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Celebrating a historical event and person in Sri Lanka

11 Aug 2021

By Prof. Tissa Vitarana  The 68th anniversary of the Great Hartal and the 42nd death anniversary of Dr. Nanayakkarapathirage Martin Perera fall on 12 and 14 August 2021, respectively, and these are historic dates in the politics of Sri Lanka.  The leaders of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) will place a floral tribute at the statue of Dr. N.M. Perera at 9.30 a.m. on 14 August of this year and follow it up with a felicitation meeting at the LSSP headquarters on the same day. Other leftist leaders will be invited to participate.  Dr. Perera was a Founder Leader of the LSSP in 1935 and remained its Leader right up to his death in 1979. He completed his studies in the London School of Economics where he obtained a doctorate and a doctor of science degree. He was known as the favourite pupil of Prof. Harold Laski who was a Chief Advisor to the British Labour Party. While in London, England, he, together with the other Founder Leaders of the LSSP Dr. Colvin Reginald de Silva, Ranaweera Appuhamilage Leslie Herbert Gunawardana, Dr. Sugiswara Abeywardena Wickramasinghe, and Don Philip Rupasinghe Gunawardena (who did his postgraduate studies in the US), changed from social democratic politics to Marxist (a reference to philosopher Karl Heinrich Marx) politics. They returned to Sri Lanka which was under the cruel British imperialist rule and formed the LSSP, as a revolutionary Marxist-Leninist (a reference to political theorist Vladimir Ilyich Lenin) party. The suffering of the people during the malaria epidemic led them to shift their focus to the rural poor, while developing the trade union movement in the urban and plantation areas. They faced opposition from the local capitalist class which later became the United National Party (UNP) as well as the British rulers and their agents in Sri Lanka. In the General Election of 1936, the plantation workers supported the LSSP and the UNP retaliated by disenfranchising the plantation workers. The outcome was that large sections of the Tamil voters also supported the LSSP.  The LSSP fought for complete independence for Sri Lanka while the UNP was content for Sri Lanka to remain a semi-colony of Britain under dominion status. The LSSP wanted to do away with exploitation by the British and the local capitalist class and establish an “equal society (a Sama Samajaya)”, and build a truly Sri Lankan society free from any type of discrimination based on race, religion, or caste. The outbreak of World War II in 1939 resulted in the formation of the Communist Party (CP) from within the LSSP, which chose to support the British war effort. But the LSSP chose to continue the struggle for independence and as a result, the LSSP was banned (it had to go underground) and its leaders were imprisoned by the British rulers. The LSSP leaders escaped from jail and joined the independence struggle in India led by Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi. They were caught and imprisoned while in India and finally released in 1945 with the end of the war. The LSSP leaders who returned to Sri Lanka became politically active on behalf of the people. The workers were organised into a powerful trade union movement and carried out several mass protests and strikes to win their rights and improve their working and living conditions. The struggle for complete independence was intensified and on 4 February 1948 (after India won Independence in 1947), the British conceded independence to Sri Lanka. In the General Election held at that time, the UNP became the ruling party and allowed the British to continue to exploit our country. S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike, who was then a Minister in the UNP Government, broke away in 1951 and formed the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP). This was not enough to end the UNP rule. The people remained frightened and servile.  The Great Hartal With the onset of an economic crisis, the UNP decided to pass the burden of the emerging crisis onto the people, rather than the rich capitalist class. The price of rice was increased from 25 cents a measure to 70 cents and the UNP also raised the price of sugar and other essentials. The LSSP took the lead in protesting on behalf of the people, organising mass actions in workplaces and the villages. It was supported in this by the SLFP and the CP. The mass protests spread throughout the country, but mainly in the Western, Southern, and Central Provinces. The main demand was that the increase in prices should be reversed. The LSSP promoted strikes in the workplaces and there were also protests in the rural areas. The fear the people had over the rule by the UNP supported by the British had to be overcome if a significant change in the policies of the UNP were to be made. The LSSP with the support of the other opposition parties decided to have a day of struggle on 12 August 1953. The people responded and besides protest meetings, widespread unrest led to interference with public transport and communications by cutting trees across the roads and telephone posts. The mass response to this one day struggle, the Great Hartal, led to an emergency meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers in a British warship in the Colombo Harbour. The British and the local capitalist class prevailed on the Prime Minister, Dudley Shelton Senanayake, to resign, and replaced him with a strong man with a military background, John Lionel Kotelawala, as the Prime Minister. The UNP Government pacified the people by reducing the prices of the essential commodities. With backing given to Kotelawala by the British Government and because a General Election was due in 1956, where the people could defeat the UNP, the LSSP took the decision, along with the other leftist parties, to save the people from the danger of a massacre by not extending the Hartal. History has proved that this decision was correct by the fact that Bandaranaike was able to lead the SLFP to power with the support of the left. Don Philip Rupasinghe Gunawardena joined the Government and became a Minister along with his Viplavakari LSSP Party. At that time, the LSSP wanted Tamil also to be made an official language, in addition to Sinhala, if it was to join the SLFP-led Government. But later, in 1964, the LSSP also joined the SLFP-led Government.  The outcome has been historic, because the SLFP and the LSSP have come together with the other progressive parties. This has made it possible to form successive progressive governments which has in turn led to Sri Lanka becoming a completely independent, sovereign nation, not subservient to imperialism. Further, it has enabled Sri Lanka to be able to develop a national economy to satisfy the needs of all its people. The LSSP calls upon all progressive people and political parties to join us in celebrating these historic events.  (The writer is a virologist, Government Parliamentarian, the Committee on Public Accounts Chairman, and the LSSP General Secretary)


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