{"id":218629,"date":"2021-04-30T07:41:15","date_gmt":"2021-04-30T02:11:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/?p=218629"},"modified":"2021-05-03T16:21:27","modified_gmt":"2021-05-03T10:51:27","slug":"arguing-with-racists","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/index.php\/arguing-with-racists\/","title":{"rendered":"Arguing With Racists"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><span class=\"s1\" style=\"color: #ff6600;\">By <a style=\"color: #ff6600;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/?s=Charles+Ponnuthurai+Sarvan\">Charles Ponnuthurai Sarvan<\/a> &#8211;<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_80832\" style=\"width: 160px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/04\/Charles-Sarvan.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-80832\" class=\"size-thumbnail wp-image-80832\" src=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/04\/Charles-Sarvan-150x150.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"150\" height=\"150\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/04\/Charles-Sarvan-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/04\/Charles-Sarvan-50x50.jpg 50w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 150px) 100vw, 150px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-80832\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Dr. Charles Sarvan<\/p><\/div>\n<p class=\"p3\"><span class=\"s1\">Epigraph: <\/span><span class=\"s1\">\u201cUnhappy the land that has no heroes.\u201d \u201cNo, unhappy the land that needs heroes.\u201d~\u00a0 (Brecht)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><span class=\"s1\">Preface. St Augustine said he thinks he knows what time is but if someone were to ask him \u201cWhat is time?\u201d, he would find it difficult to answer. So it seems with the word \u201crace\u201d. We think we know its meaning and use the term with casual confidence. In literary theory, the Russian Formalists drew attention to the fact that language is the medium of literature, and one of the devices of literature was (through unusual use and collocation) to make strange the familiar and, therefore, draw attention. The terms \u201crace\u201d and \u201cracism\u201d need to be estranged and looked at because of their semantic shifts. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\"><span class=\"s1\">The attempt here is not to provide answers but to share some perspectives on race and racism: different perspectives at the expense of rigorous cohesion for which I apologise. I also admit I have filched bits and pieces from my earlier articles. Though set in motion by \u2018<i>How to Argue with a Racist\u2019<\/i> by Adam Rutherford, someone who has \u201cstudied genetics all his adult life\u201d, it\u2019s not about Rutherford\u2019s book. In passing, I wish Rutherford\u2019s title had been, \u2018How to discuss race with racists\u2019. By \u201cargue\u201d it is implied that one side is utterly convinced of its position and seeks to defeat the others who are equally convinced of theirs. But to silence a person in argument doesn\u2019t necessarily mean s\/he has been convinced. Besides, as Darwin wrote, ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge. May I say that by nature I dislike argument as much as I welcome frank discussion. Argument generates the heat of emotion but often not the light of understanding: argument, as one dictionary has it, means \u201cthe expression of opposite views, typically in a heated manner\u201d. Argument can descend to, and end in, vulgar name-calling. The starting point for Socrates was that he didn\u2019t know. This was not the doubt of a Hamlet leading to paralysis but an active questioning, probing, self-examination. Beginning in the late 1950s in what I had thought of as home (Ceylon), race and racism are not abstractions to me.<\/span> <span class=\"s1\">What follows is about race in general though being written for a Sri Lankan readership, it draws on the Island. End of Preface.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p8\"><span class=\"s1\"> The signifier \u201cunicorn\u201d refers to a non-existent animal. Similarly, the term \u201crace\u201d seems to be a signifier without a signified in the real world. But we are loose in our use of language. We speak of colonialism and colonies in instances where it was imperialism and imperial territories: Ceylon was not colonised, nor India.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>We perpetuate the mistake of Columbus by speaking of \u201cIndians\u201d, rather than of \u201cNative Americans\u201d. We say \u201cHappy birthday\u201d rather than, more precisely, \u201cHappy birth-anniversary\u201d. We talk of \u201cblack\u201d (non-white) people, and sometimes of \u201cthe white race\u201d. <\/span><span class=\"s3\">In reality, there are neither \u201cwhite\u201d nor \u201cblack\u201d people. The paper on which we write or type is white but not the people classified as \u201cwhite\u201d. Fielding<i> s<\/i>uggested \u201cpinko-grey\u201d instead of white, while Boakye offers \u201cpinkish beige\u201d: see bibliography below. But the dominant West has chosen \u201cwhite\u201d (associated with cleanliness and purity) and the rest of the world has followed suit through docility or simple laziness. Similarly, there are no black people but shades of brown. But we have a penchant for sharp dichotomy: the guilty and the innocent, good and bad; black and white; 14 million Jews and the rest of the world of almost 8 billion gentiles etc. Shades in between, nuance and complexity are mentally taxing and troubling. \u201cThe first problem with being black is that it is literally not accurate.