25 April, 2024

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What Your Schools Didn’t Teach You

By Thisuri Wanniarachchi

Thisuri Wanniarachchi

Thisuri Wanniarachchi

The culture of fraternity surrounding school Big Matches in Sri Lanka is a reflection of the misogyny and social malnourishment within our education system. Most of us are blind to it, not merely because we are too frenzied by the artificial hype created by these events, to see the deeper social implications they reflect. But because our national school system didn’t teach us how to open up our minds to understand the backward values entrenched in our culture that we continue to hold on to.

#1. First of all: School is only one step of the way. Life doesn’t end there.

It’s only in sri lanka that we’ve seen people stay fraternized to educational institutions from their childhood. Not universities, but schools. In the United States, this culture of fraternity is seen amongst elite universities, Sports play a major role in US universities and is a multi-million dollar industry. The annual Harvard- Yale game, for instance, is one controversial battle of fraternities, and promotes a culture of sporting rivalry. It’s somewhat easier to understand why a culture of fraternity may prevail among these university students; elite universities are extremely competitive, exclusive and promote a certain culture of academic thought that they collectively take pride in. And above all a social culture (sometimes pretentious, sometimes not) that binds them.

But how do we explain such a fraternity existing amongst students of schools? If you take the students of the schools represented in Sri Lanka’s Big Match season: less than 10% of their annual graduates receive entrance into distinguished universities. Is the reason for their return to school annually, to behave as they would have when they were children, an implication that school is as far as most of our population get in life? No, this is not a statement made to degrade the youth or middle-aged men who go to these Big Matches; it’s a fact. Statically speaking, as of now, only 6% of our Sri Lankan youth are in university. A significant number of the students who graduate from these schools remain unemployed/underemployed or end up at low quality mid-way alternative higher education programs that do not fill the gap of the education that their schools failed to give them. A majority of students don’t get the opportunity to learn how to think socially progressively. They remain socially and intellectually backward.

*(Facts and statistics aside, yes we can all agree it is also very demeaning: you attend these schools when you are a child, before you’ve matured into an adult: a time in our lives we treasure quite a lot, but not enough to go back to our sports-meets dressed in our uniforms. I mean, you don’t have to be the coolest kid in the room to agree that fully-grown adults feeling the need to go back to their childhood school every year is a little weird, unless they do so to mock their childhood selves.)

#2. They never taught you the meaning of the term misogyny.
And now here you are, ignorantly being a total misogynistic a******.

When I was a student at St. Bridget’s Convent, during Big Match season, without any consent, boys would break into our school and vandalize it. It was a joke to us. It was so normalized by our school culture that we even laughed about it. But I now realize that this was patriarchy and sexism taking place in its most ignorant form. How absolutely misogynistic is it that boys feel the need to disrespect the boundaries and space of a girls’ institution breaking and entering in such an act of dominance?

*Oh and by the way, “to disrespect/ disregard an individual’s physical boundaries and space by non-consensually entering it” is literally the definition of rape.

For the past three years I’ve been conducting research on education institutions in Sri Lanka and potential administrative reforms that could help ease the passing of progressive education reforms, which involves deep conversations with education administrators across the country. I’ve met countless female officials who (when we discuss the matter of sex education and its importance to reduce the high number of sexual assault cases) have opened up to me about having been sexually assaulted by their male co-workers but refuse to speak up. A lot of them and when I mean a lot I mean about 95% of them, do not believe they should speak up on it, they believe it will further lower their chances to succeed in the workplace. I think one of the most striking encounters I’ve had was when a female official who was a sexual assault survivor laughed about it at the end of our conversation, saying (translated from Sinhala) “it was bad then, but that’s how we learn.” It wasn’t nervous laughter, it was genuine laughter. She was laughing, but I just wanted to cry for her.This brought me back memories of how once, a few girls in our school were assaulted by some boys who broke in during Big Match season. The girls were crying and the teachers told them to “laugh it off, these things happen.” As if it was something that happens to everyone: a lesson in life that we can learn from. Like it’s an experience we as women ought to have. That’s what our schools teach us. And in a country where almost 90% of the population depend solely on the education they receive from school, our society reflects what our schools teach. And man don’t they set us up for a treat.

Anyone with a knowledge in social psychology would know the widely-accepted theory of “stereotype threat” when a certain social group, be it a gender or ethnicity, is treated a certain way, they are much more likely to be at risk of losing confidence in themselves and giving into believing that they are meant to be treated that way.

#3. They never pointed out the severe levels of transphobia you suffer from; that you feel the need to parade it.

Big Match parades having men dressed up as women behaving in a degrading manner is just another petty and ignorant act of misogyny and transphobia being played out in public. The homophobic terms commonly used by boys and girls of elite schools in Colombo include “faggot” as an insult and the use of the phrase “gay” to describe something that is uncool. Our school system never taught us to be politically correct or how to grow up to be a part of an inclusive society that respects people of all genders, and sexual orientations.

#4. They forgot to teach you that racism is your own insecurity.

The Sinhala-Buddhist centric schools conveniently forgot to teach their kids that racism is a reflection of one’s lack of education. Someone go to the “Battle of the Maroons” to see how blissfully ignorant and backward a majority of boys in these schools are. The racism is a whole other level. It’s like someone did a mass infomercial for “Sinha-le”. (Or maybe that’s what they were going for.)

Here’s the thing: little boys who grow up seeing in this culture will never quite learn how to respect a woman equally, and someday they will become one of the 1 in 10 men in Sri Lanka who sexually assault a girl in their lives, or the majority of men who restrict their wives to the kitchen and the household, and the worst part is: they die believing they did nothing wrong, they will always believe they were entitled to live this way. They will disrupt their work places and god forbid their homes (incestuos rape is very common in Sri Lanka).

They will raise their daughters with much less freedom than their sons; and the kids will carry on the stereotypes with them. The girls who grow up entrenched in this culture lack the self confidence to speak up against discrimination; in fact they may never know how to identify if they are being discriminated against or not, because sexist discrimination is all they’ve known in their lives that it’s so normalized.

We are currently in a phase of administrative transition in Sri Lanka. We are trying to change the way the country works. In this process, more often than not we find ourselves facing the same problems we faced 50 years ago. And sometimes we wonder why? We want to make progressive change but our country is filled with racists, misogynists and homophobes. They are not terrible people; their education system has failed them. They were never given a chance. We know that our education system is the root of the problem; the reason we are still living in the 1960s. Yet, we get so surprised when a kid gets expelled from a school for a false AIDS rumor. And we question “why are people so ignorant?” like we don’t already know the answer. If even the most well-resourced national schools in Colombo seem to fail at teaching students to think progressively, how can we expect the rest of the country to?

