishermen (Karava) and cinnamon peelers (Salagama), benefited from the
emerging new economic order, to the detriment of the traditional ruling
cultivators (Goyigama).The development of a capitalist economy forced
the traditional elite--the chiefs and headmen among the low-country Sinhalese
and the Kandyan aristocracy--to compete with new
groups for the favors of the British. These upwardly mobile, primarily urban,
professionals formed a new class that transcended divisions of race and caste.
This class, particularly its
uppermost strata, was steeped in Western culture and ideology. Thisanglicized
elite generally had conservative political leanings, was loyal to the
government, and resembled the British
so much in outlook and social customs that its members were sometimes called
brown sahibs. At the apex of this new class was a handful of Sri Lankans who
had been able to join the
exclusive ranks of the civil service in the nineteenth century. The first Sri
Lankan entered by competitive examination in 1840. At that time, entrance
examinations were held only in
London and required an English education, so only a few members of the native
middle class could aspire to such an elitist career. Consequently, in spite of
the liberal policies that
Colebrooke and Cameron recommended, the British held virtually all high posts
in the colonial administration.
BUDDHIST REVIVALISM
Beginning around the middle of the nineteenth
century, the Buddhist clergy attempted to reform the sangha (religious
community), particularly as a reaction against Christian missionary
activities. In the 1870s, Buddhist activists enlisted the help of an American,
Colonel Henry Steele Olcott. An ardent abolitionist in the years leading up to
the American Civil War, Olcott cofounded and later became president of the Theosophical Movement, which was
organized on a worldwide basis to promote goodwill and to champion the rights
of the underprivileged.
Shortly after his arrival in Sri Lanka, Olcott organized a Buddhist campaign
against British officials and British missionaries. His Buddhist Theosophical
Society of Ceylon went on to
establish three institutions of higher learning: Ananda College, Mahinda
College, and Dharmaraja College. Olcott's society founded these and some 200
lower schools to impart Buddhist
education with a strong nationalist bias. Olcott and his society took a special
interest in the historical past of the Sinhalese Buddhist kingdoms on the
island and managed to persuade
the British governor to make Vesak, the chief Buddhist festival, a public
holiday.
CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM
The rediscovery of old Buddhist texts rekindled a
popular interest in Sri Lanka's ancient civilization. The study of the past became
an important aspect of the new drive for education.
Archaeologists began work at Anuradhapura and at Polonnaruwa, and their finds
contributed to the resurgent national pride. In the 1880s, a Buddhist-inspired
temperance movement
was also initiated to fight drunkenness, and the Ceylon Social Reform Society
was founded in 1905 to combat other temptations associated with Westernization.
Encouraged by the free
reign of expression that the government extended to these reformists, a growing
number of communal and regional political associations began to press for
constitutional reform in the
closing years of the nineteenth century. The colonial government was petitioned
for permission to have Sri Lankan representation in the Executive Council and
expanded regional
representation in the Legislative Council. In response, the colonial government
permitted a modest experiment in 1910, allowing a small electorate of Sri
Lankans to send one of their
members to the Legislative Council. Other seats held by Sri Lankans retained
the old practice of communal representation.
WORLD WAR I
World War I had only a minimal military impact on
Sri Lanka, which entered the war as part of the British Empire. The closest
fighting took place in the Bay of Bengal, where an Australian
warship sank a German cruiser. But the war had an important influence on the
growth of nationalism. The Allies' wartime propaganda extolled the virtues of
freedom and
self-determination of nations, and the message was heard and duly noted by Sri
Lankan nationalists. There was, however, an event, only indirectly related to
the war, that served as the
immediate spark for the growth of nationalism. In 1915 communal rioting broke
out between the Sinhalese and Muslims on the west coast. The British panicked,
misconstruing the
disturbances as part of an antigovernment conspiracy; they blamed the majority
ethnic group and indiscriminately arrested many Sinhalese, including D.S.
Senanayake--the future first
prime minister of Sri Lanka--who had actually tried to use his influence to
curb the riots. The British put down the unrest with excessive zeal and
brutality, which shocked British and Sri
Lankan observers alike. Some sympathetic accounts of the unrest take into
consideration that the judgment of the governor of the time, Sir Robert
Chalmers (1913-16), may have been
clouded by the loss of his two sons on the Western Front in Europe. At any rate, his actions insured that 1915 was a turning point in the nationalist movement. From then on, activists mobilized for coordinated action against the British.
clouded by the loss of his two sons on the Western Front in Europe. At any rate, his actions insured that 1915 was a turning point in the nationalist movement. From then on, activists mobilized for coordinated action against the British.
The nationalist movement in India served as a
model to nationalists in Sri Lanka. In 1917 the Indian National Congress and
the Muslim League mended their differences and issued a joint
declaration for the "progressive realization" of responsible
government in India. Nationalists in Sri Lanka learned from their Indian
counterparts that they had to become more national
and less partisan in their push for constitutional reform. In 1919 the major
Sinhalese and Tamil political organizations united to form the Ceylon National
Congress. One of the first actions
of the congress was to submit a proposal for a new constitution that would
increase local control over the Executive Council and the budget. These demands
were not met, but they led
to the promulgation of a new constitution in 1920. Amendments to the
constitution in 1924 increased Sri Lankan representation. Although the
nationalists' demand for representation in
the Executive Council was not granted, the Legislative Council was expanded to
include a majority of elected Sri Lankan unofficial members, bringing the
island closer to representative
government. Yet the franchise remained restrictive and included only about 4
percent of the island's population.
THE DONOUGHMORE COMMISSION
In 1927 a royal commission under the Earl of
Donoughmore visited Sri Lanka to ascertain why representative government as
chartered by the 1924 constitution had not succeeded and to
suggest constitutional changes necessary for the island's eventual self-rule.
The commission declared that the constitution had authorized a government
characterized by the "divorce of
power from responsibility," which at times seemed "rather like holy
matrimony at its worst." The 1924 constitution, considered by the
commission to be "an unqualified failure," failed to
provide a strong, credible executive body of representatives. To remedy these
shortcomings, the commission proposed universal adult franchise and an
experimental system of
government to be run by executive committees. The resulting Donoughmore
Constitution, promulgated in 1931 to accommodate these new proposals in
government, was a unique
document that provided Sri Lankans with training for self-government. The
document, however, reserved the highest level of responsibility for the British
governor, whose assent was
necessary for all legislation. The legislative branch of the government--the
State Council-- functioned in both an executive and legislative capacity. Seven
committees performed executive
duties. Each committee consisted of designated members of the State Council and
was chaired by an elected Sri Lankan, who was addressed as minister. Three
British officers of
ministerial rank, along with the seven Sri Lankan ministers, formed a board of
ministers. The British ministers collectively handled responsibility for
defense, external affairs, finance, and
judicial matters.