\u201d No matter how dark my skin is, it is not black in hue (Boakye). But \u2018Brown\u2019 and \u2018pinkish beige\u2019 are not as neat and effective as \u2018black\u2019 and \u2018white\u2019. The connotations of black are almost invariably negative except, as Boakye notes when, with reference to expenditure and income, one speaks of being financially \u201cin the black\u201d. (Note: the opposite of black in this context is not white but red: to be \u201cin the red\u201d.) I recall that in Sinhala a word of endearment was \u201c<i>Sudhu\u201d<\/i>, applied even to someone dark-skinned: if I\u2019m not mistaken, the term means \u201cfair\u201d. If someone felt ignored, he would teasingly ask: \u201c<i>Api kalu the?\u201d <\/i> \u201cAre we black?\u201d Implying, \u201cIs that why you don\u2019t treat me better?\u201d Again, whether the expression has current currency, I don\u2019t know. But Olive-skinned Romans looked down upon people we now consider white, and enslaved them. \u201cIn Australia I met many people that to me looked white and yet they swore they were blackfellas \u2013 as Aboriginal people often call themselves \u2013 and the intensity with which they spoke about their blackness let me know that they really had lived blackness in the harshest sense Australia could possibly muster. How could this occur that people that literally have a \u2018white\u2019 complexion (but Aboriginal features) came to be seen as black?\u201d (Akala). Sri Lankan Christopher Rezel, writer and journalist now ensconced in Australia, commented in an email message to me: \u201cbeing a 100% white Aboriginal makes no difference. First and foremost you are Aboriginal, irrespective of skin colour.\u201d To the chagrin of those Sinhalese who cherish a belief they are Aryans, extreme white right-wing groups will reject them unceremoniously because \u201cAryan\u201d means \u201cwhite\u201d to them. (The Nazis narrowed the term Aryan, and even excluded Russians and East Europeans who are very much \u2018white\u2019.) Often in the Western press, particularly in the USA and UK, \u201crace\u201d means a non-white skin-pigmentation. In an article written many years ago, titled \u2018The term Racism and Discourse\u2019, I suggested, somewhat tongue-in-cheek, that a certain kind of racism be more accurately termed not \u201cracism\u201d but \u201cColourism\u201d. For an instance of Asian \u201ccolourism\u201d against Asians, see the personal and painful experience of Martin Jacques whose Indian-Malaysian wife died of neglect in a Chinese hospital in Hong Kong. (It\u2019s argued that prior to the 1600s and the enslavement of Africans, white people saw themselves as belonging to a country rather than to a \u2018race\u2019. In simple terms, the enslaved were not Christian and, therefore, could be held in life-long servitude but as the slaves became Christian, another justification was needed, and it was found in whiteness. See, among others, Robert Baird, \u2018The Invention of Whiteness\u2019; also the essay by W E B Du Bois, 1868-1963, titled \u2018The Souls of White Folk\u2019.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p9\"><span class=\"s1\">Though Lewis Carroll\u2019s Humpty Dumpty idiosyncratically claimed: \u201cWhen I use a word it means just what I choose it to mean\u201d, language is conventional rather than individual. So though I am careful to distinguish between colonialism and imperialism; though I refer to the autochthonous as \u201cNative Americans\u201d and not as \u201cIndians\u201d, I find myself writing about \u201cblack\u201d and \u201cwhite people\u201d, sometimes with the added cautionary but clumsy phrase, \u201cso called\u201d: so-called white people. Another expedient is the phrase, \u201cpeople of colour\u201d, though not its opposite: colourless people.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p9\"><span class=\"s1\">Those who believe in race are unable to agree on the number of races presently existing: Rutherford estimates they range from just one (the human race) to about seventy. Shlomo Sand (2010. See, Sarvan, \u2018<i>Groundviews\u2019<\/i>, 07 March 2013) states that there is no biological basis for Jewishness, and that belief in a Jewish race is nothing but \u201cracist pseudoscience\u201d. Race is a social myth and not a scientific fact but \u201cZionist pedagogy produced generations who believed wholeheartedly in the ethnic uniqueness of their nation\u201d. Shlomo Sand is Professor of History at Tel Aviv University and this book was first written in Hebrew for a Jewish readership. It\u2019s as if a Sinhalese teaching at a Sri Lankan university were to publish a book \u2013 not in English but in the Sinhala language \u2013 questioning the fundamental assumptions of Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. (Professor Sand observes that in Sri Lanka identity contains a very distinctive blend of ethno-nationalism with traditional religion where religion becomes an instrument serving political ends: pages 285-6).<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Permitting myself a digression, the popular (and legitimising) Sinhalese Buddhist belief is that they (like the Jews) are a chosen race because they and the Island were chosen by the Buddha and tasked with preserving Buddhism in its pristine purity. How this \u201cpurity\u201d finds expression is debateable. The title of Professor Sand\u2019s book (see bibliography below) is deliberately ambiguous: Jewishness is not natural and real but is an artificial invention. Another work by Professor Sand has the provocative title, \u2018<i>How I Stopped Being a Jew<\/i>\u2019. (Perhaps, the title should have been \u2018Why I stopped being a Jew\u2019.) Opposition to Zionist policy and practice, particularly against the Palestinians, is deliberately and incorrectly met as being racism, more precisely, as anti-Semitism. But there is no Semitic race (Sand). What prevails is but ethno-religious nationalism. Israel today is made ugly by \u201cbrutal racism\u201d and a crying failure to take others into consideration (Sand, p. 76). Israel defines itself as a Jewish state but is unable to define who a Jew is: there is no Jewish DNA (Sand, 79).Professor Sand asserts that he can\u2019t be free unless others are also free. \u201cMy own place is among those who try to discern and root out, or at least reduce, the excessive injustices of the here-and-now\u201d. