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

  • 69
    9

    Thisuri,

    I really appreciate the innovative way you’re thinking girl.. And the guts you’ve got to write this article with all those so called ‘facts’ you have collected. But I doubt whether your effort was worth it at all.
    Darling please don’t talk about things which you girls don’t know at all. First of all Just because you have experienced em boys trucking to St’Bridgets convent it doesn’t mean you know anything about the spirit and traditions em boys had and still have for more than 10 decades!
    Secondly just because some boys filled with big match spirit in their hearts and souls together with the love for their beloved school breaks into a selected number of girls schools to give out a cheer, With what authority do you refer this behaviour to misogyny and sexism? How does this behaviour ever be misogynistic? All These boys were and these boys are only doing is simply supporting their beloved schools with thy spirit of the big match. How does this even be related to misogyny and sexism? Oh please darling, your innovative thinking is indeed very good but it’s far beyond reality. It’s just an illusion which you’re not even aware for yourself. Don’t try to mislead people with your false logic together with your talent for writing. Keep on mind that Wisdom is always way better than Logic. So please girl once again don’t talk about things which you girls have no idea about.
    STOP WRITING ARTICLES TO MISLEAD THE PUBLIC!

    • 29
      6

      Typical Colombo 7 attitude of holier than thou- where everyone apart from ‘us’ are- sexist, homophobic, racist, ancestral and racist.

  • 71
    12

    I have just returned to the U.S after attending the Royal Thomian cricket encounter for the first time since leaving Sri Lanka. Needless to say I thoroughly enjoyed the event and very impressed !! In fact this has become the Sri Lankan version of the Home Coming weekend which exists in the US.This young lady seems sadly unaware and quite confused about the Sri Lankan culture and quite unaware of the Culture that exists in the elite private schools in the United States or UK. My daughter who attended Brearely school in Manhattan and currently a graduating economics major at Harvard ( same age as the author of this article and news editor for Harvard Crimson ) would tell you that most Brealey alumni consider attending Brealey their crowning achievement and mind you 50% of graduating students from BREARLEY get into Ivy League schools . Similarly my son who attended REGIS high school in New York city and entered Amherst College and graduated MD from Cornell medical school currently training at Harvard/ Brigham and women’s would similarly adore his high school more than anything else he has achieved so far simply because they have realized that their current success was rooted in these institutions.I also think that the author may not have been exposed to the foot ball rivalries in less well known colleges that trigger even greater frenzy than the Harvard Yale annual encounter and has nothing to do with their academic standards. As for Bennington college , I am sorry I don’t know where it is but I am sure they do have a homecoming weekend !!!
    Miran Salgado MBBS MD
    Chairman Department of Neurosciences New York Methodist Hospital
    Royal College Class of 74

  • 22
    4

    Hi Thisuri,

    I have just one thing to say, [Edited out]

  • 15
    5

    Oh My Dear thisuri….

    First of all I just wanted to tell you that I am gonna change my name some how cos I assume it as a crap of having *This* part in both of our names. Give me sometimes I will change it. And I secondly I am gonna tell you that I used to love bridget a lot untill 5 minutes ago and you just came here with this holy #*%(# #*%*@ article and ruined it…. Just take it personally madam cos I have some great bridgetians out of there talking.

    Do you know how fun it is? Or else are you having a personal issue with royals because of they use ur Great Great uniform as a weapon to make theirselves happy???have you ever gone for a big match. Have you seen a parade?? Parade is not just a perahara which brings kasakarayo and those kind of things. Parade is not something like perhara which makes people so emotional on their own religion ?? That’s something which makes those who walk in the parade more happy… You don’t know what it brings… happiness…… okay well you have mentioned that you are a bridgetian.. I know about someone of bridgets. She was the only one who deserve the Presidential ship of one society and they didn’t give it.. Because of her religion. I have heard that most of girls used even to hate her because of being really talented and dark skinned. You guys must be knowing the emotions and ethics of being an human. Before you involve with the education system. Remember this Madam Bridget.. You are just a small piece of this system and you have no idea for what this system is capable of cause you have been fooled in a life because of having a strict parent I guess isnt that true? Strick parent.. No phones till the end of the Als… no guys as mates. Oh yeah common childhood issues.