The Donoughmore Constitution ushered in a period
of experimentation in participatory democracy but contemporary political
scientists have criticized it for not having provided an
atmosphere conducive to the growth of a healthy party system. The system of
executive committees did not lead to the development of national political
parties. Instead, a number of
splinter political groups evolved around influential personalities who usually
followed a vision too limited or an agenda too communally partisan to have an
impact on national politics.Among the Sinhalese, a form of nationalism arose
that sought once again to restore Buddhism to its former glory. The Great
Council of the Sinhalese (Sinhala MahaSabha), which was
founded by S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike in 1937, was the strongest proponent of this
resurgent ideology. Other groups followed suit, also organizing on communal
grounds. These groups
included the Burgher Political Association in 1938, the Ceylon Indian Congress
in 1939, and the All Ceylon Tamil Congress in 1944.
GROWTH OF LEFTIST PARTIES
During the Donoughmore period of political
experimentation, several leftist parties were formed. Unlike most other Sri
Lankan parties, these leftist parties were noncommunal in
membership. Working-class activism, especially trade unionism, became an
important political factor during the sustained economic slump between the
world wars. The first important
leftist party was the Labour Party, founded in 1931 by A.E. Goonesimha. Three
Marxistoriented parties--the Ceylon Equal Society Party (Lanka SamaSamaja
Party--LSSP), the
Bolshevik-Leninist Party, and the Communist Party of Sri Lanka
(CPSL)--represented the far left. All three were divided on both ideological
and personal grounds. The Soviet Union's
expulsion of Leon Trotsky from the Communist Party after Lenin's death in 1924
and Stalin's subsequent decision to enter World War II on the Allied side
exacerbated these differences,
dividing the Communists into Trotskyites and Stalinists. The LSSP, formed in
1935 and the oldest of the Sri Lankan Marxist parties, took a stance
independent of the Soviet Union,
becoming affiliated with the Trotskyite Fourth International, which was a rival
of the Comintern. Most LSSP leaders were arrested during World War II for their
opposition to what they
considered to be an "imperial war." Although in more recent years,
the LSSP has been considered a politically spent force, gaining, for example
less than 1 percent of the vote in the 1982
presidential elections, it has nevertheless been touted as the world's only
successful Trotskyite party.
The CPSL, which began as a Stalinist faction of
the LSSP that was later expelled, formed its own party in 1943, remaining
faithful to the dictates of the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union. The Bolshevik-Leninist Party was formed in 1945 as another breakaway
group of the LSSP. The leftist parties represented the numerically small urban
working class. Partly
because these parties operated through the medium of trade unionism, they
lacked the wider mass appeal needed at the national level to provide an effective
extraparliamentary challenge
to the central government. Nonetheless, because the leftists occasionally
formed temporary political coalitions before national elections, they posed
more than just a mere "parliamentary
nuisance factor."
WORLD WAR II AND THE TRANSITION TO
INDEPENDENCE
When Singapore fell to the Japanese in February
1942, Sri Lanka became a central base for British operations in Southeast Asia,
and the port at Trincomalee recaptured its historically
strategic importance. Because Sri Lanka was an indispensable strategic bastion
for the British Royal Navy, it was an irresistible military target for the
Japanese. For a time, it seemed that
Japan planned a sweeping westward offensive across the Indian Ocean to take Sri
Lanka, sever the Allies' lifeline to Persian Gulf oil, and link up with the
Axis powers in Egypt. Admiral
Isoroku Yamamoto, mastermind of the raid on Pearl Harbor, ordered Vice Admiral
ChuichiNagumo to command a large armada to seek and destroy the British Eastern
Fleet in the Indian
Ocean. The two nations' fleets played a game of hide-and-seek, but never met.
Some military historians assert that if they had met, the smaller British fleet
would have met with disaster.
The British instead fought several desperate air battles over Colombo and
Trincomalee and lost about thirty-six aircraft and several ships.Yamamoto's grand strategy failed to isolate and
destroy any major units of the British fleet. But if the Japanese had persisted
with their offensive, the island, with its limited British naval
defenses, probably would have fallen. The Japanese carrier force, however,
suffered such high aircraft losses over Sri Lanka--more than 100
warplanes--that it returned to Japan for
refitting rather than press the attack. By returning to Japan, the force lost
its opportunity for unchallenged supremacy of the Indian Ocean. The focus of
the war in this theater then
shifted away from the island.On the whole, Sri Lanka benefited from its role
in World War II. The plantation sector was busy meeting the urgent demands of
the Allies for essential products, especially rubber,
enabling the country to save a surplus in hard currency. Because Sri Lanka was
the seat of the Southeast Asia Command, a broad infrastructure of health
services and modern amenities
was built to accommodate the large number of troops posted into all parts of
the country. The inherited infrastructure improved the standard of living in
postwar, independent Sri Lanka.Unlike India, where nationalists demanded a
guarantee of independence as recompense for their support in the war effort,
Sri Lanka committed itself wholeheartedly to the Allied war
effort. Although the island was put under military jurisdiction during the war,
the British and the Sri Lankans maintained cooperative relations. Sri Lankan
pressure for political reform
continued during the war, however, and increased as the Japanese threat receded
and the war neared its end. The British eventually promised full participatory
government after the war.In July 1944, Lord Soulbury was appointed head of
a commission charged with the task of examining a new constitutional draft that
the Sri Lankan ministers had proposed. The
commission made recommendations that led to a new constitution. As the end of
the war approached, the constitution was amended to incorporate a provision
giving Sri Lanka dominion
status.British constitutional principles served as a
model for the Soulbury Constitution of independent Sri Lanka, which combined a
parliamentary system with a bicameral legislature. Members
of the first House of Representatives were directly elected by popular vote.
Members of the Senate, or upper house, were elected partly by members of the
House and partly by the
governor general, who was primarily a figurehead. The British monarch appointed
the governor general on the advice of the most powerful person in the Sri
Lankan government--the
prime minister.
INDEPENDENCE
The British negotiated the island's dominion
status with the leader of the State Council, D.S. Senanayake, during World War
II. Senanayake was also minister of agriculture and vice
chairman of the Board of Ministers. The negotiations ended with the Ceylon
Independence Act of 1947, which formalized the transfer of power. Senanayake
was the founder and leader of
the United National Party (UNP), a partnership of many disparate groups formed
during the Donoughmore period, including the Ceylon National Congress, the
Sinhala MahaSabha, and
the Muslim League. The UNP easily won the 1947 elections, challenged only by a
collection of small, primarily leftist parties. On February 4, 1948, when the
new constitution went into
effect (making Sri Lanka a dominion), the UNP embarked on a ten-year period of
rule.