We are what we learn.
And they teach us so little.

*Thisuri Wanniarachchi, 21, is the author of novels The Terrorist’s Daughter and Colombo Streets. She is Sri Lanka’s youngest State Literary Award winner and the world’s youngest national nominee to the prestigious Iowa International Writers’ Program. She is currently an undergraduate student and full scholar of Bennington College studying Political Economy and Education Reform.

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Latest comments

  • 23
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    Thisuri,

    I can see you have been blessed.

    No one is out there to bless you and give you a good fortune. You are blessed because of your own righteous thoughts, words and actions.

    You have blossomed like a flower in a sea of hatred, ignorance and fear. You are and exceptional individual.

    • 24
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      Dear Thisuri,

      “We want to make progressive change but our country is filled with racists, misogynists and homophobes.”

      That is a golden statement. I take my hat off for that. It takes courage to make that kind statement in public. In this very angry nation.

      However, why attack the innocent Big Match? Agree we can make changes to improve it. Yet, Big Match is one thing I love about living in SL. It has evolved into something uniquely Sri Lankan. It has become a national Institution.

      Just look at Royal Ascot or Ox-Bridge Regatta in the UK. And many more stupid events around the world. Such as the Pamplona tomato festival in Spain. Oh what fun! While we are still alive. The whole point is that there is no point. Just like life itself.

      Besides, racists, misogynists and homophobes are growing their numbers all over USA, Europe & Middle East. Not just in impoverished, under-educated SL as you put it.

      For starters, look at the Republican Primary Season for President in the US. None of the candidates or the field of bloody idiots for POTUS think a woman should have the right to abortion. VIOLA!

      Therefore cut the poor Sri Lankans some slack, please Thisuri.

      Leave the Sri Lanka Big Match alone Thisuri!

      Let us quit moralizing every little thing that makes life worth living. Big Match is just one of those things.

      Well, I am off to my tent at the SSC. Who can resist the Papare Band over there in their right mind? If one can still breath.

      Cheers!

      • 6
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        Ben

        The Sri Lankan big matches are followed even by famous international cricketers and commentators. Every time Sri Lanka play in England the TV and Radio commentators always comment about the big matches and inquire from which school a particular player hails from

        Whenever a big match clash with an international fixture at colombo, it’s the big match that attracts more crowd

        • 4
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          May be Thirusi is referring to [Edited out] like the one who gave a thumb down to this generic sporting comment

    • 1
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      Dear Ms. Thisuri Wanniarachchi

      RE: What Your Schools Didn’t Teach You

      “ The culture of fraternity surrounding school Big Matches in Sri Lanka is a reflection of the misogyny and social malnourishment within our education system. But because our national school system didn’t teach us how to open up our minds to understand the backward values entrenched in our culture that we continue to hold on to.”

      #1. First of all: School is only one step of the way. Life doesn’t end there.

      “It’s only in sri lanka that we’ve seen people stay fraternized to educational institutions from their childhood. Not universities, but schools.”

      ( Will not comment on Items 2, 3 and 4, as they are the effect of the cause Amarasiri is discussing under your Item #1)

      Thanks for the write up. You can only work with what you have got. What have we got? IQ of 79. All those who have got an IQ greater than 79 have been blessed, irrespective of the schools they attended. A better school education will certainly help on top of that. Also, it is actually very hard to raise IQ by environment, if you are already at your limits.

      https://iq-research.org/en/page/average-iq-by-country/lk-sri-lanka

      1.) This brings to the surface, Tribalism, or the New Tribalism of the Schools, above the Tribalism of being a Sinhala, Tamil, Buddhist, Hindu Christian, Muslim , Burgher or Malay, one belongs to. This, in an indirect way saying is that they are smarter or better trained than the rest of you “Low IQ” provincials or villages. However, this is not entirely the case, because, the selection to these schools is not entirely based on intelligence, but based on other factors.

      Competition is good in that it promotes merit. So we are talking about meritocracy, that is a combination of merit (“goodness worthy of praise or reward”) and aristocracy,meaning “the highest class in certain societies.” In a government based on meritocracy, the leaders are chosen because they are the smartest and have best judgment. They can come from the poorest, most humble background just as long as they are the most noble and fit to rule.
      Sri Lanka is competing globally.

      So, where do the Sri Lankans rank globally on Education, skills and Intelligence. There have been many studies that have shown that on human intelligence, 80% comes from Native Intelligence, and 20% comes from environmental factors, nutrition and education. If you have a 79 cc motorbike, you can tune it only so much but it is unlikely to perform better than a 158 cc motorbike, however badly tuned.

      What is the Reality on a Global scale.

      IQ Test Results from Global Study – Singapore highest then China and Korea
      Discussion in ‘World Affairs’ started by East Asia United, Jun 21, 2013.

      http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/

      These are calculated using both formal IQ tests and the very large international student assessment tests such as the TIMSS and PISA which correlate highly with IQ. Figures in brackets were estimated from neighboring countries. Note that the scores reflect that many countries are not racially homogenous and that the average IQs of the different races in a country often differ significantly from the average country IQ.

      Singapore has the highest IQ (107.1), followed by China (105.8), Hong Kong (105.7), Korea and Taiwan (both 104.6), and Japan (104.2)

      Race/Population group by IQ:

      East Asia: 105

      European/White: 99

      Arctic Natives: 91

      Latino Americans: 89

      Southeast Asians: 87

      American Indian: 86

      Pacific Islanders: 85 (Maori in New Zealand have a mean IQ of 90)

      African-Americans/Black British: 85

      Middle Eastern/North African: 84

      South Asians: 82
      (Nepal 78, Sri Lanka 79, Bangla Desh 81, Maldives 81, India 82.2, Pakistan 84)

      Sub-Saharan Africans: 67

      Australian Aborigines: 62

      Pygmies: 53

      A full listing of the IQ’s by country here:

      https://lesacreduprintemps19.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/intelligence-a-unifying-construct-for-the-social-sciences-richard-lynn-and-tatu-vanhanen.pdf

      It should also be noted that this is for the ‘native’ populations of each population group/race (except the African-America/Black British category)

      For example, Indians in India have a mean IQ of 82, but Indian-Americans have a mean IQ of around 112. Selection bias means that such immigrants are both high-IQ, and high caste, in Indian terms.