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s1\">Belief in race is troglodyte. All human beings \u201care of one and the same blood\u201d (Karen and Barbara Fields). Genetically, women are far more different to men than black men are to white men (Rutherford). Individuals often share more genes with members of other races than with members of their own race, and so we should speak not of race but of \u201cpopulation groups\u201d (Gavin Evans). But language being the invention and tool of human beings, I fear \u201cpopulation groups\u201d will soon grow the negative connotative barnacles \u201crace\u201d has acquired at present.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\"><span class=\"s3\">Yet another synonym suggested for discredited \u2018race\u2019 is \u2018ethnicity\u2019. However, the latter term can testify to the resilience and mutability of racism, and the disguises it can adopt. <\/span><span class=\"s1\">Ethnicity is an aspect of relations between groups where at least one party sees itself as being culturally distinctive, if not unique. This sense of difference influences the perception and treatment of others. Though there are similarities and differences, the former are glossed over, and much made of difference. However, the boundary delimited by one cultural criterion \u2013 system of government, language, religion, social customs and practices \u2013 does not coincide with those established by other criteria. In short, \u201cethnicity\u201d may be a Trojan horse bringing back disgraced racism. Ethnicity is a term to be used after careful thought. The term culture can now denote something essential, now something acquired; now something bounded, now something without boundaries; now something experienced, now something ascribed. Race as culture is only biological race in polite language. \u201cLanguage is the source of misunderstandings\u201d (Saint-Exupery) but language can also disguise and deceive. Finally, as with other terms bandied about, it\u2019s a matter of defining terms and clarifying concepts. Take for example, the word \u201cpeace\u201d: Is it peace for the conquerors only? Is peace merely the negative absence of overt war or the positive presence of harmony for all citizens which, in turn, is the product of elements such as justice and a sense of security? (Justice cannot be equated with Law because there can be unjust, discriminatory, laws.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\"><span class=\"s1\">As with ethnicity, so it is with nationalism. It has been said that a patriot is one who loves his own while a nationalist hates all others. \u2018Nationalist\u2019 can be but a euphemism for \u2018racist\u2019: some nationalists claim that their group, and only their group, constitutes the true, real and authentic, nation. Racists reject a nationality based on law and legal status. Some Sri Lankans living abroad claim, often receive and enjoy, this nationality but vehemently and violently deny it to other groups in the country of their origin: there, they affirm, nationality is based on \u2018race\u2019.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p7\"><span class=\"s1\">As I have written elsewhere, though race does not exist, racism certainly does \u2013 and flourishes. Race is not the father of racism but its child (Ta-Nehisi Coates): it is racists, those who are race-minded, who think and react in terms of race. Racists create race. In Flannery O\u2019Connor\u2019s short story, \u2018The Artificial Nigger\u2019, a man asks his little grandson \u201cWhat was that?\u201d The innocent boy gives several wrong answers such as a man, a fat man, an old man until the grandfather educates him with, \u201cThat was a nigger\u201d.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>As Professor Amy Chua notes, the majority projects itself as the norm; others are deviations and subordinate. African Americans are not allowed to feel American in the same way that many white Americans take for granted. \u201cSri Lanka\u201d means for many \u201cSinhalese Buddhist\u201d, and secondly Sinhalese Christians. Tamils, Muslims and others are beyond the including border. (The Buddhist scholar, Dr. K. S. Palihakkara, using figurative language, sadly noted: Soon after the death of the Enlightened One, the beautiful clearing he had made was overrun by the surrounding jungle, and now \u201calmost all Buddhists practise more of Hinduism than Buddhism: page 109. If this is so, it obviates the question whether there are Sinhalese Hindus: Buddhists are also Hindu. After all, according to the \u2018Mahavamsa\u2019, the dying Buddha prayed to the Hindu god, Vishnu, to protect Vijaya and his followers who were bringing Buddhism to Lanka.) Some Tamils claim that only Tamil Hindus are \u201creal\u201d Tamils. (If, according to Dr Palihakkara, Buddhists believe in and practise much of Hinduism, then Professor Ratnajeevan Hoole, ever an individual and an iconoclast, argues that most Tamils were once Buddhists.