20 April, 2024

Blog

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.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Latest comments

  • 15
    54

    Hi,

    I fully agree with what Thisuri has written. Sri Lanka’s ills lies in its out dated and segregated education system.

    The world has moved on. More progressive and developed countries education has been made secular.

    Sri Lanka can move forward only if it can secularize its education system from race and religion. But that will not happen in the near future.

    Vast majority of Sri Lanka’s military officers come from the racist schools like Ananda and Nalanda who have no interactions with other ethnic communities.

    • 21
      1

      Here’s a question…Is it racist if a racist calls a racist a racist?

    • 19
      1

      Fun fact: Thisuri’s father is an Army Brigadier. Still want to agree with her? ;)

      • 12
        0

        I don’t think any school has produced more veteran officers than Ananda so good luck to her when she meets her father’s friends.

    • 12
      0

      “Vast majority of Sri Lanka’s military officers come from the racist schools like Ananda and Nalanda who have no interactions with other ethnic communities.”
      wow :) You gotta win ur freedom! Be Glad they fought for you and saved your little a**!

    • 13
      0

      Another person who’s turned a blind eye to all what’s wrong with the article and what’s even worse, call entire schools racist simply because they’re Sinhala Buddhist. Guess what, well respected people like Imithiaz Bakeer Marker who’s a Muslim who went to Ananda has spoken who well he was treated in it and how inclusive he felt during his time there.

      The only racist bigot here in YOU! Pathetic!

    • 0
      0

      aatputhan

      “Vast majority of Sri Lanka’s military officers come from the racist schools like Ananda and Nalanda who have no interactions with other ethnic communities.”

      This is not necessarily the case, but the lack of other races and religions, among their peers, certainly make the other races and religions foreign, Para, to the Para-Sinhala Buddhists in the Land of Native Veddah Aethho.

      So, the students need to be taught, you All are Paras, and that includes your religions, except the Native Veddah Aethho and their beliefs.

      This will level the playing and educational fields for All Paras, both the Para races and Para-Religions.

  • 44
    3

    I did not attend a public Buddhist school nor did anyone in my family did but I still find this article very very biased and immature. I lose faith in an author’s point of view when there’s a whole lot of generalization and stereotyping- which is what I read here.

  • 25
    2

    Last week recorded one of the most hottest weeks during 2016. With 34 °C, precipitation of 11% and a humidity of 67%, our tropical country was in sweat. It is fact that this is the reason why those boys dressed up in gowns…in order to air their balls.

    Facts and statistics aside, yes we can all agree it is also very demeaning, please vote for Donald Trump. He’s an American. He fights against racism. He loves Hispanics, mother promise. This too a fact.

    In response to recent radical Islamic terrorist attacks, Trump proposed “a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what the hell is going on.” He’s still right cause he had an Ivy league education. Because Americans/Ivy League educated are always right.

    Wow, had I known it was this easy to become a journalist, I would have done this a long while back.

  • 0
    0

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

  • 20
    3

    Immature article.shows off her half-wittedness by trying to portray Sri Lankan graduates as a useless lot.please do your research.

  • 21
    3

    dear thisuri,
    I really do not understand why you came up with this kind of immature ; Hateful article against big matches & specially Against Maroons ( Ananda-Nalanda ). seems you are against Buddhists.. specially Sinhala Buddhists. matter fact I’m a Nalandian, our schools did not teach racism & never will. if you go by that, all other schools like St. Thomas / peters’ , Zahira must be teaching racism too. is it ??? And I’m pretty sure that maroons does not break in to schools during match parades. mayb you are an award winning author. but this is just barking at the moon.

  • 4
    2

    You had Strict Parents dont you :p

  • 0
    18

    That was a great piece of writing on a topic I had no clue about since I have not studied in Sri Lanka. Thank you for bringing this to the public attention. Hopefully this will spur debate and get young people thinking about these issues so that we can start to address this and make education worthwhile and clouded by a sense of obligation and peer pressure.