      Also, the Ashkenazi Jewish IQ is around 110, the highest of any single ethnicity in the world, though the mean Jewish IQ is around 103 (due to lower IQ Mizrahim and Sephardi Jews).

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kp6nCn7

      The MENA region (Middle East-North Africa) has a depressed figure because of significant inbreeding rates.

      The South Asian figure is slightly depressed because of the living conditions. The nutritional factors, infant brain development, etc.

      sub-Saharan Africans have a genotypic IQ potential of 80, from their average at 67 currently.

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kphRXos

      .. What? So Blacks have a potential of 80, even though they score a mean of 85 in America?

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kq6LY3S

      Nope, look at the study. Blacks have a mean IQ of 85 instead of their max genetic potential at 80 because the average African American has 17% Europoid genetic admixture.

      In fact, do the math and it adds up. 20 IQ point difference between European and Black. 20×0.17 results in 3.4, so total Black IQ would be 83.4, not far off from the off-sited 85 figure.

      Also, Blacks tend to have 1-1.1 SD (83.5-85) difference compared to Whites, so this is actually within the average range.

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kq20UC6

      These are only averages. Indian Americans have an average IQ of 112, so that’s pretty high, but this is because of selective immigration. There’s also a brain drain from India as the more intelligent (higher IQ) people tend to try to find better living standards and jobs in Europe and North America.

      Also, it is actually very hard to raise IQ by environment if you are already at your limits. For example, in all of your tests, has your IQ ever budged more than a point or two? I think not.

      Some people which have had mental illness due to iodine deficiency and cretinism will artificially lower average IQ below it’s potential, so India has potential to increase her IQ even adjusted for Flynn effect.

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kqGjYvi

      The South Asian IQ figure is being weighed down by very low IQ India.., (82.2).

      If you only take in account Pakistan(84) Bangladesh (81) and Sri Lanka’s (79), Maladives (81) and Nepal(78).

      Source: http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/#ixzz42kqdmaNj

    • 1
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      Ms. Thisuri Wanniarachchi

      RE: What Your Schools Didn’t Teach You

      “The culture of fraternity surrounding school Big Matches in Sri Lanka is a reflection of the misogyny and social malnourishment within our education system.”

      Let’s see how our two regional neighbors, who have native IQs 82, India, 84, Pakistan and 97 Sri Lanka are doing? You have to work with what you have got.

      Sri Lanka spends 3% of GDP on Education and has a literacy rate of 96%

      Pakistan spends 2% of GDP on Education and has a literacy rate of 57%

      So, the Average Sri Lankan is better “educated” and “Better Off” than the Average Pakistani. However, not so on a global scale.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h45dGRwkgCI

      10 Minutes: Pakistan Education System

      Published on Feb 10, 2016
      This program approaches and analyses Pakistan educational system, including its curricula and textbooks, as a potential context for extending extremism and terrorism in the country.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJVhqMG5PXc

      Making Indian education smarter

      Published on Jan 27, 2016
      A young, enterprising nation with half its population under 35 years of age calls for education as a basic right. But does quality take a beating? With several schools and colleges missing qualified teachers, experts believe that the Indian education system could be changed to help students absorb how to learn and move away from the stifling exam system. Tune in to Heads Up as Maya Sharma gets talking to experts on the much needed change the education system calls for.

    • 1
      0

      Ms. Thisuri Wanniarachchi –

      RE:What Your Schools Didn’t Teach You

      What does your Sunday School Teach you— from the Bible and the Quran?

      The Age of Reason Vs. the Age of Revelation

      Bible or Quran Experiment – Surprising Reactions!

      Holy Quran Experiment in America
      The Holy Quran Experiment in Canada

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCQ0svB0UUU

      The Islam has been under huge scrutiny lately and is often criticized for being an aggressive religion… but what about Christianity?

      In this video we disguised a Bible as a Quran and read some of it’s most gruesome verses to the people. This is what they had to say.

  • 54
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    The author is a complete hypocrite. Of course she mentions she went to St. Bridget’s which negates the whole point of the article. Isn’t self promotion wonderful?

    • 11
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      So you judge her by the school she went to. You place importance on St Bridgets. She does not. You just proved her point.

    • 6
      8

      Actually if she wanted to self promote she would have told you that she went to The British School of CMB on a full scholarship. Which she did.
      This what she means when she says “school is only one step of the way;life doesn’t end there” you idiots think school is everything and spend your whole life thinking that and boasting it.

    • 1
      1

      Smitty

      “The author is a complete hypocrite. “

      All the Paras in the Land of Aethho are hypocrites. They are Para-Sinhala, Paa-Tamils, Para-Muslims, Para-Malays and Para-Parangios. This is specially the case for Para-Sinhala.

      The all have IQ’s at the lower end of Homo Sapiens.

      https://iq-research.org/en/page/average-iq-by-country/lk-sri-lanka

      Want to learn more as to how “smart” the Paras are? The link to knowledge is given below.

      What is the Reality on a Global scale. IQ Test Results from Global Study – Singapore highest then China and Korea Discussion in ‘World Affairs’ started by East Asia United, Jun 21, 2013.

      http://defence.pk/threads/iq-test-results-from-global-study-singapore-highest-then-china-and-korea.259586/

  • 37
    17

    She won the state litaracy award? Wow! No wonder our public service is in such a pathetic state!

    • 7
      17

      Sheer jealousy! Don’t you wish you could write like her?

      • 9
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        Don’t be that guy paul……….

    • 6
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      Drum of,
      State LITERARY award, Not LITERACY, There is a difference, you know.

    • 3
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      It’s LITERARY AWARD. Not Literacy award. God you are proving her point that our education system sucks

      • 0
        0

        Interesting how you think education comprises of knowing how to spell in a foreign language.

        Way NOT to generalize.

    • 2
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      Drum of

      “She won the state litaracy award? Wow! No wonder our public service is in such a pathetic state!”

      What about those who did not win?