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s3\">Racism can strengthen the racial consciousness of a minority. Identity isn\u2019t<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>single and simple but multiple and complex but racism and \u2018colourism\u2019 focus on just one aspect, be it \u2018race\u2019 or skin-colour. I quote from an earlier article of mine: <\/span><span class=\"s1\">\u201cThe so-called assimilated Jews of Germany felt their Jewishness was accidental rather than important, much less essential. Several fought and died for Germany in the First World War: ironically, Hugo Gutmann, the senior officer who recommended Hitler for<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>the Iron Cross, was Jewish. Soon Hitler and the Nazis made it brutally clear that the Jews were Jews and not German. One thinks of the early decades of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century and those Tamils who worked ardently for (what was then) Ceylon\u2019s independence. The following is slightly edited from my \u2018<i>Public Writings on Sri Lanka\u2019<\/i>, Volume 2.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p12\"><span class=\"s1\">There was a time when most, if not all in the Island, irrespective of language and religion, equally took a measure of pride and encouragement from ancient achievement, temple and lake; an equal measure of happiness in being \u201cCeylonese\u201d; a time when Tamils described themselves as Ceylonese and not (as some Tamils tend to do now) as \u201cSri Lankan Tamil\u201d.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>When in 1915, D. S. Senanayake (later the first Prime Minister of independent Ceylon) and his brother, F. R. Senanayake were jailed by the British authorities, Tamil Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan went to England to plead their case. On his successful return, jubilant crowds placed him in a carriage, detached the horses, and dragged the carriage themselves. He was not seen as a Tamil who had helped free a Sinhalese, but as a Ceylonese helping a fellow Ceylonese\u2026 In 1925-6, when Bandaranaike, as leader of the Progressive National Party, set out the case for a federal political structure for Sri Lanka, he received no support for it from the Tamils (K M De Silva). Even after the trauma of Standardisation (\u201cracial\u201d quota) in relation to University admission beginning in 1971, and the Draft Constitution of 1972, the All Ceylon Tamil Conference declared, \u201cOur children and our children\u2019s children should be able to say, with one voice, Lanka is our great motherland, and we are one people from shore to shore. We speak two noble languages, but with one voice\u201d (Nesiah, p. 14). In 1952, the Kankesuntharai parliamentary seat was contested by<i> <\/i>Chelvanayakam, as a member of the Federal Party.<b> <\/b>He was comfortably<i> <\/i>defeated<i> by a U.N.P. candidate.\u201d <\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p12\"><span class=\"s1\">Racism is a virulent force, more powerful than religion or class solidarity. I cite from an earlier article of mine: \u201cNelson Mandela observed that \u2018race\u2019 and colour generate far stronger and virulent emotion than class solidarity. History shows us that the powerful tide of racism can sweep away class solidarity; indeed, in the name of race, people are willing to damage even their material welfare. I know individuals who were socialists but later in life proudly succumbed to racism. Even those who have chosen to live outside the Island, while asking for and enjoying equality in their new home, nourish racism in the Island. The Bible (Acts, 9:4) tells us that cruel and persecutory Saul changed dramatically, and has come down in Christian history as Saint Paul. But in politics, it\u2019s a case of Pauls becoming Sauls, racist and corrupt. Life is corrupting.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s1\">As it has been observed, the trampling of the rights of others is often justified by a proclaimed sense of victimhood and vulnerability: \u201cWe are victims.\u201d \u201cWe were cheated and robbed.\u201d \u201cWe attempt only to balance the scales of justice.\u201d \u201cOur identity and survival are in danger.\u201d The last is said even by an overwhelming majority in full control of the state and its apparatus. The struggle for equality by a minority group is deliberately miscast as an attempt at domination, and brutally suppressed. (As History shows, fear, whether imagined or real, can breed cruelty.) George Floyd, an African American, was murdered in May 2020 by a white police officer. The officer was found guilty of murder in April 2021 and is due to be sentenced. Mr Floyd\u2019s dying words, \u201cI can\u2019t breathe\u201d, have resonated widely. His first-person singular \u201cI\u201d can be pluralised by oppressed minority groups who gasp: We can\u2019t breathe freely! <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s1\">Inter-racial social and personal friendships do not alter fundamentals, though they are touted as evidence of the speaker being above racism. As Henry Thoreau (1817-1862) reflects in his essay, \u2018On Civil Disobedience\u2019, it doesn\u2019t help if you are against injustice but do nothing at all about it. (Among others, Thoreau influenced Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King.) Perhaps, the ruling elite in Sri Lanka, including military officers, have Tamil associates, if not friends: \u201cI have a Tamil friend, therefore I am not a racist.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s1\">Racism is not only stronger than class solidarity but also more powerful than religious affiliation: white Christians in the USA joined their fellow whites in enslaving or lynching black Christians.