Tamils became capable English speakers and were overrepresented in
universities and public-service jobs, which created Sinhalese resentment,
especially during the slow economy of the 1950s. The main political
parties played on Sinhalese fear that their religion, language and
culture could be swamped by Indians, perceived to be natural allies of
Sri Lankan Tamils. The Tamils, whose Hindu identity had become more
pronounced in the lead-up to independence, began to find themselves in
the position of threatened minority.
The Sinhala-only bill disenfranchised Sri Lanka’s Hindu and Muslim
Tamil-speaking population: almost 30% of the country suddenly lost
access to government jobs and services. Although tensions had been sim-
mering since the end of colonial rule, this decision marked the beginning
of Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict.
A similar scenario played out in 1970, when a law was passed favour-
ing Sinhalese for admission to universities, reducing numbers of Tamil
students. Then, following an armed insurrection against the government
by the hardline anti-Tamil, student-led People’s Liberation Front (Jana-
tha Vimukthi Peramuna or JVP), a new constitution (which changed
Ceylon’s name to Sri Lanka) gave Buddhism ‘foremost place’ in Sri Lanka
and made it the state’s duty to ‘protect and foster’ Buddhism.
Unrest grew among northern Tamils, and a state of emergency was
imposed on their home regions for several years from 1971. The police
and army that enforced the state of emergency included few Tamils
(partly because of the ‘Sinhala only’ law), creating further division and,
for Tamils, an acute sense of oppression.
Birth of the Tigers
In the mid-1970s several groups of young Tamils, some of them militant,
began advocating for an independent Tamil state called Eelam (Precious
Enemy Lines:
Warfare, Child-
hood, and Play
in Batticaloa, by
Margaret Trawick,
is a poignant
memoir of living
and working in
eastern Sri Lanka
and witnessing
the recruitment
of teenagers to
the LTTE cause.
MEMOIRS
WHAT’S IN A NAME?
Changing the country’s name from Ceylon to Sri Lanka in 1972 caused considerable
confusion for foreigners. However, for the Sinhalese it has always been known as Lanka
and for the Tamils as Ilankai; the Ramayana, too, describes the abduction of Sita by the
king of Lanka. The Romans knew the island as Taprobane and Muslim traders talked of
Serendib, meaning ‘Island of Jewels’ in Arabic. The word Serendib became the root of
the word ‘serendipity’ – the art of making happy and unexpected discoveries. The Portu-
guese somehow twisted Sinhala-dvipa (Island of the Sinhalese) into Ceilão. In turn, the
Dutch altered this to Ceylan and the British to Ceylon. In 1972 ‘Lanka’ was restored, with
the addition of ‘Sri’, a title of respect.
1919
Following the British
arrest in 1915 of Sinha-
lese leaders for minor
offences, the Ceylon
National Congress
unifies Sinhalese and
Tamil groups to further
nationalist and pro-
independence goals.
1931
A new constitution in-
troduces power sharing
with a Sinhalese-run
government. universal
suffrage is introduced
as the country is the
first Asian colony to
give women the right
to vote.
1948
Ceylon becomes an in-
dependent member of
the Commonwealth six
months after India. The
united National party
( uNp) consolidates
power by depriving
p antation Tamils of l
citizenship.
1956
The Sri Lankan
Freedom party (SLFp)
defeats the uNp on a
socialist and nationalist
platform. protests,
ethnic riots and conflict
break out after a
‘Sinhala only’ language
law is passed.
History
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