  • 39
    8

    It looks like the author had too much of indoctrination from the modern western style education. We should not forget that the purpose of the state controlled education is not to make us think outside the box, or to make us think critically, but to make us robot like people who would be brainwashed to think alike and act alike. If the author thinks the solution to current problems lies in the modern western education, she is far from finding a solution. The education system in US and the west creates men and women who think alike, loyal to their government, and become slaves to big corporations. They are afraid to speak their minds fearing that they would offend someone by not being politically correct and in turn loose their livelihood. US and the west talk about these great freedoms, but no one exercises them. They self-impose limits to their own minds. They are taught of all the modern psychoanalysis (from Freud and Bernays Lee and others) such as feminism, homophobia, misogyny and what not. Author thinks we are stuck in 60s. If it was the case, it would have been a good thing. 60s-70s were as not bad as now. Girls could wear short dresses and not get much stares. Today the western society is broken. There is a continuous assault on the family unit. Instead of compromising, people become too demanding and self-entitled and break apart their families. Pornography and modern advertising culture has made the woman a commodity that can be exploited to ones hearts’ desire. SL gets this culture trickled down from the west and the author thinks more of these is the solution! All this is because some kids from a male-only school tried to enter into a girls-only school. I am sure there are isolated incidents that gets out of control. But it is not the norm. Author should read up on modern social experiments done on western societies that would not be taught at any of the schools that she goes to. Because school is one of the places where those sinister social experiments are put to test and the result is folks like this author!

  • 20
    6

    Not to mention that this is relic of the colonial era. It is the british who introduced this idea of the school you went to being so important. Even they have more sense about it. You won’t see anyone with a “Proud to be an Etonian” sticker on their car in the uk.

    • 12
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      what is wrong with school spirit? It is common in the US even to the extent that there are hoodies saying ‘proud father/mother of daughter/son who attended x university’.

      • 1
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        Getting into an elite university is usually an indication of academic or sporting achievement (unless you are a Bush). Getting into a school in Sri Lanka means your parents went there or you have some religious or political connections. Grade 5 Scholarships students being an exception to this.

        • 1
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          nishan

          Yes.

          “Getting into a school in Sri Lanka means your parents went there or you have some religious or political connections.”

          “Grade 5 Scholarships students being an exception to this.”

          Yes. This is where the Government Schools, and central schools are very critical, so that the intelligent students van be pulled into the system, irrespective of their birth, as it is the country that benefits in the end.

          A stupid Catholic or a Stupid Buddhist can get into a better known Catholic or Buddhist school, compared to a non-Catholic or Non-Buddhist etc.

  • 9
    10

    For most of us, it took long time to see the truths you see at the age of 21. Excellent young lady… You mentioned that even at present day only 6% goes to Uni. Where the rest 94%, (actually 100% after another 4 years) go after schooling? All go to the society as young adults. How our education system address this, by preparing our children ready to become responsible, productive citizens. Main aim of education should be to produce good citizens.

    I went to tuition classes from year 9 to learn maths and sciences and that helped me to get a place in a Uni. What potion of my education got from my regular schooling? Ethical, Moral values? Have we?

  • 15
    3

    Thisuri Wanniarachchi has done a great analysis to equate a school boy prank of entering a sacred women’s school to that of Rape,misogyny,Patriarchy,elitistism,social decadence,lack of education and anti lesbian,gay ,bisexual transgender(LGBT) and pure puerile behavior.
    She also says that antics are not the solely to be found Sri Lanka but other western nations as well.
    What she does not realize is that there is a group psychology taking place here.Old boys come from afar to be at the big match and consume large amounts of alcohol purely to fraternize with their peers of yesteryear and to keep track of what has happened to each other very similar to major family reunion and the scorecard is the least important factor.This tradition has caused much consternation to their spouses who heard of their husbands arrival at the big match and learned of his departure to the UK without having visited his family,soon after the Bog Match.If Thisuri was the spouse she would be very upset to say the very least!-

    Id say ban all male chauvinist , big matches and instead spend three days of mourning each year.

  • 10
    9

    I personally find the author Thisuri to be a truly amazing individual with a truly progressive mind. What she states doesn’t mean we need to adopt western principles however we now need to be more open and adapt to a free thinking world. It is my view that the SL school system tries too hard to be focused on studies and probably less focused on ensuring good people are bread. The school believes this should be thought at home while at home it’s assumed the school will do this with its discipline. Sadly though to quite an extent we end up with intelligent people who are socially inapt due to their insecurities which leads to narrow minds. A testimony to this would be our parliamentarians.

    Maybe what SL and probably the world needs is for a period within the school day to teach children social etiquette. This could be where young children are though self-hygiene, using toilets, table manners, cultural and ethnicity manners, general manners and the older they get it includes gender equality, sexual orientations, to sex education (a wider sex education) and if we truly want even mannerisms of social media and communications. I am sure if thought about it the list would be endless. However teaching children these would certainly lead to a more equal and accepting society. We in Sri Lanka truly need this. As parents we need to raise good people.

    I would love to meet the author purely to share thoughts as I find her work to be thought provoking and enlightening.

  • 0
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    her writing [Edited out]

  • 16
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    Well first of all you better get your facts straight before publishing some criticism. I agree on most of the things mentioned here but can’t agree with the fact that Buddhist schools cause racism. You would see that there would at least 75% of those who are from Buddhist schools is not racist. Even though there’s a less representation of other nationalities in the school, the students have never been forced to discriminate based on the religion. Thanks

  • 17
    6

    Anything and everything is turned into some bullsh*t feminist issue these days. Although the big match culture leaves much to be desired, turning it in to a feminism issue is a complete joke. We do not want a western style radical feminist, or social justice warrior movement here in Lanka which has pushed them backwards.

    BTW by the same feminist logic of women being equally capable of EVERYTHING, why dont the girls stand up for themselves and fight? just asking?

  • 9
    2

    I agree with some of the things you wrote. Like how our schools do not teach tolerance. Unfortunately most schools in SL represents a single religion, which according my knowledge so is your school. But I loved going to big matches even after I left school. Cos, that was a chance for me to get together with my old school buddies. And for some, going back to a school event brings them back some sweet memories. There’s nothing wrong with that. Of course some would do it with the intention of securing a school entry for their children.

    However you seem to justify the US college sports events and somewhat disregard the SL school sports events. Maybe Americans don’t have many good memories ab’t their school lives. We all know that school bullying is a big issue in US. Whereas in SL we also got bullied but learned to tough it out. That’s why we didn’t commit suicide like those American kids :)

    Most of the Westerners I talked to has no connection with their school friends at all, even in a time when technology is so developed. Whereas in SL we still have connections with our school friends, special thanks to social media.

    You also mentioned ab’t Sexism, which of course is a very crucial and important matter. I agree with you on that 100%. But, then again those US college sports events you mentioned are also male oriented sports events. Girls are merely some hot cheerleaders. So there is somewhat of a Sexism there as well

  • 20
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    Should have just named the title ‘What Your schools Didn’t Teach You if you went to a boy school’ because the majority of this is bashing big matches and boy schools, hell almost all of it lol. How is it not sexist?