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>(If I am not mistaken, primarily Sinhalese Christians do not identify with Tamil Christians but with Sinhalese Buddhists.) A sacred text in one hand can do more harm than the knife or burning torch in the other hand. In fact, as Graham Fuller and others have shown, religion has often willingly lent itself to political and racist projects. Those capable of injustice and cruelty be they (in alphabetical order) Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Jews or Muslims transform those evils not only into the unavoidable but into the noble and, most importantly, the holy: sacred, therefore obligatory. Golda Meir asserted that Israel was brought into existence in order to fulfil God\u2019s wish and promise. Similarly, \u201cthe Buddha chose the Island and us. Therefore, we have to choice but to dominate.\u201d Rather on the lines of \u201cBlame me on History\u201d, we have \u201cBlame me on the Divine\u201d.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p9\"><span class=\"s1\">For Sri Lankan readers, the contradictions inherent in racism are illustrated by Anagarika Dharmapala (1864-1933).The Buddhism he carried to India and to the West was a world religion, a lofty and noble Buddhism which was not sectarian but broad and inclusive. But within Lanka, Dharmapala\u2019s Buddhism was \u2018racist\u2019, narrow and political. (Compare those Sri Lankans living abroad who embrace multinationalism and multiculturalism but vehemently deny it to others back on the Island.) As Patrick Grant writes, Dharmapala lauded Buddhist tolerance and inclusion but believed in Sinhalese hegemony. He preached that Buddhism was universal, breaking down boundaries and hierarchies of race, colour, caste, kinship but promoted a racist Sinhalese-Buddhist fundamentalism, one which even excluded Sinhalese Christians: the true Sinhalese was a Buddhist. He urged young Sinhalese, following the Western example, to be scientific but credited the myth of the \u2018<i>Mahavamsa\u2019<\/i> with literal truth (Grant). Evidently, the Anagarika was not troubled by cognitive dissonance. One of the factors leading to his break with Henry Olcott was that the latter rationally could not believe in relics while Dharmapala venerated them. Having viewed the Buddha\u2019s tooth at Kandy, Olcott thought it was not that of a human being but was the incisor of an animal. However, Helena Blavatsky explained that it was, of course, the Buddha\u2019s tooth because in one of his previous lives the Buddha was incarnated as a tiger:<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Steven Kemper, p. 82.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>(When I expressed surprise that the actual tooth had been exposed to Olcott, Professor Kemper, in a message to me dated 20 April 2017 wrote: \u201cAn exception was not made for Olcott to view the relic.\u00a0 A steady stream of British officials, including the Prince of Wales, had a chance to view the relic &#8212; both before and after Olcott&#8217;s visit.\u00a0.The relic was once shown to a visiting Australian cricket team, I believe. The Kandyans\u2019 animus was not so much the presumed Christianity of these foreign visitors to the Dalada Maligawa, but the treatment of the relic as a curiosity, as opposed to an object of veneration.\u201d) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p9\"><span class=\"s1\">As I have written elsewhere, the \u201cdreams\u201d of some can become terrible and tragic \u201cnightmares\u201d to others. The Anagarika was an irredentist, an irredentist who wanted to recover a paradise that had never existed. In his \u201cdream\u201d, Lanka under King Dutugemmunu was a paradise: \u201ctemples, tanks, parks, gardens, public baths, resting houses for man and beast, hospitals \u2013 also for man and beast \u2013 free almonries, schools, colleges for Bhikkhus and nuns, gymnasiums, public baths. The Sinhalese people lived a joyously cheerful life in those bygone times\u2026the streets were crowded day and night by throngs of pilgrims\u2026The atmosphere was saturated with the fragrance of sweet-smelling flowers and delicate perfumes (Dharmapala, p. 324). There were \u201cno slaughter houses, no pawnshops, no brothels, no prisons and law Courts and no arrack taverns and opium dens\u201d (Dharmapala, p. 325). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p9\"><span class=\"s1\">Professor Daniel Goldhagen who taught Political Science at the University of Harvard sees racism leading to something much worse than war: eliminationism. Eliminationism is racism at its very worst: given the book\u2019s relevance to the subject of racism, I quote at length from it. By this key term, the Goldhagen means the transformation, repression, expulsion or extermination of a group. Such a policy is implemented \u201conly when the perpetrators are confident of success, owing to the overwhelming superior force they can unleash against defenceless people\u201d who, though they are fellow countrymen, are seen as foreigners and inferior (page 361). The enemy is pursued and killed with veritable \u201cglee\u201d (pages 356 &amp; 7). \u201cThey routinely talk to them, taunt them, conveying to them their belief in their deeds\u2019 rightness and justice, and their joy in performing them\u201d (page 170).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p14\"><span class=\"s1\">Multiple acts of savagery not only precede and accompany but occur after the death of the victims (160). Bodies are stripped naked, mutilated and displayed to men, women and even children. The perpetrators express joy, gloat and boast. \u201cThey mock the victims and celebrate their death\u201d (180). Not only dead bodies but places of worship and cemeteries are deliberately desecrated. The rape of women is part of the display of power, intended to humiliate and visit shame, not only on the victims but collectively, on the group.