    • 3
      0

      The reply is your response is your username.

  • 14
    0

    I do like her writing style and she’s certainly entitled to her opinion but honestly, the article clearly shows the lack of research and information on the author’s part. For instance, I do not understand how she justifies colleges in US being fraternized and not high schools in Sri Lanka. Who is to say that its only acceptable to be fraternized to your college? I’m sure she’s aware of the growing problem of campus rape in US colleges- it’s highly prevalent in those elite universities she had mentioned and their top fraternities. So maybe its not only “Sri Lankan national schools” who have forgotten to teach their students about not being misogynistic? Stuff do not become “facts” just because one believes them to be. Hope she would take in the criticism as constructive and reconsider/ improve on her work.

    • 7
      0

      Far from that. Her response to criticism is, this is her own words, not mind.

      “I promise you, your denial and irrational anger is the first of many steps in the path to change.”

      She thinks we’re a bunch of idiots for seeing through her heap of crap and thinks WE should change. It’s only expected though. Normally a delusional person don’t see how deluded him/her is.

  • 3
    9

    Honestly speaking how can an almost exclusively Sinhalese Buddhist school foster a student anything less than an racist? Where common subjects like Sinhala and English fail to mention other ethnicities, only inter racial interactions stands a chance in shaping young minds to be ethnically aware and accepting.Sadly for a majority of these Buddhist school, leave perhaps one or two Muslims in a class, every other student is of the same religion.
    So i ask all you people who are hurt by Thisuri’s words, what measures did your school take to NOT teach racism ?

    Also trucking is an violation of privacy and my school had to specially bring in a troop of police to avoid “boys” jumping in and disrupting a school day.
    Slavery was also once traditional. So how about before you start disregarding well made points based on the traditional benefits you gained…you question if you are in an essence merely trespassing and causing chaos.

    Thishuri i’m sure you had a very hard time deciding to keep maroons in your article without hiding behind generalization..so shout out to you girl !

    Good luck !

  • 6
    11

    Dear Thisury,

    Just last week I wrote to the editor of the Sunday Observer (and asking him to copy it to the Sinhala and Tamin News papers too) on the same subject.

    1) I don’t live in Sri Lanka anymore.
    2) I too studied in a ‘Leading School in Colombo’.
    3) I too find that my batch mates, even the ones in the country I live in now, try to ‘continually’ live the ‘glory days’ and not do anything constructive. By that they bring disrespute to our motherland too!
    4) One only has to search ‘You tube’ to see that these ‘big match’ parties would make ‘westerners’ blush. These parties offer ‘Return Air Tickets to Bangkok, Russia, etc’. What these really offer are ‘ladies of the night from these countries’ [this has cause many divorces in Sri Lanka] (a popular You Tube video shows ‘Thattaya dancing with scantily clad ‘ladies of the night’).
    5) Sri Lankans (especially Girls) seem to believe that life in the ‘West’ is what they see on ‘Soap Operas’. On the contrary Western girls are quite ‘conservative’. I see the opposite in Sri Lankan Immigrants/Students.

    I believe I have made my point. Sri Lanka has lost its morals. All my class mates/batch mates in the country I now live in also ‘attack me’ for being politically active. But the ‘natives’ and politicians here respect me for what I am doing/trying to do (showing social responsibility).

    Keep up the good work. If not Sri Lanka may have won the War, but we would have lost the Country and our future.

    Every school in Sri Lanka deserves EQUAL respect based on results. It is high time that our Colleges and Convents teach the children proper values and give them an education than simply do anything to get ‘donations’ (the donation racket is criminal, to say the least).

    It is good to respect your ‘Alma mater’, but living a lost glory or a lack there of is FOOLISH!

    Again, Keep up the good work, people criticize good people because it is easy.