  • 9
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    What needs to change is segregated schools. There’s no need for Buddhist schools, convents, girls schools, boys schools. If all schools were inclusive, secular, and coed, kids will naturally grow up respecting and understanding everyone else. There’d be no need to jump over a wall, or dress up as the opposite gender, cos they’d all be cheering and partying together!

  • 24
    3

    Amarasiri I think the average IQ of Sri Lanka has taken a major hit after reading this article. Can you give us the updated figure?

    Is the author correlating the fraternizing culture in big matches to higher-education rates??? what are you trying to get at in your first bullet point?

    Are you implying that Ivy League students can fraternize because they are in Uni whereas fostering school spirit among students and alumni is unacceptable? Then you claim that they will be socially and intellectually backward? Not only is there no argument but what is written is blatantly illogical. A big match has got to do nothing with the potential a person possesses. what is wrong with cheering your school and how is that related to not getting a higher education? Also your ‘facts’ don’t even make sense. Only a handful of the school’s in the island participate in big matches and somehow that is attributed to the 6% university rate throughout the entire country. LOL.

    misogyny is defined as the hatred or contempt against women. kids during big match season jump into schools because of their hatred of women is one of the better jokes of the article.

    the school system is not responsible for being intolerant of other sexual orientations. we have to blame the generations behind us and the slow progressing culture for ingraining that taboo in the coming generations. No where in the world have I ever heard of the school system inculcating these values.

    the last bullet point of blaming racism due to a lack of education is another joke. the author just mentions the title, throws soil at the ‘battle of the maroons’ and proceeds on a tangent talking about the male favoritism in Sri Lankan families. Sinhala Buddhist schools don’t ingrain racism, it’s the fault of the individual or their family upbringing. Schools actually promote religious harmony and it is not fair for the author to corner only one faction of the religiously exclusive schools when there are schools that are Catholic/Christian and Muslim only which promote segregation as well.

    With what level of statistical significance are these claims being made? no one knows.. I hate articles like these. They are just written for the sake of being written. Lacks common sense and most importantly an argument or reasoning.

  • 2
    0

    These actually were British traditions. Our school system is a British system that we have been holding onto so dearly for the past 70 odd years. The younger generations move on and so does the British schools. Our children will move on but our adult generation insists that they follow the same rules. At school these children undergo depressed teacher centred, diciplined education to become celibates. The big match is the release of the children’s depression at school. Either we have to move the system to suit the younger generation. Or the behaviour will get worse and worse to the point that it is unbearable resulting in a collapse of the whole system.

  • 4
    7

    Do you say being Gay is ok?

    • 1
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      Jehan

      “Do you say being Gay is ok?”

      It depends on your beliefs and brainwashing.

      If they make you believe and brainwash you saying that you will end up in Hell Fire, them you believe that and generally avoid being Gay.

      If not, depending on the environment and culture you are in, you may take on different positions, on being Gay.

      It is my understanding that Wahhabies and their clones are forbidden being Gay, Listen to music and have few other restrictions, like not showing reverence to dead people and dead saints etc.

  • 21
    5

    This is disgusting. she refers particularly to the cricket match played by the country’s most respected Buddhist schools and refers to the children of these schools of being racist, ignorant and backward. This is clearly inaccurate, misleading and a distortion of facts.Such poor journalism must be condemned in the strongest possible manner and the journalist is not fit to be nominated to the International Writing Programme conducted any university nor is she qualified to receive any literacy awards.

    • 1
      0

      I could not agree more. No doubt this does happen in Buddhist schools but also in Christian, Muslim and it may shock her but international schools as well.

  • 19
    3

    Whilst there are a few interesting “keywords” in the article, the author who has an excellent grasp of English, should really take a chill pill.

    The following “How absolutely misogynistic is it that boys feel the need to disrespect the boundaries and space of a girls’ institution breaking and entering in such an act of dominance?” made me laugh as most times (at least when I was in school) it was girlfriends, friend’s sisters etc. who implored us to come into their school to break the monotony. Additionally most of them would join us at the game on the Saturday and Sunday. Oh, I should also say a belated “thank you” for every one of those girls who threw down money to keep the fuel in the “trucks”.

  • 32
    4

    Thisuri,

    Breaking and entering and vandalism anywhere are crimes which must be punished. But is it misogyny? patriarchy? sexism? rape?! Really?! I understand your need to use hyperbole and sensationalism in your writing, but to call using these words a huge stretch would be an understatement! How does a young boy’s desire to even break the law to go see/impress/get attention from girls equal hating women? Quite the opposite, I would say!

    Now, if a boy assaults or harasses a girl (whether inside her school, or just walking down the street), that is a whole different ball game. Building walls between our girls and boys is not the way to address that problem.

    As for boys dressed as girls in parades, what specifically is your problem with them expressing themselves this way? Isn’t it you who is being transphobic (or crossphobic?) here? A very conservative stance, for someone claiming to be socially progressive. If you dressed up as a Fire-fighter, a Mexican, a superhero etc., would that be degrading to those parties? On the contrary, it is celebrating that person.

    I’m also not following your issue with fraternity? What’s wrong with wanting to catch up and party once an year with friends you grew up (for 13 years) with? …and what do you mean going back to school in uniforms? I’m not aware of this practice. Old boys usually just go for the match, and perhaps the cycle-parade right? By the way, girls schools have sporting rivalries as well, which are passionately attended by old-girls. If you went back to St. Bridget’s to attend an OGA meeting, fair, or sporting event, would that be weird? demeaning? mocking your childhood self?

    You’re also on very shaky ground implying that it’s ok for elite universities to have rivalries, but not the others. That’s elitism, not progressive thinking.

    It’s good that young people like you are thinking and writing about social issues, but I feel you should think through your arguments/words more, consider counter-arguments, and try to present strong supporting evidence for your hypotheses.

    • 0
      0

      your comment said everything i couldnt say in an even better way

  • 21
    3

    Did the author really compare jumping into schools to patriarchy, sexism and then rape? Is she serious? People like this is exactly why feminism has gotten a bad rep. Dragging everything related or unrelated, digging up non-existent issues and splitting hairs to make women seem victimized at every turn. I’ll sure as hell would be against if the guys who jump physically harass girls in a school but making the whole big match culture sound like an entire women-hating parade is utter bull to say the least. The worst that happened to a school by jumping into it is a free period or two (except for that one time Royalists who broke down the gate of Museaus which none of the Royalists I know is proud of). Generations have existed without getting butthurt over things like this but this year seems to be the year which everybody gets offended by something. The author herself said she would just laugh it off in her school days. That’s exactly how it’s supposed to be. Sometimes getting older doesn’t make one always wiser.