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p15\"><span class=\"s1\">Eliminationists see themselves as reacting, rather than acting (page 442). Perpetrators view the victims as \u201chaving inflicted great injury upon them and their society\u201d (pages 448-9). Eliminationist action is justified as being essentially retributive and, secondly, preventive of (imagined) future attack. The victims, and not the perpetrators, are seen as the \u201cproblem\u201d: They are the cause. They are to blame. They exist. Eliminationists believe they are acting for their group, for a high and noble cause, and not for themselves (page 221). Horrible and horrifying cruelty is seen as obligatory, laudable, even \u201csacred\u201d.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p16\"><span class=\"s1\">The aim of eliminationism is to homogenize society, to usher in some dreamed-of pure state. Eliminationists think on the lines of, \u201cIf W is achieved, then X, Y and Z will inevitably follow or be realized, and some kind of an ethnic and spiritual paradise will be realized\u201d. Language and visual images conveyed in talk and discussion, newspapers and radio spread the notion that an entire (emphasised) group of people are subhuman and dangerous. Therefore, any study of eliminationism that \u201cfails to give primacy to language and imagery\u201d denies the fundamental reality of how people are cognitively, psychologically and emotionally prepared (313). Language is the soil that contains the seeds of action (page 342).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p16\"><span class=\"s1\">Such eliminationist attacks will not occur if the community in general disapproved, was shocked or expressed revulsion and distaste. In that sense, there is general complicity. An entire community contributes towards, and is responsible for, elminationism. The clergy is listened to with respect and credence, and has a powerful influence on the thought and actions of the people. They incite, absolve, make sacred. Places of religious worship are provided for meetings and planning; in some instances, for the storage of weapons. In the name of religion, irreligious acts are carried out.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p14\"><span class=\"s1\">Intellectuals and artists (through literature, folk songs, story, plays, and symbols) project the myth of a great, heroic and noble people victimised, in danger and having the need for defensive aggression and elimination, so that their true nature can, once again, find expression. Such works tend to be tragic, reproachful and, finally, hortatory: (Goldhagen uses the phrase literary and artistic mass murderers: page 346.) University professors, academics, intellectuals, journalists and artists are no different from the illiterate and the lowest in society (page 398). Indeed, enjoying recognition; having status and influence, they are far worse and culpable.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p18\"><span class=\"s1\">Soldiers, the paramilitary and policemen play a major role in elminationism. They constitute \u201cpre-existing institutions of violence (page 103) and are either \u201cthe lead killing institution or in a critical support role\u201d (page 102). During a period of conflict, other countries have difficulty knowing what is happening, and this gives license to the military to act as it pleases (page 285). Soldiers often feel rage because of the danger they face, and because \u201ctheir comrades, loved ones and people\u201d (page 455) have been killed, suffered injury or harm (page 455). They inhabit a brutalizing and brutalized world.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>(Jonathan Shay, in his 1994 study, \u2018Achilles in Vietnam: Combat Trauma and the Undoing of Character\u2019, records a US soldier who fought in Vietnam saying, \u201cI carved him up with my knife. I lost all mercy. I couldn\u2019t inflict enough pain.\u201d) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p18\"><span class=\"s1\">Detention camps set up by the government and its soldiers are \u201ca spatial, social and moral netherworld\u201d (page 113) into which the perpetrators herd \u201ca weakened, overwhelmed, unthreatening, and pliant population, including children\u201d (page 441). \u201cA principal operational purpose of camp systems is degrading the victims, to make them understand their subjugated, demeaned, and right-less state (page 424). Camps are \u201ccruelty\u2019s quintessential sites\u201d and perpetrators create them in a manner guaranteeing the victims will suffer cruelty \u201cregularly, daily and nightly\u201d (page 433. End of Goldhagen quote.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s3\">From another perspective, one can argue that racism is inherent and makes us, of all animals in the world, the most dangerous (Yann Martel). Indeed, we have made the planet and everything on it our \u201cprey\u201d (op. cit). Doris Lessing observed that<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>there\u2019s something in us that impels us to divide and separate. I\u2019ve long felt there\u2019s something fundamentally flawed in our human makeup. The French psychologist and psychiatrist, Jacques Lacan (1901-1981), <\/span><span class=\"s1\">wrote of the mirror-stage in the development of a human being when, unlike with animals, it realizes that the image seen in the mirror is she, herself: that there is me here. The German word <i>fremdeln: <\/i>refers to a behavioural pattern in the development of infants, usually around the eighth month of life, in which a child develops a mistrust, dislike or fear of strangers. In a fundamental, biological, sense there is \u201cMe\u201d and everyone else is the \u201cOther\u201d. (But this does not throw most of us into some kind of existential angst because we construct what I would call bridging relationships: with parents, relations, friends, and through romantic and\/or sexual love.) Is racism the result of the individual, rather than being single, seeing herself as belonging to a group, separate from, if not opposed to, other groups formed by other individuals? Does racism go back to our distant past when, armed with stones and sticks, we fought other animals and other groups of humans for our very survival? Professor Harari writes that <\/span><span class=\"s3\">tolerance is not a human characteristic, and a small difference in skin-colour, language or religion has been enough to prompt one group of Sapiens to set about exterminating another group (page 18).