    An uncle :)

  • 0
    0

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

  • 11
    3

    Hi,
    The intention of this artical is to stop big match for all schools? So this will guarantee that woman rights, racism and all that u have calmed which was exsisting due to big matchers will end? U also argue that 6% only goes to university’s. Didn’t it occur to u that it is the maximum capacity the local university’s are providing? Plus the rich goes to privet universities and poor are the ones struggling! And also according to ur argument all those who went to local universities are doing well with jobs? (FYI 40% of graduates are unemployed).
    Also I live close to ananda college and Nalanda. Some of my best friends are from both this schools and being a Muslim I never felt any discomfort bring with them because they treat me like there own brother.

    So my advice to you is stop wasting your time with all this usless arguments that does not help the society in anyway. Let boys be boys and have fun because that’s what being young is meant to be. Focus your efforts to fight more critical issues the country is facing than big matchers. If u think boys trashing girls school is Rape then make a complain to the police. (Well I actually saw a lot of SBC girls attending this big matchers (must be to protest against it). Plus the gate crashing to girls schools are meant to invite them also to attend this big matchers. FYI Tc

  • 11
    4

    Sorry to state that this is a very stupid & immature article… what poor way of showing hatred towards two leading Buddhist schools in Sri Lanka. Looks like you were not a normal school girl who enjoyed the big match season. Feel sorry for you.. you should’ve gotten out and got a life :( I am an Anandian and will always proudly say so! So sister go get a life!

  • 19
    3

    I’m a proud Harvard alumnus from one of the schools mentioned by you here. I beg of you to not write about things you have absolutely no grasp of. Stick to your Bennington (wherever and whatever it is).

  • 12
    3

    Inferiority complexes can be hard on some people who have nothing to be proud of, we understand that.

  • 21
    2

    I find it hilarious when writers who have been confined to the ‘posh’ English speaking sub culture, attending the ‘BIG’ schools, never setting foot in a train or a bus, mentally living in the USA (or some other fantasy land), having absolutely no idea about what goes on outside the confines of Colombo and it’s suburbs other than what you see in TV/Social media , write about issues that exist in the country.
    (I Know I’ve been stereotyping writers here but since you’ve done that already on the article I guess that’s OK)

    P.S : I’d rather be in a country where school boys act like this, break into girls school and act like monkeys RATHER THAN in a country where one kid in class suddenly walks in with a gun and shoots the entire class and teachers. [Edited out]

  • 3
    2

    Living in Sri Lanka as an expatriate born in Europe and having gone to a ‘Big match’ I think the lady Thisuri tends to be ‘bigoted’ while taking the moral high ground. She makes a prudent point that school days are limited and not the end all and be all of life, only about 11 years out of an average life expectancy of 70 years or 14.5% of a normal life. But to many they were the best days of their life care free, may be even irresponsible days, friends were made for life! So when once a year an opportunity to relive those years for 2 or 3 days comes around men become boys again. However, as adults one cannot claim ignorance of basic norms, more’s and the law those must be respected. Back to school days are not a license for mischief I agree. The issue is respect. Respect the others who do not have these annual rituals do not invade their space and privacy. As for one side pummeling boys of another side that is not the spirit of sports, off and on the field respect the other side win with skill and tactics not with might. Racism, hooliganism, assault, invasion of girls schools have no place in all this despite the argument that some of these are traditions. Let us remember “do unto others as you wish done unto you” no one wants their sisters and mothers harassed so respect Thisuris wish leave her alone and do your thing!! Rik

  • 0
    0

    [Edited out] @CommonSense, please use one name, instead of commenting under multiple names – Riddler, AmateurJournalist etc. – CT

  • 0
    0

    This comment was removed by a moderator because it didn’t abide by our Comment policy.For more detail see our Comment policy https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/comments-policy-2/

  • 9
    8

    Dear Thisuri,

    First of all congratulations on caring. Most people your age (especially those privileged as you are) do not care about anything beyond themselves. You are passionate about a pressing issue and chose to voice it. I am sorry that many have bashed you. Unfortunately, the keepers of these misogynistic traditions get offended by the truth and criticize those who do something… anything. As a female who attended an all-girls school in Colombo I have experienced some of the negatives you point out here, which is why I have promised myself that my child will not attend my school or any similar school.