DIVISIONS IN THE BODY POLITIC
The prospects for an economically robust, fully
participatory, and manageable democracy looked good during the first years of
independence. In contrast to India, which had gained
independence a year earlier, there was no massive violence and little social
unrest. In Sri Lanka there was also a good measure of governmental continuity.
Still, important unresolved
ethnic problems soon had to be addressed. The most immediate of these problems
was the "Indian question," which concerned the political status of
Tamil immigrants who worked on
the highland tea plantations. The Soulbury Commission had left this sensitive
question to be resolved by the incoming government.After independence, debate about the status of
the Indian Tamils continued. But three pieces of legislation--the Ceylon
Citizenship Act of 1948; the Indian and Pakistani Residents Act
No. 3 of 1948, and the Ceylon Parliamentary Elections Amendment Act No. 48 of
1949--all but disenfranchised this minority group. The Ceylon Indian Congress
vigorously but
unsuccessfully opposed the legislation. The acrimonious debate over the laws of
1948 and 1949 revealed serious fissures in the body politic. There was a
cleavage along ethnic lines
between the Sinhalese and the Tamils, and also a widening rift between Sri
Lankan Tamils and Indian Tamils.In 1949 a faction of the Ceylon Tamil Congress
(the major Tamil party in Sri Lanka at the time) broke away to form the (Tamil)
Federal Party under the leadership of S.J.V. Chelvanayakam.
The creation of the Federal Party was a momentous postindependence development
because it set the agenda for Tamil exclusivity in Sri Lankan politics. Soon
after its founding, the
Federal Party replaced the more conciliatory Tamil Congress as the major party among Sri Lankan Tamils and advocated an aggressive stance vis-à-vis the Sinhalese.
Federal Party replaced the more conciliatory Tamil Congress as the major party among Sri Lankan Tamils and advocated an aggressive stance vis-à-vis the Sinhalese.
UNITED NATIONAL PARTY "MAJORITY"
RULE, 1948-56
The largest political party in independent Sri
Lanka, the United National Party (UNP), emerged as an umbrella party from the
colonial era. It was similar in some respects to the Indian
National Congress. Like its Indian counterpart, the UNP represented a union of
a number of groups espousing different personalities and ideologies. Known
later as the "uncle-nephew
party" because of the kinship ties among the party's top leadership, the
UNP served as the standard-bearer of conservative forces. In late 1947, when
the party won the country's first
general election, the UNP attempted to establish an anticommunist,
intercommunal parliamentary form of government. Prominent nationalists, such as
D.S. Senanayake and S.W.R.D.
Bandaranaike (the country's first and fourth prime ministers, respectively),
led the UNP. The party's internal differences gradually worsened, however. The
first and most serious break
came in July 1951, when Bandaranaike's left-of-center bloc seceded to form the
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the first major non-Marxist political movement
to oppose the UNP.Despite the benevolent guidance of Senanayake,
the UNP could not defuse the nascent dissension between the Sinhalese and the
Tamils. Some of Senanayake's policies, particularly his
awarding of land grants to Sinhalese settlers for the resettlement of the
northern dry zone, precipitated renewed competition between the two ethnic
groups.When Senanayake died in a horseback-riding
accident in March 1952, not only the UNP, but also the entire nation suffered
from the loss of the only man who could pose as a credible
symbol for the country's unity. In the election that was held immediately after
Senanayake's death, the UNP, led by his son Dudley, and the SLFP, led by
Bandaranaike, vied for Sinhalese
votes, while the Tamil Congress and Federal Party competed for the Tamil vote.
The UNP won the election, and the SLFP emerged as major opposition party. The
SLFP managed to win
only nine out of forty-eight seats in Parliament. The Tamil Congress, having
supported the UNP, lost much of its following to the Federal Party, which
continued to advocate an
autonomous homeland within a Sri Lankan federation. Ethnic tensions, although
mounting, remained manageable.
After D. S. Senanayake's death, the nation's
economic problems became apparent. The terms of world trade were turning
against Sri Lanka. The population was growing faster than
production in most sectors. A World Bank (see Glossary) study completed in 1952
noted that social and welfare services were consuming 35 percent of the budget.
The report
recommended that the government rice subsidy--which accounted for the major
portion of the expenditure--be reduced. Prime Minister Senanayake followed the
advice, but the move
proved to be his political undoing. A massive, sometimes violent civil
disobedience movement was launched to protest the reduction of the rice subsidy
and provoked the resignation of
Senanayake. In October 1953, his cousin, Sir John Kotelawala, became prime
minister and remained in office until the UNP defeat in the 1956 election.The UNP government under Kotelawala disagreed
with India's interpretation of political solidarity in the developing world.
This divergence became painfully clear to India at the Colombo
Conference of 1954 and the Bandung Conference in Indonesia in 1955.
Kotelawala's strident condemnation of communism, as well as the more
fashionable condemnation of Western
imperialism, especially irritated India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
Kotelawala was also anxious to have Ceylon join the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization (SEATO), but he
encountered strong domestic opposition to the plan. The Soviet Union was
especially sensitive to what it considered the government's pro-Western
attitude and repeatedly vetoed Sri
Lanka's application to join the United Nations (UN). Sri Lanka was finally
admitted in 1955 as part of an East-West agreement.The UNP continued a defense agreement with the
British that spared Sri Lanka the cost of maintaining a large military
establishment. National defense consumed less than 4 percent of
the government budget in the postindependence years, and hence the military was
not in a position to interfere with politics.
EMERGENCE OF THE SRI LANKA FREEDOM PARTY
Following its defeat in 1952, the SLFP marshaled
its forces in preparation for the next national election. The 1956 election was
destined to become a turning point in the modern history of
Sri Lanka and is seen by many observers as a social revolution resulting in the
eclipse of the Westernized elite. S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike campaigned as the
"defender of a besieged
Sinhalese culture" and demanded radical changes in the system.