<\/span> <span class=\"s3\">Biological distinctions between different groups of Homo sapiens are negligible yet figments of imagination are transformed into cruel and very real social structures and practice (Harari, page 144).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\"><span class=\"s1\"> Though not based on fact and science, \u201crace\u201d exists, and powerfully so, because it\u2019s a political and social construct. <span style=\"color: #ff6600;\"><a style=\"color: #ff6600;\" href=\"https:\/\/www.colombotelegraph.com\/?s=Tisaranee+Gunasekara\">Tisaranee Gunasekara<\/a><\/span>, erudite and among the most trenchant of commentators in English on Sri Lankan matters, wrote that racism is universal. In the West, it is talked about but elsewhere, it\u2019s a closed subject, hidden though in plain sight (message, April 2021). The answer is to \u201ctalk\u201d about it, reasonably and calmly, avoiding vulgar abuse and name-calling. To the Stoics, the divine spark in human beings was reason. Voltaire (1694-1778) believed that though doubt is uncomfortable, and certainty can lead to criminality, progress can be made by the use of reason. <\/span><span class=\"s3\">Judgement is easy, while knowledge is difficult: John Williams.<\/span> <span class=\"s4\">To my limited knowledge, Buddhism is a philosophy and, most importantly, a moral and ethical code. But a moral position, adopting a moral life, is based on reason. What has long struck me about Buddhist doctrine is its beautiful reasonableness (reason + able). Buddhist doctrine is above all one of reasonableness. No wonder most follow the Buddhist religion and not Buddhist doctrine. (In a message to me, Graham Fuller said that, though not a Buddhist, Buddhism has had the strongest influence in shaping his \u201cmost basic world and spiritual views\u201d. He then went on to add: \u201cI had initially tended to think that Buddhists were of course something of an exception to the bloody link between religion and violence. Yet I discovered in later years that in Sri Lanka and indeed in Myanmar, that Buddhists too fall prey to the same human instincts\u201d.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p19\"><span class=\"s1\"> Apart from religious doctrine; apart from ethical and moral principles, empathy is needed to combat our racism. And a pre-requisite of empathy is a modicum of imagination; the ability to \u201cput oneself in the shoes of another\u201d. This imagination and empathy has been found lacking in philosophers, and even in academics teaching lofty, compassionate, literary texts. Those of the majority do not pause or care to ask what it would be like to be a member of an oppressed, subordinated, minority. In the early 1960s, John Howard Griffin, a white journalist, turned himself into an African American and travelled in the more racist southern states of the USA. The resulting book describes not empathy but lived experience. Perhaps in Sri Lanka, during times of most uncivil \u2018civil disturbance\u2019, some Sinhalese has had his racial identity menacingly questioned? Sri Lankan Tamils for their part must ask themselves, with absolute honesty, whether they are free of all vestiges of thinking, attitude and behaviour based on caste.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p19\"><span class=\"s1\"> But racism is irrational, so how can it be deconstructed by reason? Can the irrationality of racism be disinfected and dispersed by the rational? After all, racists first form attitudes and beliefs, and then set about finding justification. Heraclitus of Ephesus (535-475 BCE) famously said, \u201cAll is flux\u201d, and the Buddha made transience one of his most important perceptions but, as has been noted, from another perspective, though some things change, some (unfortunately) don\u2019t. Professor Harari observes that confronting racists with facts, evidence and statistics has no effect because their beliefs are not based on reason. Elsewhere he observes that tolerance is not a human characteristic, and that a small difference in skin-colour, language or religion has been enough to prompt one group of sapiens to set about exterminating another group. Professor John Gray has argued that the idea that history is a story of increasing rationality, decency and ethical progress is a myth. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p19\"><span class=\"s1\"> Lines from a song popular during the time of the US invasion of Vietnam come to mind: \u201cOh when will they ever learn. When will they ever learn?