  • 7
    1

    Misogyny is not the correct term. School discipline involves many components. Good teaching, controllable student density, education of social behavior and responsibilities, teaching to respect and value others, use of good language, tutor qualities, etc. The root cause is the contravention or absence of such components that should have been followed at schools. Minsters are the heroes who are vested with such powers and they doesn’t seem to know how to implement them, which should have been rightfully vested with school heads. We have seen a teacher knelt for disciplining a student by an MP and then being invited as chief guest later. Parliament itself display what kind of discipline the country should follow from the way they behave and speak within the parliament and the excessive use of foul language. The people are responsible for foolishly choosing such members to the parliament. Now the poor discipline in schools and everywhere also could be compared like a tax imposed on the society for making wrong choice again and again by sending wrong people to the parliament.

    Sexual behaviors of members of the Indo Sri Lankan Society is a bit too complicated for the simple reason that some of our cultural believes impose too many taboos on free social behaviors. The administration have to introduce organized programs to improve the character of the students. When i commented that all our administrators are suffering from begging syndrome, one person commented that this is our culture. Similarly, in the absence of intellectual leadership, nothing will change in the near future of these ill behaviors of students.

  • 4
    2

    Big match tamashas are good fun , lets have it.
    Expats make their annual pilgrimage to attend these tamashas and reminisce.

    Children are children at school and surely they grow out of their childhood and become serious citizens?

    Sri Lankan citizens are law abiding on the whole.

    Its the politicians who went to the same said schools turn in to corrupt and violent so and so?

  • 18
    2

    To my friends who feel my response is too long, tldr; author has swallowed social justice bs hook, line and sinker and tries to lecture us on her vision of an ideal society. nice try, sweetheart.

    Since the author has seen fit to parade her school’s name around, I’ll just say I’m a 4th generation Trinitian, who has seen society (more than this little girl with her sheltered upbringing) and has got shit done in an anglican school, in a predominantly buddhist country, as a muslim. that alone makes the author’s ridiculous, hysterical accusations of racism ring hollow.

    I see that a few commenters above me have seen fit to negate the author’s silliness, utter falsification of statistics, and general misunderstanding of the whole damn situation. I see idealistic girls like this, and I just laugh my ass off. However, I felt I should put any doubts to rest.

    This spiel starts with this gem; ‘The culture of fraternity surrounding school Big Matches in Sri Lanka is a reflection of the misogyny and social malnourishment within our education system’
    According to the author’s logic, a school happy hour fostering brotherhood, meeting up with estranged friends etc. reflects our hatred towards women. That’s a damn huge leap of logic. How the hell is the human brain even capable of that. ‘Social Malnourishment’? Is the author implying that Sri Lankan boys know nothing of society, when we are inundated with advice from our parents, elders, teachers and others too numerous to mention? Relax ladies, you know we love you.

    ” A significant number of the students who graduate from these schools remain unemployed/underemployed or end up at low quality mid-way alternative higher education programs that do not fill the gap of the education that their schools failed to give them. A majority of students don’t get the opportunity to learn how to think socially progressively. They remain socially and intellectually backward.”

    Really? According to the author, the students of Royal, St. Thomas’s, Trinity College (my alma mater), St. Anthony’s College, Kingswood, Dharmaraja, Ananda college, Nalanda college are all to be found working in middle/lower class jobs in our country and are all waiting for amnesty from the government. Literally every 5th person you see is an uneducated student from one of the above schools. Unemployed students literally jostling each other in the streets. Yeah, right. the author levels a serious accusation towards some of the most prestigious schools in the country claiming that they undereducate their students. Royal, Ananda and Nalanda alone produce a sizeable amount of university students.
    Progressive? I look at the US, Canada, most of Europe, Australia, and we as Sri Lankans decide against rampant homosexuality, silly body positivity crap, against demonizing normal functioning males, non-existent -phobias and -isms. Yeah, that’s a done deal. If that’s progress, god bless my country, it doesn’t want any of it.

    “They never taught you the meaning of the term misogyny.
    And now here you are, ignorantly being a total misogynistic a******.”

    and that’s what progress is. charming, ain’t it?

    “But I now realize that this was patriarchy and sexism taking place in its most ignorant form. How absolutely misogynistic is it that boys feel the need to disrespect the boundaries and space of a girls’ institution breaking and entering in such an act of dominance?

    *Oh and by the way, “to disrespect/ disregard an individual’s physical boundaries and space by non-consensually entering it” is literally the definition of rape.”

    Suddenly, after travelling to a predominantly white, more liberated society where years of shitty government, the author realizes the depths of the misogyny and rape perpetrated by Sri Lankan schoolboys. the horror! #sarcasm lol

    where is this definition from? the Social Justice Warrior dictionary?
    upon reading this, I suddenly realize that I have been raped multiple times, even by old ladies, and mostly by good looking girls. since, ya know, they got too close in my personal space and I didn’t grant them this magical “consent” to get close. I’m shocked, shocked I tell you. lol brah.

    females sexually assaulted by their male co-workers? where are all these rape victims? Let it be said first ANY DECENT, NORMAL HUMAN BEING (NO MATTER WHERE THEY’VE STUDIED) CONDEMN RAPE AND LOOK UPON RAPISTS AS LESS THAN HUMAN.
    now that we got that out of the way, where is the author getting these stuff from? no statistics for this outrageous statement, and I’ll say even these statistics are bound to be false. later in the article the author says that 1 in 10 sri lankan men will sexually harrass a woman. again, where is the source for this allegation? this statistic is obviously copied from the infamous 1 in 4 college rape statistic in the US. you think Sri Lankans will blindly accept whatever you parrot to us without looking behind the facade? knowing the huge amount of public rape-hoaxes in the US, the author thinks that stuff will fly here. not in our country, ma’am. you oughta know better, you grew up and went to school here. lmao writing this, but it’s all true, and you know it.

    but the best for last, brothers and sisters of untarnished minds:

    “They never pointed out the severe levels of transphobia you suffer from; that you feel the need to parade it.