Bandaranaike came from a family of Westernized Sinhalese and was educated at
Oxford, but early in his political career,
he rejected many of the Western elements of his background and embraced the
Buddhist faith and adopted native garb (regarded at the time as an affectation
among members of his
class). Bandaranaike brought to the election a deep knowledge of the passions
that communal politics could provoke. His Sinhala MahaSabha, founded in 1937 as
a movement within the
Ceylon National Congress, was the only wing of the congress at that time that
sought to infuse a Sinhala consciousness into Sri Lankan nationalism. The
Sinhala MahaSabha formed the
backbone of Bandaranaike's SLFP and helped spread his 1956 election warning
that Buddhism was in danger. Accusations of a "conspiracy" between
the UNP and the Roman Catholic
Church helped raise emotions feverishly. As one commentator put it,
"Bandaranaike built up a popular following based on the Sinhalese dislike
of Christian influence, essentially stoking
the fires of communal and religious bigotry."Bandaranaike and his supporters used the UNP's
pro-Western stance as a potent propaganda weapon against the party. He claimed
that the independence granted in 1948 was "fake"
and that real independence could only be attained by severing all links with the Commonwealth of Nations. In economic matters, Bandaranaike planned to nationalize plantations, banks, and insurance companies. He advocated the control over trade and industry vested in Sinhalese hands. With such a radical platform, Bandaranaike managed to unite many disparate groups into his People's United Front (MahajanaEksathPeramuna--MEP), a political coalition under the leadership of his SLFP formed to defeat the UNP. In addition, he was able to forge a no-contest pact with two Marxist parties, the LSSP and the CPSL.The central and most explosive issue of the 1956 election was a linguistic one. After independence, it was commonly accepted that Sinhala and Tamil would replace English as the language of administration, but Bandaranaike announced that only Sinhala would be given official status if his coalition won the election. Bandaranaike introduced a dangerous emotionalism into the election with his "Sinhala only" platform, which labeled both Tamil and English as cultural imports.
and that real independence could only be attained by severing all links with the Commonwealth of Nations. In economic matters, Bandaranaike planned to nationalize plantations, banks, and insurance companies. He advocated the control over trade and industry vested in Sinhalese hands. With such a radical platform, Bandaranaike managed to unite many disparate groups into his People's United Front (MahajanaEksathPeramuna--MEP), a political coalition under the leadership of his SLFP formed to defeat the UNP. In addition, he was able to forge a no-contest pact with two Marxist parties, the LSSP and the CPSL.The central and most explosive issue of the 1956 election was a linguistic one. After independence, it was commonly accepted that Sinhala and Tamil would replace English as the language of administration, but Bandaranaike announced that only Sinhala would be given official status if his coalition won the election. Bandaranaike introduced a dangerous emotionalism into the election with his "Sinhala only" platform, which labeled both Tamil and English as cultural imports.
The 2,500th anniversary of the death of the
Buddha (which also marked the legendary landing of Vijaya and his followers on
the island) coincided with the 1956 election, electrifying the
political atmosphere. The UNP was susceptible to the emotional power of these
issues. In what was later seen as a shameless last-minute reversal, the party
also espoused the "Sinhala
only" program. This political about-face came too late to help the UNP,
for the party lost the election, winning only eight seats in parliament. The
People's United Front won the majority
share of fifty-one seats.
TAMIL POLITICS
Some political commentators hold that it was in
the wake of the 1956 elections that two completely separate and basically
hostile political systems emerged in Sri Lanka: one for the
Sinhalese and another for the Tamils. The trend toward Tamil exclusivity,
however, despite periods of accommodation with Sinhalese political parties, had
begun developing before
independence. The first political organization to be formed specifically to
protect the welfare of an ethnic minority was the All Ceylon Tamil Congress
(ACTC), which G.G. Ponnambalam
founded in 1944. The Tamil Congress attempted to secure adequate constitutional
safeguards before the country attained its independence. These attempts
reflected Tamil anxieties that
British domination would simply give way to domination by the Sinhalese
majority.After independence, a dissident Tamil group in
the ACTC emerged under the leadership of S.J.V. Chelvanayakam. The new group
disagreed with Ponnambalam's policy of collaboration
with the intercommunal, but Sinhalese-dominated, UNP. In 1949 the dissidents
broke away from the ACTC and formed the rival Federal Party, which proposed
establishing an
autonomous Tamil linguistic state within a federal union of Sri Lanka. The
Federal Party regarded this alternative as the only practical way to preserve
Tamil identity.In 1956 the Federal Party emerged as the dominant
Tamil political group as a result of its convincing victory over the
conservative Tamil Congress. The Federal Party had a distinct
advantage because the Tamil Congress had suffered considerably from the stigma
of its association with the UNP (which had abandoned its policy of making both
Sinhala and Tamil
national languages in an attempt to obtain the support of the numerically
greater Sinhalese vote).The Federal Party continued to consolidate its
strength and became an important player in national politics. In 1965 the party
became a component of the UNP-led coalition government
by committing its bloc of parliamentary seats to the UNP, which at that time
needed the Federal Party's support to form a stable parliamentary majority. In
1968 however, the Federal Party
withdrew from the UNP government because its leaders were convinced that the
party could no longer derive any tangible benefits from further association
with the UNP. In 1970 the
Federal Party campaigned independently, unlike the Tamil Congress, whose
leaders called on the Tamils to join a united front with the Sinhalese.
SRI LANKA FREEDOM PARTY RULE, 1956-65
LEGISLATION AND COMMUNAL AGITATION
Some of the first actions taken by the new SLFP
government reflected a disturbing insensitivity to minority concerns. Shortly after
its victory, the new government presented parliament
with the Official Language Act, which declared Sinhala the one official
language. The act was passed and immediately caused a reaction among Tamils,
who perceived their language,
culture, and economic position to be under attack.The passage of the Official Language Act
precipitated a current of antagonism between the Tamils and the Sinhalese. The
Sri Lankan Tamils, represented by the Federal Party, launched a
satyagraha (nonviolent protest) that resulted in a pact between S.V.R.D.
Bandaranaike and S.J.V. Chelvanayakam. The agreement provided a wide measure of
Tamil autonomy in
Northern and Eastern provinces. It also provided for the use of the Tamil
language in administrative matters. The BandaranaikeChelvanayakam Pact also
promised that "early
consideration" would be extended to Indian "plantation" Tamils
on the question of Sri Lankan citizenship. But the pact was not carried out
because of a peaceful protest by Buddhist
clergy, who, with support from the UNP, denounced the pact as a "betrayal
of Sinhalese-Buddhist people."In May 1958, a rumor that a Tamil had killed a
Sinhalese sparked off nationwide communal riots. Hundreds of people, mostly
Tamils, died. This disturbance was the first major episode of
communal violence on the island since independence. The riots left a deep
psychological scar between the two major ethnic groups. The government declared
a state of emergency and
forcibly relocated more than 25,000 Tamil refugees from Sinhalese areas to
Tamil areas in the north.