    You also have mentioned that school life is just a step.. Ypu don’t have to keep it till the rest of life. Not in ur words but that’s what you wanted to tell. Have you been at your class when you were in grade 10??? History first period of the year??? Aha you were there cos you are a teachers’ child neh anyway tho I wasn’t at class that much I learned this one thing. They says person who forget their past and try to build their future willno longer be succeed.. And I would like to add this part too.
    They wont just get succeed they will also get scold by people just as you are right now

    You girls don’t have the faith on your school. I knew this girl who used to go t your school but she left your school and went to Ladies apparently … you know whys that??? She wrnt to a school and she left it for another school. Your school doesn’t build the faith in you.. We have that. Royalist have that. Nalandians have that. Thomians have that.. They love their school sometimes even more than their parent that’s the truth to be bold. You guys doesn’t have that. I don’t know how it should be called
    Faith??? Love??? Loyalty??? Anyway whatever it is you don’t have that. That’s why exactly you are here yelling at our parades yelling at our big matches. You must be enjoying your life going out with friends who gives you a relief for your life. Other then staring at yoir computer walking through the gossip sites and social medias and blogging holly craping shits about the things that u being in jealous cos of not having..

    We parade it not to show anythinf it brings us a huge fun… and you can even imagine how much it exactly is.. Madam.. Suicide yourself and wish to be a guy even in your next soul. You will feel the way we feel.

    And yeah we need a proper knowledge not to be racism… you know what madam…. After you were born in five seconds your parent and all will decided your name… your religion and your nation. And the rest of your life you will sacrifice to keep something that you didn’t decide by your own. That’s the system madam you cant just change it by your pen. You are a author I know but admit that tho you typed this should be changed and all ln a blog yoi cant be a Shakespeare… everyone in this world personally will be racism. Only what matters is the way how they show it. But you poor soul you don’t understand idiot.

    Parades shows the joy. Big match shows the brotherhood. Having the faith on your school will show you your school as a heaven not just as a school. Your mother just gave you the birth my child. But your school has given you the foundation of your life. Where you are…. Exactly who you are cos of it. So do not type stuff here after by putting it in a ground level.

    Hope you understood something. Try to be clear minded. I may not a perfect write who won awards just like you. I am literary a graphic designer who see things in different ways. So that’s how I see all of these things.

    Judge your school. Judge your thoughts and your evidence before you ever gonna talk against someone else.

  • 30
    5

    As an admirer of women – well, a distant admirer :)) – I do not agree with your misogyny analogy. But there is truth in some of what you say.

    Mediocrity wants something to hang on to make them feel that they are better than the rest of mediocrity.

    If you can come out from nowhere and be world class that’s all what matters. What school or college that Einstein went was he proud of?

    Please, please. please I am not trying to insult anyone here; I do not get in to personal insults, but to illustrate my point, in his comment Dr Miran Salgado has taken the opportunity to tell Lankans about his and his children’s achievements. But if they have contributed anything of significance to any field the world would have known about them and they would have transcended whatever schools or colleges they would have attended. In the absence of any great achievement one depend on some educational institution to transcend one’s insignificance.

    Ah mediocrity, the horror, the horror ……..

  • 54
    2

    Hi Thisuri,

    After reading your article, I don’t know where to begin addressing how skewed your mentality as a ‘progressive thinker’ is. To start off with, you’re right, this country is sadly very patriarchal and does have a very misogynistic mindset. I do not support trucking, however I love how you have chosen to sensationalize this by associating it with rape to gain attention (quite cheap).

    It appears you have chosen to write about a topic that you have done very little research on. It is great that you have dropped the word ‘facts’ a few times in your article in a poor attempt to keep it legitimate. However the ‘fact’ of the matter is you have failed at understanding the mindset of the people attending the events you have criticized and instead chosen to impose your own idea of what it is. Students receive free education and develop a sense of unity under the flag of their respective school. Is this not something to be proud of? are they not allowed to celebrate it? Even the adults who chose to come back and celebrate their alma mater, celebrate all the friendships and memories they made, what is wrong with this? why do you label this as weird simple because you do not understand? Did you not stand up for the LGBT community? isn’t their biggest obstacle the fact that people don’t understand and therefore label them negatively?

    Its unfortunate that you witnessed a instance of racism when you went to the battle of the maroons. It must have been a horrific episode (for the rest of the crowd having to sit there around you and your cynical attitude). What you witnessed I can only imagine was an isolated incident of racism that is not at all what these events represent (I can assure you as I have been to many and I’m not drawing my judgement from just one event, unlike you). As I said before, these events create a sense of unity, it does not matter what what religion or race you are, people feel a united sense of pride under one school flag and are seen as equals in each others eyes (Once again, a phenomenon you have not experienced but chosen to judge). I’ts absolutely great how you brought the ‘Singha-le’ into this to sensationalize it and blow this out of proportion (maybe rethink where you want to start your career? you seem more suited to be working for the western media).

