| Sri Lankans celebrate Sinhala Tamil New Year in Solidarity |
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| Tuesday, 15 April 2008 | |
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CDTCA held its first major event on Sunday 13 April 2008 at the Agincourt Collegiate Auditorium in Scarborough. It was a cultural programme to celebrate the Sinhala Tamil New Year. The programme was dubbed "Celebrating Sri Lankan People's Solidarity" and it was well attended by Sri Lankans of all backgrounds. The program featured Kandyan Dance and Bharatha Natyam, and both Sinhala and Tamil music. "Shiners" and "Breeze," two leading Sri Lankan bands based in Toronto provided top musical entertainment to a large gathering comprising of Sinhalese, Tamils, Muslims, Malays, Burghers and their Canadian friends. Canadian politicians Hon. Bas Balkissoon, Member of Ontario Parliament and Mr. Chin Lee, Toronto City Councillor attended the celebration and addressed the gathering. The full text of the address given by Sam Rajendran, President of the Canadian Democratic Tamil Cultural Association on the occasion is given below: Hon. Bas Balkissoon, M. P. P for Scarborough - Rouge River and Mr. Chin Lee, Councillor for Scarborough East - Rouge River, and my friends - My name is Sam Rajendran, and as President of the Canadian Democratic Tamil Cultural Association, it’s my great pleasure to warmly welcome all of you. I thank you all for kindly accepting our invitation and coming out this evening to participate in this unprecedented event. I say unprecedented because, unfortunately in the Diaspora, as we all know, the Sri Lankan communities have been drifting apart. So we decided to hold this event and try to bring everyone together. Many said “it is impossible….it’s not going to happen.” Well, I have a feeling we have done it. Haven’t we? By deciding to come to this event, you have defied views that are deeply entrenched among us in the Diaspora. You have made this event happen. Therefore you are participants in the true sense of the word. You have made a conscious decision to rise above the prejudices that tend to divide us, and for that I salute you. History has shown, time and again, that though forces of fanaticism, intolerance and extremism may dominate in the short run, ultimately it’s moderation, reasonableness, and sobriety that prevails. Because human beings – no matter what their backgrounds are – are innately fair-minded, decent and reasonable. Human beings are also pragmatic and rational. No matter what horrendous atrocities are committed – ultimately sanity will prevail. This is what history shows us. There simply is no history of extremism dominating forever. So we of the Canadian Democratic Tamil Cultural Association are unshaken in our belief that this tragic chapter in our history will pass – that the people of Sri Lanka will ultimately find a way to resolve their differences and accommodate each others’ concerns. This mutual understanding and adjustment is already reflected in the way they are coping with the ongoing war. One of the positive developments in Sri Lanka today is that more Tamils are living among the Sinhalese in the South than ever before. Ironically this is a consequence of the actions of those who are trying to turn the two communities into hostile camps. A basic truism of social science is that all social action have unintended consequences. So one of the ironies of social changes brought about by the conflict in Sri Lanka is that social interaction between the two communities has increased phenomenally. Tamils who have had little interaction with the Sinhalese in the past are now living side by side with them. So in spite of the conflict, people of all backgrounds, all walks of life somehow manage to get along in Sri Lanka in their day to day lives. In most parts of the country the Sinhalese, Tamils, Muslims, Malays and Burghers, they all live side by side and they toil together in their fields, factories and offices and in their neighbourhoods. Though the world media portrays otherwise, we - Sri Lankans – know in our hearts we are a caring, civilized society. No one can take that away from us. We no doubt have our difficulties and challenges as any multi-ethnic society does – but we have not lost our humanity. Though we may belong to different communities, as Sri Lankans we all share the joy of living on this beautiful island along with our common predicament: the need to find a way to accommodate each others' concerns. We shall endure. We are a resilient people. This is what we decided to celebrate our solidarity as decent people. And what more fitting occasion than the Sinhala Tamil New Year. This festival reflects the fact that we share common cultural bonds. By celebrating together we are also showing the Canadian mainstream that we are not hopelessly divided by some unbridgeable gap as portrayed by the superficial western media. Finally, the best tribute that we can pay to the ordinary but courageous people of Sri Lanka is to emulate them and live amicably in the Diaspora. We can learn from them how to live together in spite of all the political strife and the negative media hype. We can learn from them how to remain human in the most brutal circumstances; how not to lose one's humanity in the face of the gravest of provocations. In Sri Lanka we live together, work together and struggle together to achieve peace. So why can't we in Canada? Why can't we have a dialogue? In my view, nothing that we do in the Diaspora to promote the well-being of our brothers and sisters in Sri Lanka can be more useful than such a dialogue. But in order to make that contribution, we must not forget even for a moment that we are also Canadians. Yes it's possible to be a Sri Lankan and a Canadian at the same time in today's postmodern world. Under globalization multiple allegiances and trans-national identities are becoming facts of life. I believe it's by exercising our "Canadian-ness" that we can make a positive contribution towards resolving the conflict in Sri Lanka. As Canadians, we are entitled to the rights and freedoms guaranteed in the Canadian Charter. Are we going to pursue narrow, divisive political goals in Canada and invoke the charter when inevitably the Canadian authorities start cracking down on these activities? In other words are we going to use the very Canadian Charter to undermine the democratic rights of our own people in Canada? Are we going to abuse Canadian democracy to create more suffering for our people in Sri Lanka? Or, are we going to use the Charter in its proper spirit - its intent, rather than its letter. Today I believe we have taken the first step in that direction. For what we have done this evening is to emphatically exercise one of the fundamental freedoms enshrined in the Canadian Charter: the freedom of association. The right to associate as we like, the right to gather as we choose - not as some with authoritarian, extremist persuasions among us would prefer. Once again I salute you all for coming out this evening. Thank You. (Courtesy : Canadian Democratic Tamil Cultural Association ) |
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