POPULIST ECONOMIC POLICIES
The Bandaranaike government actively expanded the
public sector and broadened domestic welfare programs, including pension plans,
medical care, nutrition programs, and food and
fuel subsidies. This social agenda threatened to drain the nation's treasury.
Other popular but economically unfeasible schemes promoted by the Bandaranaike
government included
restrictions on foreign investment, the nationalization of critical industries,
and land reform measures that nationalized plantations and redistributed land
to peasants.When a Buddhist extremist assassinated
Bandaranaike in September 1959, the nation faced a period of grave instability.
The institution of parliamentary multiparty politics proved strong
enough to endure, however, and orderly, constitutional actions resolved the
leadership succession. The office of prime minister passed to the minister of
education, Wijeyananda
Dahanayake, who pledged to carry on the socialist policies of his predecessor.
But policy differences and personality clashes within the ruling circle forced
the new leader to dissolve
Parliament in December 1959. The short-lived Dahanayake government, unable to
hold Bandaranaike's coalition government together, was defeated by the UNP in
the March 1960 general
elections. The UNP won 33 percent of the seats in the lower house, giving the
party a plurality but not a majority.
UNITED NATIONAL PARTY INTERLUDE
The new prime minister, Dudley Senanayake,
honored his election pledge to avoid compromise with the leftist parties and
formed an all-UNP government with support from minor
right-of- center parties. His overall parliamentary majority, however, was
below the minimum seats required to defeat an opposition motion of no-confidence
in the UNP cabinet. Less than
a month after its formation, the UNP government fell. A new election was
scheduled for July 1960.
RETURN OF THE SRI LANKA FREEDOM PARTY
The UNP fell because it lacked the support of any
other major party in Parliament. The leftists tried to bring it down, and the
Tamils withheld their support because the UNP had earlier
hedged on the issue of the use of the Tamil language. Most important, the UNP
had earned the reputation among Sinhalese voters of being a party inimical to
Sinhalese nationalism.Meanwhile the SLFP had grown stronger because of
its unwavering support for making Sinhala the only official language. The SLFP
found in the former prime minister's widow, Sirimavo
Ratwatte Dias (S.R.D.) Bandaranaike, a candidate who was more capable of
arousing Sinhalese emotions than Dahanayake had been in the March elections.In the July 1960 general election, Bandaranaike
was profiled as a woman who had nobly agreed to carry on the mandate of her
assassinated husband. She received the support of many of
the same small parties on the right and left that had temporarily joined
together to form the People's United Front coalition (which had brought her
husband victory in 1956). She won the
election with an absolute majority in Parliament and became Sri Lanka's
seventh, and the world's first woman, prime minister. The new government was in
many ways the torchbearer for
the ideas of S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike, but under his widow's direction, the SLFP
carried out these ideas with such zeal and force that SinhaleseTamil relations
sharply deteriorated. One of
Sirimavo Bandaranaike's first official actions was to enforce the policy of
Sinhala as the only officially recognized language of government. Her
aggressive enforcement of this policy
sparked immediate Tamil resistance, which resulted in civil disobedience in
restive Northern and Eastern provinces. Bandaranaike reacted by declaring a
state of emergency and curtailing
Tamil political activity.Bandaranaike also antagonized other significant
minority groups, particularly the Christians. In response to a recommendation
by an unofficial Buddhist commission, her government
took over the management of state-assisted denominational schools. The move
deprived many Christian missionary schools of support. Roman Catholic activists
spearheaded
demonstrations, which forced the government to reconsider some of its measures.
Still, relations between the prime minister and the Christian denominations
remained unstable.Bandaranaike moved vigorously early in her
administration to nationalize significant sectors of the economy, targeting
industries that were under foreign control. The 1961 creation of the
State Petroleum Corporation adversely affected the major petroleum
companies--Shell, Esso, and Caltex. The new corporation was guaranteed 25
percent of the country's total petroleum
business. Under Bandaranaike's instruction, state corporations began to import
oil from new sources, effectively altering for the first time the pattern of trade
that had been followed since
British rule. Sri Lanka signed oil import agreements with the Soviet Union,
Romania, Egypt, and other countries not traditionally involved in Sri Lankan
trade. The government also put
important sectors of the local economy, particularly the insurance industry,
under state control. Most alarming to Bandaranaike's conservative opponents,
however, were her repeated
unsuccessful attempts to nationalize the largest newspaper syndicate and
establish a press council to monitor the news media.In foreign relations, Bandaranaike was faithful
to her late husband's policy of "dynamic neutralism," which aimed to
steer a nonaligned diplomatic stance between the superpowers. Sri
Lanka exercised its new foreign policy in 1962 by organizing a conference of
neutralist nations to mediate an end to the SinoIndian border war of 1962.
Although the conference failed to
end the war, it highlighted Sri Lanka's new role as a peacebroker and enhanced
its international status.The UNP opposition was apprehensive of
Bandaranaike's leftward drift and was especially concerned about the SLFP
alliance with the Trotskyite LSSP in 1964. The UNP approached the
March 1965 election as a senior partner in a broad front of "democratic
forces" dedicated to fight the "totalitarianism of the left." It
enjoyed significant support from the Federal Party
(representing Sri Lankan Tamils) and the Ceylon Workers' Congress (representing
Indian Tamils).
THE UNITED NATIONAL PARTY REGAINS POWER,
1965-70
The UNP "national government" emerged
victorious in the March 1965 elections, capturing more than 39 percent of
parliamentary seats, compared to SLFP's 30.2 percent. One of the first
actions of the new government, led by Senanayake, was to declare that the
nation's economy was virtually bankrupt. Senanayake also announced his
intention to improve relations with
the United States. (In 1963 the United States had suspended aid to Sri Lanka
because of Bandaranaike's nationalization of foreign oil concerns.)The government tried to develop a mixed economy
with an emphasis on the private sector. Between 1965 and 1970, private sector
investment was double that of the public sector, thereby
reversing the trend set in the previous administration. Despite the UNP's
emphasis on the private sector, the economy generally failed to show a major
improvement. This failure was
partly caused by a nearly 50 percent increase in the cost of rice imports after
a worldwide shortage in 1965 and a concurrent steep decline in the price of Sri
Lanka's export commodities. In
1966 the UNP government was forced to declare a state of emergency to ward off
food riots. Senanayake reduced the subsidized weekly rice ration by half. The
reduction remained in
effect throughout the remainder of the "national government" period
and contributed greatly to UNP's defeat in the 1970 general elections.The UNP paid more attention to Buddhist
sensitivities than it had in the past, and in an effort to widen the party's
popularity, it replaced the Christian sabbath with the Buddhist poya
full-moon holiday. This action satisfied Buddhist activists but alienated the
small but powerful Roman Catholic lobby. The UNP also tried to earn favor with
the Tamils by enacting the
Tamil Regulations in 1966, which were designed to make Tamil a language
officially "parallel" to Sinhala in Tamilspeaking regions. Sinhalese
activists immediately expressed hostility
toward the Tamil Regulations. Civil violence ensued, and the government was
forced to proclaim a state of emergency that lasted for most of the year.