    I do not think I need to talk about how wrong it was that you think Harvard and Yale are allowed to have these sporting events, but schools in Sri Lanka aren’t. Your elitist standpoint contradicts so many things you have spoken for in the past and it is absurd how that you think this was okay to say. Different countries are allowed to celebrate different rivalries whether it is a school or a university makes no difference. They are both institutions of education that have the right to celebrate their rivalries as they wish (but its nice that you have again chosen to label who can do what).

    Lastly I want to talk about your pure arrogance and in ability to take criticism. You talk about irrational anger and denial when you addressed peoples reactions to this but I think its time to do some self reflection on who really is irrational and in denial.

    I’d like to conclude by saying, you’re right about how patriarchal and misogynistic our culture is. You’re right in addressing its need to change. But you have started by pointing fingers in all the wrong places in a cheap attempt to gain attention. The sporting rivalries are hardly the place to be accusing and even the few isolated incidents that do occur there are not a result of the events themselves but rather a result of the individuals upbringing. To date your articles have been riding the wave of the political instability in our country and your content has always been common knowledge to your particular audience (not the entire country). It is good however that you have chosen to write them regardless of them being common knowledge or not because even though many people did know, they remained silent. This is the first time you have written an article with original ideas, and I was excited to read this only to be utterly disappointed. It was misinformed, emotive, inaccurate and hardly a representation of what the events actually are. I understand where you are coming from and why you felt the need to address these issues in the country, however you have done so very poorly and I suggest you do more research (quantitative AND qualitative) before you get your keyboard out.

  • 12
    1

    [Edited out]

  • 12
    2

    Yes, I have noticed that private schools in Sri Lanka have created the culture of cliquishness, where usually the rich and influential rule the roost. That school fraternity/sorority is usually ones exclusive circle of friends, long into adulthood.

    People will do anything to maintain that social group. And if ever a crunch time comes in, e.g. losing one’s job or money, they usually go to pieces, because going to another circle of interaction is beyond their capacity to accommodate.

    Private-school Lankans simply do not have that flexibility and resilience to develop and sustain themselves in a small country such as ours, where country-wide networking is imperative for country success and sustenance.

    It is quite a fallacious situation, considering over 80% of our nationals go to government schools. There is little networking between facets of society. This probably effects our economy in a very negative way.

    There is an overemphasis on alma-mater dedication. This kind of devotion comes from the British, at a time when they needed that pomp and swagger spirit to maintain their colonies. America too attempts lay adherence to that type of school and college culture, although being a huge country, and movement of people for employment, makes this culture somewhat less stringent.

    It’s time for especially the Catholic and other Christian schools to modernize and fraternize with the rest of the Nation. While usually not discriminatory towards other faiths and ethnicities, their initial dedication solely towards their right of faith, has somehow also created a secular culture of divisiveness and braggadocio.

    As for the boys……boys will be boys. But I agree that if these boys and young men were given more school guidance on interacting with different facets of Lankan society, they wouldn’t have all that much time to indulge in senseless sports of reckless and brash behavior.

  • 2
    0

    [Edited out] Please write instead of posting links – CT

  • 13
    49

    Isn’t it amazing how the moment a woman speaks up, men rally around her to say she’s wrong.
    “When men are oppressed it’s tragedy.
    when women are oppressed it’s tradition.”

    Big fan of Thisuri for voicing what she believes in. She’s not scared so she will say what every1 is thinking.

    These people are butthurt because they don’t want to be reminded what frauds and losers they are.
    They are sheep they will blindly go anywhere the wave takes them. Thisuri’s always consistantly been open about what’s wrong with our education system and society.

    Thank you
    -S.L

    • 13
      1

      Same way when a woman touches a man mistakenly and it’s called a mistake or a flirt but when a man does it, he is a perv or a sexual abuser ✌️!

    • 10
      0

      lol yes, evidently we’re the blind sheep. What’s wrong with our society is morons with warped point of view about reality and prejudice. In case your brain can’t register that, I’m talking about people like you and her.

    • 11
      0

      Thisuri is that you? *laugh emoticon* You seem to be lauding yourself quite a few times here S Lokuge, so much that I with other readers suspect you are in fact Thisuri in disguise/her brother/her boyfriend.
      My two cents is that we aren’t sheep. [Edited out]

    • 2
      0

      Not when you dish out incorrect facts. Just because you see a few connections to a problem does not necessarily mean that is the cause of the problem and such a problem exists to begin with. There is no empirical or theoretical evidence to support her claims.”We only see what we want to see; we only hear what we want to hear. Our belief system is just like a mirror that only shows us what we believe” – Don Miguel Ruiz
      You might argue my friend that the train will be long gone by the time all this research is done. But mind you, sensitive topics like this needs sufficient evidence or will lead to a propaganda.