    However, I do agree with the fact that you seemed very emotionally driven and failed to maintain objectivity in the way you present your ideas. I understand that this article may have stemmed from a bad experience, but as a professional (and young, so no shame) writer, you should practice professional writing.

    Again, congratulations on being active about pressing social issues, rather than sitting around and criticizing others like most Sri Lankan LOVE to do.

    • 9
      0

      “As a female who attended an all-girls school in Colombo I have experienced some of the negatives you point out here”

      Please enlighten us how big match culture is breeding women-hating, rape-happy, hooligans and how it has affected you personally.

  • 6
    0

    Stereotyping is a means of reducing the cognitive effort by compartmentalising and oversimplifying complexities one’s brain is too immature to handle. Although can be quite useful in writing fiction, stereotyping may imply intolerance, discrimination and limited understanding of the society.

  • 2
    11

    You could be the best writer, but you really have to do your research if one wishes to display factual information. However, a well written eye-opener….

  • 3
    1

    You have got your knickers in a knot.
    There are clearly two issues…. one about the unauthorised entry and vandalism and the other the ageless pride in ones alma mater and the tradition that goes with the big sporting events. School is what mould you and sets you up for life in the big bad world. We learn values from school and that holds you in good stead for the challenges that arise later on in life. Universities, albeit only available to the fortunate and affluent adds polish to what we were learned at school. I for one was not fortunate to go to university in Sri Lanka, but my good schooling and perseverance helped me to graduate through the mercantile sector with a lot of success. Today, I run my own business and employ over 500 staff world wide, thanks to my good schooling. I continue to support my school, wear my college colours with pride, sing the college anthem as loud as I can and will promote the college at every given opportunity. I tell you the author of this article, you have not done your research.

    Regit Silva

  • 8
    1

    I know this is just an opinion piece but what a waste of time! What ever she is trying to prove was all lost simply on the words rape and racist.

  • 8
    1

    Sounds a sad. boring 21 year old.Thinks that anyone not going to a Uni, is a failure. 90% of the Corporate execs who lead the successful blue chips and multinationals are thus failures, according to her poorly reasoned out analysis. Poor child, reality may dawn on her, as she ages

  • 1
    2

    If the current debate in social media about ‘What Your School Didn’t Teach You’ can lead the SL youth to see through the loopholes of our current education system rather than the loopholes of the article that raised all this concern, we could harness all this attention to encourage the govt to make improvements to the current education system which still lags behind, advocate, and disseminate hackneyed Victorian ideals (which are of course long rejected by the imperialists themselves). But as usual, sadly and typically, all the attention is directed towards all the wrong reasons. We are so Sri Lankan!

  • 1
    1

    If the current debate in social media about ‘What Your School Didn’t Teach You’ can lead the SL youth to see through the loopholes of our current education system rather than the loopholes of the article that raised all this concern, we could harness all this attention to exert some pressure on the govt to make improvements to the current education system which still lags behind, advocate, and disseminate hackneyed Victorian ideals (which are of course long rejected by the imperialists themselves). But as usual, sadly and typically, all the attention is directed towards all the wrong reasons. We are so Sri Lankan!

  • 0
    3

    There is a lot the writer says that is true. We must guard against descending into hyperbole though; to equate school boys jumping over a wall to rape, belittles the trauma of a rape survivor. the writer does however underscore the need for sexuality and relationship education based on the foundation of respect for self, respect for others and respect for difference. Brave words on her part, and the reactions bear testament.

  • 0
    0

    This comment was removed by a moderator because it didn’t abide by our Comment policy.For more detail see our Comment policy https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/comments-policy-2/

Leave A Comment

Comments should not exceed 200 words. Embedding external links and writing in capital letters are discouraged. Commenting is automatically disabled after 5 days and approval may take up to 24 hours. Please read our Comments Policy for further details. Your email address will not be published.