\u201d \u2013 what appears as a question is really a sad exclamation. However, Toni Morrison, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, pointed out that the more hopeless a struggle seems, the greater the honour in not giving up. Of course, this applies only if the cause espoused is just. Nigerian born Reni Eddo-Lodge wrote that she no longer talks to white people about (what I term) colourism because it\u2019s futile. In linguistics, the speech-act theory is associated with the philosopher, J. L. Austin but it can be argued that all speech and writing are acts, and Reni Eddo-Lodge in saying she won\u2019t talk does precisely that. She acts by saying she will no longer act. (Members of Sri Lankan groups<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>must also talk with each other: not accuse, shout and abuse.) Violence in any form, as Sartre noted, is a failure, the failure of human beings to resolve issues without resorting to the crudity of force. Language is all we have to combat racism. Goldhagen points out that the peaceful existence of several multi-ethnic, multicultural countries attest to the fact \u201cotherness\u201d need not necessarily lead to conflict. German-born Franz Boas (1858-1942), known as the \u2018Father of American Anthropology\u2019, insisted that on the basic unity of humankind. There was no natural hierarchy of races, cultures or languages. He acknowledged that rejecting traditional beliefs and stories \u201cin order to follow the trail of truth is a very severe struggle\u201d. He used the German word \u201cHerzenbildung\u201d, meaning the training of one\u2019s heart to see the humanity of another. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s5\">Racists will argue that racism is natural, but don\u2019t decency and justice \u2013 in short to be humane and civilized mean, among other things, the recognition, control and overcoming of our negative impulses and drives? <\/span><span class=\"s1\">In a message to Martin Jacques, I wrote: \u201cIndividuals like you have helped to make people confront their prejudices; to increase awareness, and so change attitudes and conduct. Our globe, planet Earth, rotates on its own but social change is the result only of human endeavour and action.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p10\"><span class=\"s1\">Some works drawn on<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Akala (Kingslee James Daley): <i>Natives: Race &amp; Class in the Ruins of Empire<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Robert Baird:<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>\u2018The invention of whiteness\u2019, <i>Guardian<\/i>, 20 April 2021 <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Jeffrey Boakye: <i>Black Listed<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Lewis Carroll: <i>Through the Looking Glass<\/i> (fiction)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Amy Chua: <i>Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Charles Darwin: <i>The Descent of Man<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Reni Eddo-Lodge: <i>Why I\u2019m No Longer Talking to White People about Race<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Gavin Evans: \u201cThe unwelcome revival of \u2018race science\u2019\u201d, <i>Guardian<\/i>, 2 March 2018<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">E. M. Forster: <i>A Passage to India<\/i> (fiction)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Karen &amp; Barbara Fields: <i>Racecraft<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Graham Fuller: <i>A World Without Islam<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Patrick Grant: <i>Buddhism and Ethnic Conflict in Sri Lanka<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">John Gray: <i>The Silence of Animals: On Progress and Other Modern Myths<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Ananda Guruge (Ed.): <span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span><i>Return to Righteousness: A Collection of Speeches, Essays &amp; Letters of the <span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 \u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p24\"><span class=\"s1\"><i>Anagarika Dharmapala<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Ratnajeevan Hoole: <i>Heritage Histories: A Reassessment of Arumuga Navalar<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">John Howard Griffin: <i>Black Like Me <\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Martin Jacques: \u2018The Global Hierarchy of Race\u2019, <i>Guardian<\/i>, 20 September 2003<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Steven Kemper: <i>Rescued From the Nation: Anagarika<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Dharmapala and the Buddhist World<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Doris Lessing: <i>The Golden Notebook<\/i> (fiction)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Nelson Mandela: <i>Long Walk to Freedom<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Toni Morrison: <i>The Origin of Others<\/i>. (b) <i>Playing in the Dark<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">K. S. Palihakkara: <i>Buddhism Sans Myths &amp; Miracles<\/i>, Stamford Lake Publishers, Pannipitiya.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Yann Martel: <i>Life of Pi<\/i> (fiction)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Saint-Exupery: <i>The Little Prince<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Shlomo Sand: <i>The Invention of the Jewish People<\/i>.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p25\"><span class=\"s1\"><i>How I Stopped Being a Jew<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">Charles Sarvan: <i>Public Writings on Sri Lanka<\/i>, Vol 2.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p25\"><span class=\"s1\"><i>Sri Lanka: Literary Essays &amp; Sketches<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"p23\"><span class=\"s1\">John William: <i>Augustus<\/i> (fiction)<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":101,"featured_media":210925,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3,46,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-218629","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-colombotelegraph","category-constitutional-reforms","category-editorial"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v26.3 - 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