      When I was her age, I predicted that World war 3 was imminent and the cause of it were the Chinese, the Russians, the Koreans and the US. I had facts and I saw connections, I saw alliances being made, I saw scheming and threats. If my predictions did come true, we would be fighting WW3 right now. So to say, I was naive and lacked professional judgement and analytical ability in such a topic. With age comes wisdom. I know know better. Had I voiced my opinion back then I would have been the laughing stock.

      This is my view on the whole article…..https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZLbUIa7exE

    • 4
      0

      Just because she’s a woman doesn’t make everything she’s said right here. To somehow equate Big Match culture with rape and misogyny and thinly veil it under ‘evidence’ and ‘proof’ is laughable and does not make her right.
      The prevailing tone in the article appears to be “I went to a better university than you, which makes me better than you and you should feel bad about that.”

  • 14
    0

    I was so interested in reading the article when i saw the topic “What your schools didn’t teach you”. And i expected to read some revolutionary ideas from you to make our education system a better one.
    And what i read was “How much i hate the boys schools big matches; specially the BOM”.
    Yes you reflect a typical journalist. Way to go sister
    hallelujah

  • 12
    3

    thisuri, mind your own business and seems like you’re anti sinhalese buddhists. no wonder chandrika is also a product of st Bridget’s..shame on you and silly chandrika

    • 2
      9

      Indha Bow Bow

      Typical Ballah barks at everything

    • 3
      0

      Dishonouring a school just due to two people is a bit too much in any case. We have also produced other much better individuals. Also not all agree with her point of view. If you see different social media, other Bridgetines are actually speaking up against her biased article. We are somewhat embarrassed by some of the points in her article and how she uses the school name for her advantage. It is true that she is pointing fingers at other schools in a wrong manner (which many have apologised for) but please refrain from doing the same as her. Doesn’t that ultimately put you in the same position as her?

  • 17
    1

    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”.

    How the fuck you comment on something you have no idea of. let me make this clear. Both Ananda and Nalanda educate their children well enough to have brains and common sense, which I see you lack a lot. So before you start making racist comments let me make you understand that you’re pointing your finger to Zahira Collage for being ISIS supporters, Hindu Ladies Collage for being Tamil Eelam Tigers and St. josephs collage boys for being KKK?
    Is that’s your point?

    Get your shit together!
    Don’t write on stuff you have no clue of.
    Good Luck!

  • 19
    0

    Such big words for such a small minded girl… Its not about disagreeing with women or devaluing their opinions. Its about talking about something you don’t fully understand. Men and Women are different social creatures, she should understand that. Going all Feminazi on men because of a few retards and calling everything “rape” never ends well.

    I know writers can be arrogant, but one should learn to be objective about things.

  • 17
    1

    Well Arjuna Ranathunga the world cup winning captain of 1996 is a proud maroon
    He was the one who stood against the injustice caused for Muttaia Muralidran (who is a Tamil)
    The bravery he showed that day,to escort the Sri lankan team from the ground was huge i don’t think anyone would do it risking his own career
    So you call us racist now?
    And Mahela Jayawardene is he any kind of a racist???
    If so will Kumar Sangakara and Mahela be buddies.
    Please try to prove your points with dacts madam.
    SBC hos only produced people like Chandrika Bandaranayake we all know how she ruled the country.

  • 16
    2

    Hilarious! The big problem of this woman is inferiority complex of being a woman. Every article she wrote can see this feministic bullshit.LOL.

  • 16
    0

    “undergraduate student and full scholar of Bennington College studying Political Economy and Education Reform” and calling the Iowa International Writers’ Program prestigious to toot her horn should say more than enough about this girl’s aspiration and the bulls* lengths she’d go to just to get her name on something. Funny how Ivy Leaguers don’t seem to have the chip she has. Or maybe she got dumped by a Marooner. Either way its personal and extremely racist. This read is a hoot. ColomtoTelegraph are you simulating the Onion or NewsCurry now?

  • 15
    0

    Thisuri,

    There are many things that I do not agree with you in this article and the best of the lot is the fact that you mention only 10% of the graduates from ‘the big match playing’ schools get the opportunity to enter distinguished universities. Yes, your stats may be correct, but it does not have anything to do with the big matches or the education provided by the schools. Simply the government can’t accommodate more students due to logistic issues.(Not a problem if you can afford a private or a foreign university.)
    For you information, I’m from a big match playing school and an undergraduate from a distinguished university. It’s really hard to find a girl from your school out of the 1000+ undergraduates in our batch while there are hundreds of students from so called ‘not teaching’ schools represented in Sri Lanka’s Big Match season. No, this is not a statement made to degrade your school; it’s a fact.

