The Colonial history of Sri Lanka
is dated from the start of the Portuguese period in Ceylon, in 1505, until Sri
Lanka achieved independence in 1948.
PORTUGUESE ERA
The first Europeans to visit Sri Lanka
in modern times were the Portuguese: Francisco de Almeida arrived in 1505,
finding the island divided into seven warring kingdoms and unable to fend off
intruders. The Portuguese founded a fort at the port city of Colombo in 1517
and gradually extended their control over the coastal areas. In 1592 the
Sinhalese moved their capital to the inland city of Kandy, a location more
secure against attack from invaders. Intermittent warfare continued through the
16th century.
Many lowland Sinhalese were forced to
convert to Christianity while the coastal Moors were religiously persecuted and
forced to retreat to the Central highlands. The Buddhist majority disliked
Portuguese occupation and its influences and welcomed any power who might
rescue them and defeat the Portuguese. In 1602, therefore, when the Dutch
captain Joris van Spilbergen landed, the king of Kandy appealed to him for
help.
DUTCH ERA
It was in 1638 that the Dutch attacked
in earnest but ended with an agreement(which was disrespected by both parties),
and not until 1656 that Colombo fell. By 1660 the Dutch controlled the whole
island except the kingdom of Kandy. The Dutch (who were Protestants) persecuted
the Catholics (the left-over Portuguese settlers) but left the Buddhists,
Hindus and Moslems alone. However, they taxed the people far more heavily than
the Portuguese had done. A mixed Dutch-Sinhalese people known as Burgher
peoples are the legacy of Dutch rule.
In 1659, the British sea captain Robert
Knox landed by chance on Sri Lanka and was captured by the king of Kandy. He
escaped 19 years later and wrote an account of his stay. This helped to bring
the island to the attention of the British.
BRITISH RULE
During the Napoleonic Wars, Great
Britain, fearing that French control of the Netherlands might deliver Sri Lanka
to the French, occupied the coastal areas of the island (which they called
Ceylon) with little difficulty in 1796. In 1802 by the Treaty of Amiens the
Dutch part of the island was ceded to Britain, and became a crown colony. In
1803 the British invaded the Kingdom of Kandy in the 1st Kandyan War, but were
bloodily repulsed. In 1815 Kandy was occupied in the 2nd Kandyan War, finally
ending Sri Lankan independence.
Following the bloody suppression of
the Uva Rebellion, the Kandyan peasantry were stripped of their lands by the Wastelands
Ordinance, a modern enclosure movement and reduced to penury. The British found
that the uplands of Sri Lanka were very suited to coffee, tea and rubber
cultivation, and by the mid 19th century Ceylon tea had become a staple of the
British market, bringing great wealth to a small class of white tea planters.
To work the estates, the planters imported large numbers of Tamil workers as indentured
labourers from south India, who soon made up 10% of the island's population.
These workers had to work in slave-like conditions and to live in line rooms,
not very different from cattle sheds.
The British colonialists favoured the
semi-European Burghers, certain high-caste Sinhalese and the Tamils who were
mainly concentrated to the north of the country, exacerbating divisions and
enmities which have survived ever since. Nevertheless, the British also
introduced democratic elements to Sri Lanka for the first time in its history.
The Burghers were given some degree of self-government as early as 1833. It was
not until 1909 that constitutional development began with a partly elected
assembly, and not until 1920 that elected members outnumbered official
appointees. Universal suffrage was introduced in 1931, over the protests of the
Sinhalese, Tamil and Burgher elite who objected to the common people being
allowed to vote.
INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT
The Ceylon National Congress (CNC) was
founded to agitate for greater autonomy. The party soon split along ethnic and
caste lines. Prof. K. M. de Silva, the famous Peradeniya historian has pointed
out that the refusal of the Ceylon Tamils to accept minority status to be one
of the main causes which broke up the CNC. The CNC did not seek independence or
"Swaraj". What may be called the independence movement broke into two
streams, viz., the "constitutionalists", who sought independence by
gradual modification of the status of Ceylon, and the more radical groups
associated with the Colombo Youth League, Labour movement of Goonasinghe, and
the Jaffna Youth Congress. These organizations were the first to raise the cry
of Swaraj, or outright independence, following the Indian example, when Jawaharlal
Nehru, Sarojini Naidu and other Indian leaders visited Ceylon in 1926. The
efforts of the constitutionalists led to the arrival of the Donoughmore
Commission reforms (1931) and the Soulbury Commission recommendations, which
essentially upheld the 1944 draft constitution of the Board of ministers headed
by D. S. Senanayake. The Marxist Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), which grew out
of the Youth Leagues in 1935, made the demand for outright independence a
cornerstone of their policy Its deputies in the State Council, N.M. Perera and Philip
Gunawardena, were aided in this struggle by other less radical members like Colvin
R. De Silva, Leslie Goonewardena, Vivienne Goonewardena, Edmund Samarkody Natesa
Iyer and Don Alwin Rajapaksa. They also demanded the replacement of English as
the official language by Sinhala and Tamil. The Marxist groups were a tiny
minority and yet their movement was viewed with grave suspicion by the British
administration. The heroic (but ineffctive) attempts to rouse the public
against the British Raj in revolt would have led to certain bloodshed and a
delay in independence. British state papers released in the 1950s show that the
Marxist movement had a very negative impact on the policy makers at the
Colonial office.