UNITED FRONT RULE AND EMERGING VIOLENCE,
1970-77
In order to prepare for the 1970 general
election, Sirimavo Bandaranaike formed a coalition in 1968 with the LSSP and
CPSL to oppose the UNP. The new three-party United Front (Samagi
Peramuna) announced that it would work toward a "people's government"
under the leadership of Bandaranaike and that it would follow a so-called
Common Programme, which promised
radical structural changes, including land reform, increased rice subsidies,
and nationalization of local and foreign banks.The United Front resurrected communal
emotionalism as a timely and potent campaign weapon. It attacked the UNP for
its alliance with the two main Tamil political groups, the Federal
Party and the Ceylon Workers' Congress. At the same time, the United Front also
announced that it would adopt a new constitution to make Sri Lanka a republic
and that it would restore
"Buddhism to its rightful place." The United Front won 118 of the 135
seats it contested, with the SLFP, the biggestsingle party, winning 90 seats,
the LSSP 19, seats and the CPSL 6
seats. The UNP won a meager seventeen seats.The United Front government moved quickly to
implement key features of its Common Programme. The philosophy of the coalition
government was seen most transparently from its
foreign and economic policies. The United Front issued declarations that it followed a nonaligned path; opposed imperialism, colonialism, and racism; and supported national liberation movements. The government quickly extended diplomatic relations to the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (then North Vietnam), the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea), and the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam. It also pledged to suspend recognition of Israel. In economic matters, the United Front vowed to put private enterprise in a subsidiary role.Prime Minister Bandaranaike tolerated the radical left at first and then lost control of it. Sensing mounting unrest, the government declared a state of emergency in March 1971. In April, the People's Liberation Front (JanathaVimukthiPeramuna--JVP), a Maoist and primarily rural Sinhalese youth movement claiming a membership of more than 10,000, began a "blitzkrieg" operation to take over the government "within 24 hours." The JVP followed a program--known as the Five Lectures--that included an agenda to deal with "Indian expansionism," the island's unstable economic situation, and the inability of the traditionalist leftist leadership to assert power or attract widespread support (an allusion to the LSSP and the CPSL). The JVP
threatened to take power by extraparliamentary means. Fierce fighting erupted in the north-central, south-central, and southern rural districts of the island, causing an official estimate of 1,200 dead. Unofficial tallies of the number of dead were much higher. The JVP came perilously close to overthrowing the government but the military finally suppressed the movement and imprisoned JVP's top leadership and about 16,000 suspected insurgents.In May 1972, the United Front followed through on its 1970 campaign promise to promulgate a new constitution to make Sri Lanka a republic. Under the new constitution, the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government were vested in the National State Assembly. Many important and vocal sectors of society opposed this concentration of power. The 1972 constitution disturbed the UNP, which feared an authoritarian government might emerge because of the new document. The UNP was especially alarmed that a Trotskyite, Dr. Colvin de Silva (Bandaranaike's minister of constitutional affairs), had drafted the constitution.The distinct lack of protection for the rights of minorities in the new constitution dismayed many sectors of the population. The Tamils were especially disturbed because the 1972 constitution contained no elements of federalism. Instead, a newly conferred status for Buddhism replaced the provisions for minorities provided by Article 29 in the 1948 constitution. The constitution also sanctioned measures that discriminated against Tamil youth in university admissions. Tamil youth were particularly irked by the "standardization" policy that Bandaranaike's government introduced in 1973. The policy made university admissions criteria lower for Sinhalese than for Tamils. The Tamil community--the Federal Party, the Tamil Congress, and other Tamil organizations--reacted collectively against the new atmosphere the new constitution produced, and in May 1972, they founded the Tamil United Front (which became the Tamil United Liberation Front--TULF--in 1976).By the mid-1970s, the antagonism between the right and left was destroying the United Front coalition. The growing political influence of the right wing led by Sirimavo Bandaranaike's son, Anura, precipitated the expulsion of the LSSP from the United Front in September 1975. The withdrawal of the CPSL in 1977 further weakened the coalition.
foreign and economic policies. The United Front issued declarations that it followed a nonaligned path; opposed imperialism, colonialism, and racism; and supported national liberation movements. The government quickly extended diplomatic relations to the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (then North Vietnam), the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea), and the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam. It also pledged to suspend recognition of Israel. In economic matters, the United Front vowed to put private enterprise in a subsidiary role.Prime Minister Bandaranaike tolerated the radical left at first and then lost control of it. Sensing mounting unrest, the government declared a state of emergency in March 1971. In April, the People's Liberation Front (JanathaVimukthiPeramuna--JVP), a Maoist and primarily rural Sinhalese youth movement claiming a membership of more than 10,000, began a "blitzkrieg" operation to take over the government "within 24 hours." The JVP followed a program--known as the Five Lectures--that included an agenda to deal with "Indian expansionism," the island's unstable economic situation, and the inability of the traditionalist leftist leadership to assert power or attract widespread support (an allusion to the LSSP and the CPSL). The JVP
threatened to take power by extraparliamentary means. Fierce fighting erupted in the north-central, south-central, and southern rural districts of the island, causing an official estimate of 1,200 dead. Unofficial tallies of the number of dead were much higher. The JVP came perilously close to overthrowing the government but the military finally suppressed the movement and imprisoned JVP's top leadership and about 16,000 suspected insurgents.In May 1972, the United Front followed through on its 1970 campaign promise to promulgate a new constitution to make Sri Lanka a republic. Under the new constitution, the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government were vested in the National State Assembly. Many important and vocal sectors of society opposed this concentration of power. The 1972 constitution disturbed the UNP, which feared an authoritarian government might emerge because of the new document. The UNP was especially alarmed that a Trotskyite, Dr. Colvin de Silva (Bandaranaike's minister of constitutional affairs), had drafted the constitution.The distinct lack of protection for the rights of minorities in the new constitution dismayed many sectors of the population. The Tamils were especially disturbed because the 1972 constitution contained no elements of federalism. Instead, a newly conferred status for Buddhism replaced the provisions for minorities provided by Article 29 in the 1948 constitution. The constitution also sanctioned measures that discriminated against Tamil youth in university admissions. Tamil youth were particularly irked by the "standardization" policy that Bandaranaike's government introduced in 1973. The policy made university admissions criteria lower for Sinhalese than for Tamils. The Tamil community--the Federal Party, the Tamil Congress, and other Tamil organizations--reacted collectively against the new atmosphere the new constitution produced, and in May 1972, they founded the Tamil United Front (which became the Tamil United Liberation Front--TULF--in 1976).By the mid-1970s, the antagonism between the right and left was destroying the United Front coalition. The growing political influence of the right wing led by Sirimavo Bandaranaike's son, Anura, precipitated the expulsion of the LSSP from the United Front in September 1975. The withdrawal of the CPSL in 1977 further weakened the coalition.