    Big Match parades having men dressed up as women behaving in a degrading manner is just another petty and ignorant act of misogyny and transphobia being played out in public. The homophobic terms commonly used by boys and girls of elite schools in Colombo include “faggot” as an insult and the use of the phrase “gay” to describe something that is uncool. Our school system never taught us to be politically correct or how to grow up to be a part of an inclusive society that respects people of all genders, and sexual orientations.”

    this is incredible. the author says guys dressing up as girls reflects our “transphobia”. WTF, that’s crazy. if we make fun of something, then that means we are afraid of it? what’s the logic behind this, oh wait, there’s none. leftist bullcrap 101.

    of course Sri Lankan society, like any sane society, doesn’t view homosexuality and transgender whatever favourably. of course we say ‘faggot’ and ‘gay’. Effeminacy, which is associated with the former words, is ridiculed in boys and men, and those are the words we use to do it.
    Donald Trump (and the author no doubt hates his guts) said that political correctness is killing the US. this will be true everywhere. free speech is our most valuable right, and we’re gonna use it goddamnit.
    all genders? didn’t you know there are only two? maybe the author identifies as a pansexual? lol forget it, Sri Lanka has it’s heart and head in the right place. no degeneracy in OUR society.

    And lastly, a desperate ploy to legitimize her idiocy by bringing up racism. NO FREE THINKING SRI LANKAN CONDEMNS DISCRIMINATION OR PREFERENTIAL TREATMENT BASED ON RELIGION, CASTE, OR CREED. Sinha-le is a silly little gesture by a few fellas, a last gasp of the Rajapaksha regime, and if we as minorities are offended by that, it just means we are thin-skinned. In my 20 years in my beloved country, I have very rarely experienced any kind of difference in treatment. As Trinitians we interact with every facet of society.
    when people of different cultures and religions try to co-exist, there will always be obstacles. a few people who go to extremes in their ideologies. but there is no problem in taking pride in your religion, and race. BE A PROUD BUDDHIST, MUSLIM, CHRISTIAN, BURGHER, HINDU, WHATEVER. But the majority doesn’t condone imposing your beliefs on others. Sri lanka is the only country where multicuturalism has been greatly successful. I am proud of my fellow countrymen.
    therefore, the accusation of racism against the general Sri Lankan public is FALSE AND UNFOUNDED.

    I could have eviscerated the author on this vast, steaming mound of stupidity, yet I refrain coz this has already gone on for too long.

    Stereotypes are how people stay safe. i assume a guy from a seedy part of town, is not a cultured and well-bred guy. is that wrong? hell no, that’s how my parents raised me. they gave me a clear idea of the roles men and women play in the good ole patriarchal society. my mother is a successful lawyer, but family is always first. god bless all normal mothers. I also hope the author doesn’t procreate. I feel sorry for her future kids and husband. though given her views, it might as well be a wife, lol.

    God bless my country, and all Sri Lankans. I love their resilience, and a few dissenters never will sever our roots.

    • 4
      10

      You have done a fantastic job of making her point for her. Well done.

    • 0
      0

      Nazhad,
      I wish there were more people who thought like you mate in the Serendipitous island, instead there are more and more of these politically correct nuts, who jump on their ill-informed psedo-righteous soap boxes, screaming bloody murder when some teenage kids or their older selves try to have some fun!

  • 1
    12

    As an alumni from one of Sri Lanka’s leading government schools I would call for the abolishment of the free education system. This system being the root causes of so many problems.

    Don’t try to replace, just abolish. Let private education take its place.

    • 7
      0

      How does that solve anything?

      Yes, let’s destroy the only chance for children from poor, lower income classes have at a better life here in this country. This is the stupidest, unrelated, not to mention selfish reply.

      • 0
        6

        It is related because it is directly a causer of poor moral standards and substandard education, but more importantly it is indirectly a causer of poverty and stress in society. This is because it is in fact socialism, and socialism is proven time and time again to be a failed concept but we still indulge in it.

        • 3
          0

          What a load of bullcrap. I wonder what’s the “leading school” you went to. It’s amazing how you connect something a bunch of school boys do for the mere thrill and fun once a year to socialism. Free education is the cause for poverty and stress? wut? As I mentioned earlier, the biggest benefiter of the free education ‘is’ the poor.

          By your logic, 80-90% of the people who have excelled in academics, science, arts, sports, politics or basically anything in this country are deprived of morals. And since your solution is private education, everyone who goes to private schools must be saints, right?

          Apparently the only thing free education has ruined is your sense of logic. Get your head outta your behind.

  • 8
    1

    Women never occupied an inferior position in Sri Lankan society, religion, politics or our culture as a whole. (quite the opposite if you ask me!) our traditions never called them chattels, which can be disposed of by men at their sweet will and pleasure. Some of the wrongly informed and superficial women such as yourself are thundering their ill-advised orations from such platforms and attributing motives which have never been sanctioned by Buddhism, our education system or approved by the thoughtful men. This is westernization and feminist propaganda at its finest. So maybe it was not the Sinhala-Buddhist centric schools that conveniently forgot, but you yourself did so blinded by western propaganda. In addition, how could you generalize saying that “little boys who grow up seeing in this culture will never quite learn how to respect a woman ” there is no other country in the world that respects and treats women like ours. This is a pathetic generalization if you ask me.

    There are many women now in Sri Lanka, who are treating their husbands like chattels and worse than chattels. For what can it mean else than selling their husbands, by contracting debts, living extravagant lives, cheating them by removing their properties and sending them to jails and handing them over to the clutches of law and penalties. Are not women hateful, mean, and cut throats, to join with dirty paramours, resort to all sorts of devilish intrigues, poison or murder their husbands and even their own children for the sake of their unholy lust, hatred, jealousy, spirit of revenge and sensual gratifications?

    Anyways the point being, there is no use of blaming this or that sex and crying patriarchy and misogyny. Good people are found among both the sexes and the worst criminals are equally counted amongst both.

    And finally that’s not the real definition of rape, maybe that’s just a delusional ‘feminazi’ version. Your logic is incomprehensible, how one thing leads to another in your mind and your chain of thoughts, i’m just like OMG .. for example how you relate big matches to the 6% in university education. And how boys seeing this culture become sex offenders and incestuous rapists ? It’s like in your head one thing is related to another.

    It occurred to me, maybe it’s a personal grudge manifesting into such hatred towards men and boys in general, maybe a childhood experience or abuse and you’re hiding behind western feminist propaganda to get away with it. one final advice for you : don’t get into the feminist bandwagon but try considering egalitarianism instead.

  • 14
    2

    I am deeply offended that I am branded in this article, as a racist just because I went to Ananda College. This is like calling a Muslim, an ISIS supporter. A Tamil, an LTTE!!