The Soulbury Commission was the most
important result of the agitation for constitutional reform in the 1930s. The
Tamil leadership had by then fallen into the hands of G. G. Ponnambalam who had
rejected the "Ceylonese identity". Ponnamblam had declared himself a
"proud Dravidian", and attempted to establish an independent identity
for the Tamils. Ponnamblam was a politician who attacked the Sinhalese, and
their historical chronicle known as the Mahavamsa. One such inflamed attack in
Navalapitiya led to the first Sinhala-Tamil riot in 1939. Ponnambalam opposed universal
franchise, supported the caste system, and claimed that the protection of Tamil
rights requires the Tamils (15% of the population in 1931) having an equal
number of seats in parliament to that of the Sinhalese (about 72% of the
population). This "50-50" or "balanced representation"
policy became the hall mark of Tamil politics of the time. Ponnambalam also
accused the British of having established colonization in "traditional
Tamil areas", and having favoured the Buddhists by the buddhist
temporalities act. The Soulbury Commission rejected these submissions by
Ponnambalam, and even noted their unacceptable communal character. Sinhalese
writers pointed out the large immigration of Tamils to the southern urban
centers, especially after the opening of the Jaffna-Colombo railway. Meanwhile,
Senanayake, Baron Jayatilleke, Oliver Gunatilleke and others lobbied the
Soulbury Commission without confronting them officially. The unofficial
submissions contained what was to later become the draft constitution of 1944.
The close collaboration of the D. S.
Senanayake government with the war-time British administration led to the
support of Lord Louis Mountbatten. His dispatches and a telegram to the
Colonial office supporting Independence for Ceylon have been cited by
historians as having helped the Senanayake government to secure the
independence of Sri Lanka. The shrewd cooperation with the British as well as
diverting the needs of the war market to Ceylonese markets as a supply point,
managed by Oliver Goonatilleke, also led to a very favourable fiscal situation
for the newly independent government.
SECOND WORLD WAR
During World War II, Sri Lanka was a
front-line British base against the Japanese. Opposition to the war in Sri
Lanka was orchestrated by Marxist organizations. The leaders of the LSSP
pro-independence agitation were arrested by the Colonial authorities. On 5
April 1942, the Japanese Navy bombed Colombo, which led to the flight of Indian
merchants, dominant in the Colombo commercial sector. This flight removed a
major political problem faceing the Senanayake government. Marxist leaders also
escaped, to India, where they participated in the independence struggle there.
The movement in Ceylon was minuscule, limited to the English educated
intelligentsia and trade unions, mainly in the urban centres. These groups were
led by Robert Gunawardena, Philip's brother. In stark contrast to this
"heroic" but ineffective approach to the war, the Senanayake
government took advantage of the war to further its rapport with the commanding
elite. Ceylon became crucial to the British Empire in the war, with Lord Louis
Mountbatten using Colombo as his headquarters for the Eastern Theater. Oliver
Goonatilleka successfully exploited the markets for the country's rubber and
other agricultural products to replenish the treasury. Nonetheless, Sinhalese
continued to agitate for independence and Sinhalese sovereignty, using the
opportunities offered by the war to establish a special relationship with
Britain.
Meanwhile, the Marxists, identifying
the war as an imperialist sideshow and desiring a proletarian revolution, chose
a path of agitation disproportionate to their negligible combat strength, and
diametrically opposed to the "constitutionalist" approach of
Senanayake and other Ethnic Sinhalese leaders. A small garrison on the Cocos
Islands, manned by Ceylonese, asttempted to cast off the British yoke. It has
been claimed that the LSSP had some hand in the action, though this is far from
clear. Three of the participants were the only British Subject Peoples to be
shot for "mutiny" during World War II.
Two members of the Governing
Party, Junius Richard Jayawardene and Dudley Senanayake, held discussions with
the Japanese to collaborate in liberating the island from British colonialism.
Sri Lankans in Singapore and Malaysia formed
the 'Lanka Regiment' of the Indian National Army.
The constitutionalists, led by D. S.
Senanayake, succeeded in winning independence. The Soulbury constitution was
essentially what Senanayake's board of ministers had drafted in 1944. The
promise of Dominion status, and independence itself, had been given by the
Colonial office.
POST-WAR
The Sinhalese leader Don Stephen
Senanayake left the CNC on the issue of independence, disagreeing with the
revised aim of 'the achieving of freedom', although his real reasons were more
subtle. He subsequently formed the United
National Party (UNP) in 1946, when a new constitution was agreed on, based on
the behind-the-curtain lobbying of the Soulbury Commission. At the elections of
1947, the UNP won a minority of the seats in Parliament, but cobbled together a
coalition with the Sinhala Maha Sabha of Solomon Bandaranaike and the Tamil
Congress of G.G. Ponnambalam. The successful inclusions of the
Tamil-communalist leader Ponnambalam, and his Sinhala counterpart Bandaranaike
were a remarkable political balancing act by Senanayake. However, the vacuum in
Tamil Nationalist politics created by Ponnamblam's transition to a moderate
opened the field for the Tamil Arasu Kachchi, a Tamil sovereignist party
(rendered into English as the "Federal" party) led by S. J. V.
Chelvanaykam, the lawyer son of a Christian minister.
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