THE UNITED NATIONAL PARTY RETURNS TO POWER
After Dudley Senanayake died in 1973, a struggle
for the leadership of the UNP ensued between his nephew, RukmanSenanayake, and
Junius Richard (J.R.) Jayewardene, a more distant
relative. Jayewardene had been involved in politics for years, having been
elected to the State Council, the parliament's colonial predecessor, as early
as 1943. A leader of the UNP since
independence, Jayewardene had deferred to the Senanayake family. But in 1970,
when the UNP suffered a resounding defeat to the United Front, Jayewardene
became more assertive. His
party manifesto--The UNP in Opposition, 1970--contended that the majority of
Sri Lankans perceived the party as the party of the "haves, the affluent,
and the employers." He also
contended that the people had come to perceive the SLFP as the party of the
"have nots, the needy, and the unemployed." Jayewardene moved
forcefully to refurbish UNP's image and
announced that the party would inaugurate an era of a just and righteous
(dharmishta) society. After becoming president of the party, Jayewardene began
to restructure the UNP and
make the party more attractive, especially to young people. By the time of the
general election of 1977, Jayewardene had developed an extensive grass roots
party organization.
ELECTION OF 1977 AND MORE VIOLENCE
After molding the UNP around his personality and
having successfully built up the party's infrastructure, Jayewardene easily
became prime minister. The UNP won an unprecedented
landslide victory in the 1977 elections, winning 140 of 168 seats. The SLFP was
reduced to eight seats. The Sri Lankan Tamils, however, gave little support to
Jayewardene or any other
non-Tamil politician. The Sri Lankan Tamils entered the parliamentary election
fray under the banner of TULF, which had elevated its earlier demand for
regional self-rule to a demand for
an independent state, or Eelam (see Glossary). TULF became the largest
opposition party in Parliament and captured all fourteen seats in the heavily
Tamil Northern Province and four
east coast seats. TULF won in every constituency with a Tamil majority on the island, except one. In Jaffna District, TULF candidates won all eleven seats, although forty-seven other candidates contested the seats. TULF originally included the largest Indian (plantation) Tamil political organization, the Ceylon Workers' Congress, but after the 1977 election, the leader of the Ceylon Workers' Congress accepted a cabinet post in the UNP government. The Sri Lankan Tamil demand for Tamil Eelam had never been of central concern to the Indian Tamils, who lived mostly outside the territory being claimed for the Tamil state.The opportunities for peace that the 1977 UNP electoral victory provided were soon lost. Just before the 1977 elections, Chelvanayakam, the charismatic leader of TULF, died, leaving the party without strong leadership. A Tamil separatist underground (which had split into six or more rival and sometimes violently hostile groups that were divided by ideology, caste, and personal antagonisms) was filling the vacuum left by the weakened TULF and was gaining the allegiance of an increasing number of disenchanted Tamil youths. These groups were known collectively as the Tamil Tigers. The strongest of these separatists were the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), founded in 1972 by VelupillaiPrabhakaran. The LTTE was responsible for some of the earliest and most gruesome acts of Tamil terrorism (see the Tamil Insurgency ,ch. 5). The LTTE first gained notoriety by its 1975 assassination of the mayor of Jaffna, a supporter of the SLFP. During the 1977 elections, many Tamil youths began to engage in extraparliamentary and sometimes violent measures in their bid for a mandate for a separate state. These measures precipitated a Sinhalese backlash. An apparently false rumor that Sinhalese policemen had died at the hands of Tamil terrorists, combined with other rumors of alleged anti-Sinhalese statements made by Tamil politicians, sparked brutal communal rioting that engulfed the island within two weeks of the new government's inauguration. The rioting marked the first major outbreak of communal violence in the nineteen years since the riots of 1958. Casualties were many, especially among Tamils, both the Sri Lankan Tamils of Jaffna and the Indian Tamil plantation workers. The Tamil Refugee Rehabilitation Organization estimated the death toll at 300.
east coast seats. TULF won in every constituency with a Tamil majority on the island, except one. In Jaffna District, TULF candidates won all eleven seats, although forty-seven other candidates contested the seats. TULF originally included the largest Indian (plantation) Tamil political organization, the Ceylon Workers' Congress, but after the 1977 election, the leader of the Ceylon Workers' Congress accepted a cabinet post in the UNP government. The Sri Lankan Tamil demand for Tamil Eelam had never been of central concern to the Indian Tamils, who lived mostly outside the territory being claimed for the Tamil state.The opportunities for peace that the 1977 UNP electoral victory provided were soon lost. Just before the 1977 elections, Chelvanayakam, the charismatic leader of TULF, died, leaving the party without strong leadership. A Tamil separatist underground (which had split into six or more rival and sometimes violently hostile groups that were divided by ideology, caste, and personal antagonisms) was filling the vacuum left by the weakened TULF and was gaining the allegiance of an increasing number of disenchanted Tamil youths. These groups were known collectively as the Tamil Tigers. The strongest of these separatists were the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), founded in 1972 by VelupillaiPrabhakaran. The LTTE was responsible for some of the earliest and most gruesome acts of Tamil terrorism (see the Tamil Insurgency ,ch. 5). The LTTE first gained notoriety by its 1975 assassination of the mayor of Jaffna, a supporter of the SLFP. During the 1977 elections, many Tamil youths began to engage in extraparliamentary and sometimes violent measures in their bid for a mandate for a separate state. These measures precipitated a Sinhalese backlash. An apparently false rumor that Sinhalese policemen had died at the hands of Tamil terrorists, combined with other rumors of alleged anti-Sinhalese statements made by Tamil politicians, sparked brutal communal rioting that engulfed the island within two weeks of the new government's inauguration. The rioting marked the first major outbreak of communal violence in the nineteen years since the riots of 1958. Casualties were many, especially among Tamils, both the Sri Lankan Tamils of Jaffna and the Indian Tamil plantation workers. The Tamil Refugee Rehabilitation Organization estimated the death toll at 300.