  • 8
    1

    Thisuri,

    It is unfortunate that you have taken the path you have taken to address what I too believe is a timely issue that is burdening the society of today. Violence overall, be it against women or men, in today’s society is an issue that needs to be addressed and as an educator involved in the state system from time to time I will tell you that the role of the system in trying to address this issue is far from enough.

    However, you have done great injustice to your own cause through trivializing the matter at hand. Through your own approach you have unfortunately gone on a poor analysis loaded with several of your own unfortunate prejudices.

    For starters let us take your point on the Battle of the Maroons. as an Anandian my self let me tell you the last thing on our mind when we meet up with our old school mates is to dance around a burning Dhamma Chakra screaming Siha-Le chants.

    The problem here is that you yourself have subscribed to the great problem of “Sri Lankan Generalization”, which leads many to read the various clusters of our society through generalization based on what they perceive in samples. I may list out a few of these prejudices thus:

    –Tamil/member of the diaspora? then surely a Kotiya/LTTE

    –Muslim,long beard? Surely ISIS

    –Thomian? Must be a gay bugger (beach boys no..)

    –Went to Ananda? definite racist..must have a Sinha-Le sticker also.

    Hope you see a pattern forming and realize how hurtful and how offensive such notions can be.

    Secondly, the point with which you start this unfortunate article is by commenting on why we oh so fondly keep returning to our schools, or as we like to call it to our “Alma Maters”. Yes this is promoted by the fraternity and the society that we live in. In fact in our welfare society this is an essential function that I hope can be passed to the University system too.

    Here is why: today many of the so called “great schools” be it Royal or Ananda (or any of the number I would rather not spare the time to mention) thrive on the fact that the Alumni fraternity or the OBA as we call it is able to support it’s greatness. We often argue that too much is been done for these schools. In fact all that is done for these schools by the free education system would come down to about 2%. The other 98% is done by the alumni.

    The free education that I grew up under and studied under and ushered me to become the man I am today was fostered by my forerunners. Please don’t trivialize what they do and what we do for those who we can do something for by saying that we return to our schools through some trauma “to mock our childhood selves”

    In fact having been an adult; for the short time I have been, I go back to school to celebrate that younger blissful self and as a teacher I find great happiness in helping children foster their childhood that I know they will miss as I do when the burden of their adulthood hits.

    Your Final point on Misogeny: unfortunately if every prank is misogenist then my every tease and every time I’ve sneaked in to a certain girl’s school; (out of sheer solidarity with a good friend of mine; to meet a girl that he was in love with at that time) I have done so as I hated my friend and that girl. Unfortunately again you read what you want to see and take the actions of a few to generalize the motives of all.

    You have completely missed the idea of humor in society and have unfortunately seen only one side of the coin. Better journalism would have been to present a balanced and much better informed opinion which was not burdened so much by your own singular opinion but rather represented a better forum of thought.

    However, all that said thank you for taking the effort you have taken and I hope for a better rounded and better analysis the next time I turn around to read one of your pieces.

    Cheers

  • 6
    1

    Thisuri,

    You are possibly only partially correct in your assessment: “A significant number of the students who graduate from these schools remain unemployed/underemployed …. A majority of students don’t get the opportunity to learn how to think socially progressively. They remain socially and intellectually backward.”

    Would be really useful to find out what share of these “socially and intellectually backward” segment from the privileged schools (yes, mostly reserved for privileged families)end up well employed, well above their intellectual capability and integrity. Many get “privileged” appointments as authoritative officials of our security, defense and policing as well as political officials (foreign service for instance).

    That would to a large extent explain from whom the lower ranks of the security forces made of rural youth get guidance and orders in conducting their responsibilities.

    Would you then not think that is the primary reason why SL forces were chucked out of Haiti, for instance. And the whole heap of atrocities in-country, ranging from the Havelock Town rugby player incident all the way to the mass rape and murder in in the North!

    Hope you get a chance to extend your curiosity and capability to investigate the root causes of that aspect as well. Good luck!

  • 13
    3

    Guys this is just a puff piece by a wannabe social activist who has done nothing in Sri Lanka except write things trying so very hard to get attention because. Ignorance is the best when it comes to people who have never been a part of great schools nor traditions. Sri Lankans and students of these schools have gone on to be great and will continue beig great. Let actions speak louder than these Net-activist type individuals like Thisuri who will forever be riding on the so called state literary award she got because her daddy played to the tune of Rajapakse’s before switching sides!

    • 2
      10

      Even though she’s 22, Thisuri has worked with government institutions advocate to fix these issues for many years. Anyone who knows Thisuri know that her work spans from Isurupaya to the Higher Education Ministry to the Presidential Secretariat. Ask around before you call her a “net-activist.”

      • 13
        0

        Just because she’s all that, doesn’t make this any better. This article is a heap of garbage and I’m not gonna go into detail dissecting everything because everything I could possibly say is already written by other commenters. If people like her are involved in “advocating” governmental and educational entities, god help this country.

      • 10
        0

        Are you Thisuri in disguise?

      • 4
        0

        While that may sound like a big deal to someone unfamiliar with kids interning at the places you just mentioned, its just a coffee-carrying/copy editing internship. You should talk to the real activists teaching kids in rural areas, putting up innovation labs and making a real difference. Sorry your girlfriend and her puff-pieces trying to break into the political scene continue to mean nothing. Help her out and take her to see how local schools and real activists help kids get educated.

      • 2
        0

        “Thisuri has worked with government institutions to fix these issues for many years”
        Shows the state of our policy making and the quality of our policymakers if a 22 year old is being given a significant role in ‘fixing’ things. A 22 year old who in those ‘many years’ has also had to complete her secondary education and her college education and write her award winning books etc etc. No wonder she has no sense of humour. Pau.

    • 1
      3

      TruthPill,
      Of course “Sri Lankans and students of these schools have gone on to be great and will continue being great.”

      Thisuri is neither denying that nor is she is pointing her fingers at that glorious alumni who continue to make those institutions and traditions proud! Instead, she is pointing out the increasing preponderance of the political-power induced transplants who end up as discards, bringing disgrace to these revered institutions, and to the nation! If you still don’t get it, may be a second look at the recent history of the “princes” behind bars or on the way to that place down Borella, may give you some insight!

      Given that you actually have difficulty figuring even that, and assuming (based on your “who have never been a part of great schools nor traditions”) that you had some affiliation to one these institution, it is not difficult for me to surmise whether you belong to the group that has done proud to the alma mater or to the second group towards whom Thisuri’s fingers are pointing!

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