  • 4
    0

    Thissuri Wanniarachchi listen this
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OfZ7OzhOyAM

  • 10
    0

    Sorry to disappoint you, but it was this childish gathering of adult males of a big match playing school who managed to convince the college adminiatration, parents and staff to get the boy who got expelled due to false AIDS rumors that you mentioned, to recieve “free” education, at there cost, and not anyone else. And for the misguided soul who complained about the “private schools”, you need to get your facts straight!! Big matches aren’t limited to private schools.

    (Wondering myself, why I’m trying to get this woman out her own inferiority complex of being a woman. With what I know, SBC could do better than this!)

  • 6
    0

    Female egoism += insecurity = rape, incest ### sol. take responsibility.
    female oppression # exist = not cool
    local high schools – more than 100 years of history and tradition = bonding and pride. The value of it comes when you are older
    elite universities in US are private. Local Uni’s are public. see the dif~

  • 12
    1

    One simple question,how many times you have been to battle of maroons? your article is simply based on your poor assumptions & it doesn’t represent the majority.You better to have some reading & do some research on your topic before publishing something crap.Pathetic!

  • 8
    1

    Do I smell Feminism…what feminism doesn’t understand is that men aren’t equal to women and women aren’t equal to men..they have separate roles in the world to play… Feminists trying become like men is like going against natural orderall that feminism has created is a bunch of over confident sluts trying destroy the local woman’s mindset with foreign ideas…feminism will get you a divorce one day if you won’t keep it in check…a woman who doesn’t know her place is a disaster to herself.. And of course I agree that guys these days should be nicer to girls..

  • 14
    0

    Thisuri, I find it amusing your argument that in the Westerns world, the affinity with elite Universities is acceptable while in Sri Lanka when that is displayed at school level that is unacceptable. What is the point that you are trying to drive here ?

    I have no doubt, if for a moment if this was thought to be the other way round, this same article would have portrayed a different view.

    I am saying that because of the closed-up, convent education Thusuri has had undoubtedly her views on the world have been shaped around that narrow exposure. This is further compounded by the fact that her education has been in a Western country & unknowingly her views are biased towards such an atmosphere.

  • 2
    0

    Thisuri I agree with your 1st point. People in general both males as well as females in Sri Lanka are proud of their school and speak about it as if it is some qualification.I guess they must learn to move on….

    As for your second point – Learning about the meaning of the term misogyny- I think this is something one has to learn at home. For instance what do little boys see and pick up from home? ( The way their Father’s treat their Mothers. How Daughters are treated, how the rest of the family relate to females etc.)
    Community at large has a responsibility to teach the next generation and main responsibility falls on Mothers and Fathers.

    In the case of point 3 (transphobia) – I am not sure whether schools could address this issue. I don’t think there are schools in Sri Lanka that have qualified and trained people who could identify the levels of transphobia a student suffers from

    However it’s an interesting subject to have a conversation on.
    Have an open mind, do some research and write and take out the emotional content at the editing stage
    Good Luck

  • 8
    0

    Why u don’t mention the matches between catholic schools. U are so impressed about the foreign systems. We hv seen many people like u. Who hv forgotten their roots. So called patriots do not know even the whole national anthem. Don’t put this kind of crap in future.

  • 3
    0

    Thisuri, I think your head is in the right place and Sri Lanka has serious issues relating to misogyny, violence against women and discrimination that needs immediate addressing. However, I think the way about voicing your thoughts about these matters need to be backed by good research and facts, especially since these are topics that are controversial in Sri Lanka. You may say that research is absent but its something that needs to be pointed out and not be painted over by a writer’s opinion. Furthermore, try to stay away from amalgamating mutiple complicated issues together. I’m sure this was a learning experience for you and I hope that you continue to write better and keep working at it.

  • 7
    1

    This article shows how narrow minded you are

  • 1
    1

    confused.

  • 7
    0

    As a student of of ‘sinhala-Buddhist’ girl’s school, it is extremely offensive to hear someone say that the background of my school or a similar school would automatically make us racists. Why is it only a sinhala Buddhist school that creates the ‘racists’? Why not other schools which admit children of a certain religion?
    And as a person who worked in an organization which predominantly employed local university graduates, the bullying that was handed out to people who had attended schools in colombo , it is not a surprise that fraternity between university students do not exist. Even amongst themselves they undercut a person who rises above.
    Also why is it childish that one would like to revisit their childhood by means of going for a big match or a sports meet ?? On this basis even a reunion would be a childish means of recapturing your chdhood..

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