Jagath Chamila with his first drama teacher, Tissa Gunawardena [Pic courtesy gossiplanka.com] |
In his acceptance speech at the awards ceremony Jagath
Chamila spoke in Sinhala. That was not
the first time that someone whose mother tongue is not English spoke in a
language other than English when accepting an award. And yet, it was significant, because it is
not the norm. It is considered a come
down of sorts not to speak in English. Even broken English is considered
preferable to Sinhala or Tamil for reasons that need no elaboration. Such choices are justified in the name of
audience-convenience and the ‘courtesy’ serves to brush aside the
preference-devils that dwell in minds and makes people slaves to agendas by and
large external to themselves, their communities and nations.
Jagath Chamila was courteous. He spoke in Sinhala and also in English. Courtesy, though, is not what this is
about. This is about something more
profound.
Jagath Chamila took the award in the name of his
country. He went further. He said ‘This belongs to my country, Sri
Lanka’. The pride in eyes and voice was
unmistakable. These are time when it is
fashionable to humiliate one’s country and one’s people, focus on the bad and
pretend that there’s nothing positive to talk about. These are times when in these and other ways
invite the most despicable international operators to poke dirty fingers into
the country’s affairs, a time when such behavior is a non-negotiable in order
to obtain membership in boorish, self-congratulatory and supercilious elite
clubs including those with ‘civil society’ tags. It is therefore ‘different’ when someone,
anyone, utters the name ‘Sri Lanka’ with the kind of warmth and affection that
Jagath Chamila did.
That’s not the story either.
He expressed gratitude to his parents. That’s not out of the ordinary
either. What makes his speech special is
the fact that he remembered with unmistakable gratitude his first drama
teacher, Tissa Gunawardena. ‘I thank my
high school drama teacher, Tissa Gunawardena….this belongs to my country…Sri
Lanka’.
It reminded me of something Arjuna Parakrama told me in
1987. He was at the time a doctoral
student at the University of Pittsburg.
He had just submitted his Masters thesis.
‘I dedicated it to my teachers. We convince ourselves that our achievements
are obtained through our own hard work and nothing else. We forget how much our teachers
contribute.’
Most teachers are not unaware of this reluctance to
acknowledge contribution, and the wiser among them don’t take offense. They don’t demand expression of gratitude but
would be happy if their students at least recognize and greet them if they were
to meet them somewhere randomly.
The Ascetic Siddartha, in his pursuit of ‘truth’ spent long
hours at the feet of teachers. Upon attaining
Enlightenment, the first act was the symbolic expression of gratitude to the
Esatu Bo Tree that had offered shelter from sun and rain, the animisa locana pooja, where it is said
that Siddhartha Gauthama, the Enlightened One spent an entire week gazing upon
the tree without blinking.
At the end of the seventh day of the seventh week, it is
said that the Enlightened One reflected on who he should impart the knowledge
he had obtained. The first thoughts were
of his teachers. When he cast his all-seeing
‘eyes’ he realized that they had all passed on.
Jagath Chamila was not sharing anything close to what was
the Thathagatha’s to give. And yet, he
thought of his teachers. Those are easy
words, true, but words that rarely make it to the tongue of those who get to
deliver acceptance speeches at awards ceremonies.
If anyone had doubts about how genuine those words were,
they would have been divested of them when Jagath Chamila returned to garlands,
applause and welcome. Among friends,
family and well-wishers was a man called Tissa Gunawardena. Old. Infirm. In a wheel-chair. That embrace was tear-made
and made for tears. An authentication,
if you will, of ‘easy’ sentiments
expressed to a waiting-to-applaud audience.
The award was accepted in the name of Sri Lanka. The recipient demonstrated, in a few words
and in a simple matter of expressing gratitude, that he belongs to all of
humanity.
3 comments:
Good topic to show how people remember their past. because Malind I see that some of our gentlemen in the 83 Group just look the other side and pretend not to know us the very peope who played to gether 30 years ago.
I was in tears all the way through this wonderfully written. Praise the humanity.
A very good article with lots of values highlighted.I could say this is beyond a reporting of an event,which enlighten the reader. Thank you ,Malinda
Post a Comment