CONSTITUTION OF 1978
After
coming to power, Jayewardene directed the
rewriting of the constitution. The document that was produced, the new
Constitution of 1978, drastically altered the nature of
governance in Sri Lanka. It replaced the previous Westminsterstyle ,
parliamentary government with a new presidential system modeled after
France,
with a powerful chief executive. The
president was to be elected by direct suffrage for a six-year term and
was
empowered to appoint, with parliamentary approval, the prime minister
and to
preside over cabinet meetings.
Jayewardene became the first president under the new Constitution and
assumed
direct control of the government machinery and party.The new regime
ushered in an era that did not
auger well for the SLFP. Jayewardene's UNP government accused former
prime
minister Bandaranaike of abusing her power while in office
from 1970 to 1977. In October 1980, Bandaranaike's privilege to engage
in
politics was removed for a period of seven years, and the SLFP was
forced to
seek a new leader. After a long and
divisive battle, the party chose her son, Anura. Anura Bandaranaike was
soon
thrust into the role of the keeper of his father's legacy, but he
inherited a
political party torn apart by
factionalism and reduced to a minimal role in the Parliament.The 1978
Constitution included substantial
concessions to Tamil sensitivities. Although TULF did not participate in
framing the Constitution, it continued to sit in Parliament in the hope
of negotiating a settlement to the Tamil problem. TULF also agreed to
Jayewardene's proposal of an all-party conference to resolve the
island's ethnic
problems. Jayewardene's UNP
offered other concessions in a bid to secure peace. Sinhala remained the
official language and the language of administration throughout Sri
Lanka, but
Tamil was given a new "national
language" status. Tamil was to be used in a number of administrative and
educational circumstances. Jayewardene also eliminated a major Tamil
grievance
by abrogating the
"standardization" policy of the United Front government, which had
made university admission criteria for Tamils more difficult. In
addition, he
offered many top-level positions, including that of minister of justice,
to Tamil civil servants.While TULF, in conjunction with the UNP,
pressed
for the allparty conference, the Tamil Tigers escalated their terrorist
attacks, which provoked Sinhalese backlash against Tamils and
generally precluded any successful accommodation. In reaction to the
assassination of a Jaffna police inspector, the Jayewardene government
declared
an emergency and dispatched
troops, who were given an unrealistic six months to eradicate the
terrorist
threat.The government passed the Prevention of Terrorism
(Temporary Provisions) Act in 1979. The act was enacted as a temporary
measure,
but it later became permanent legislation. The
International Commission of Jurists, Amnesty International, and other
human
rights organizations condemned the act as being incompatible with
democratic
traditions. Despite the act,
the number of terrorist acts increased. Guerrillas began to hit targets
of high
symbolic value such as post offices and police outposts, provoking
government
counterattacks. As an
increasing number of civilians were caught in the fighting, Tamil
support
widened for the "boys," as the guerrillas began to be called. Other
large, well-armed groups began to compete
with LTTE. The better-known included the People's Liberation
Organization of
Tamil Eelam, Tamil Eelam Liberation Army, and the Tamil Eelam Liberation
Organization. Each of these
groups had forces measured in the hundreds if not thousands. The
government
claimed that many of the terrorists were operating from training camps
in
India's Tamil Nadu State. The
Indian government repeatedly denied this claim. With the level of
violence
mounting, the possibility of negotiation became increasingly distant
.
THE RIOTS OF 1981
In June 1981, local elections were held in the
north to elect members of the newly established district development councils.
TULF had decided to participate and work in the councils. In
doing so, TULF continued to work toward autonomy for the Tamil areas.
Extremists within the separatist movement, however, adamantly opposed working
within the existing political
framework. They viewed participation in the elections as compromising the
objective of a separate state. Shortly before the elections, the leading
candidate of the UNP was assassinated
as he left a political rally. The sporadic communal violence that persisted
over the following three months foreshadowed the devastating communal riots of
1983. When elections were
held a few days later, concomitant charges of voting irregularities and
mishandling of ballots created the nation's first election scandal since the
introduction of universal suffrage fifty
years earlier.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1982
TULF decided to boycott the 1982 presidential
elections, partly in reaction to the harsh Prevention of Terrorism Act and
partly in response to pressures exerted by Tamil extremists. Only
46 percent of the voters in Jaffna District turned out. In Sinhalese districts,
85 percent of voters turned out. Increasing violence by Tamil youths in the
north and east of the island
accompanied the call for a Tamil Eelam. The rising level of violence in 1983
led the government to pass a sixth amendment to the Constitution, which
specifically banned talk of
separatism. All sixteen TULF members of parliament were expelled for refusing
to recite a loyalty oath, thus removing a critical channel for mediation.
THE RIOTS OF JULY 1983
In July 1983, the most savage communal riots in
Sri Lanka's history erupted. Conservative government estimates put the death
toll at 400-- mostly Tamils. At least 150,000 Tamil fled the
island. The riots began in retaliation for an ambush of an army patrol in the
north that left thirteen Sinhalese soldiers dead. The army was reputed to have
killed sixty Tamil civilians in
Jaffna, but most of the violence occurred in Colombo, where Sinhalese mobs
looked for Tamil shops to destroy. More than any previous ethnic riot on the
island, the 1983 riots were
marked by their highly organized mob violence. Sinhalese rioters in Colombo
used voter lists containing home addresses to make precise attacks on the Tamil
community. From Colombo,
the anti-Tamil violence fanned out to the entire island. The psychological
effects of this violence on Sri Lanka's complex and divided society were still
being assessed in the late 1980s.
Nevertheless, in the aftermath of the communal rioting, a selfevident truth was
that the island's history, and the complexity of its society, had a portentous
message for the present:
Sinhalese and Tamil Sri Lankans were fated by history and geography to coexist
in close proximity. This coexistence could be discordant or amicable, and
examples of both could be
drawn from Sri Lanka's history. It was a message, however, whose meaning was forgotten as the ethnic communities were drawn increasingly into a vortex of rancor and violence that made the restoration of harmony a persistently elusive goal for the Sri Lankan government.
drawn from Sri Lanka's history. It was a message, however, whose meaning was forgotten as the ethnic communities were drawn increasingly into a vortex of rancor and violence that made the restoration of harmony a persistently elusive goal for the Sri Lankan government.
for more information....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Sri_Lanka
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