|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Hundreds attend funeral of Sri Lankan Trotskyist
By Sarath Kumara
8 March 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
More than 300 party members, supporters, friends and relativesTamil
and Sinhalese alikeparticipated in the funeral of leading
Socialist Equality Party (SEP) member Sabaratnam Rasendran at
the public cemetery in Dehiwala-Mount Lavinia, a suburb of Colombo,
on March 3.
Rasendran was a member of the Colombo editorial board of the
World Socialist Web Site and an SEP Central Committee member.
He died at the Chest Hospital in Welisara, Sri Lanka, of pneumonia
and lung abscess septicemia on February 27 at the age of 54. He
joined the Trotskyist movement in 1973 as a university student
and fought for its perspective with courage and determination
throughout his adult life.
SEP General Secretary Wije Dias read out some of the many condolence
messages from members and leaders of the International Committee
of the Fourth International (ICFI), including WSWS chairman David
North, expressing their sorrow at Rasendrans untimely death
and their respect for his principled struggle for the liberation
of the working class.

In paying tribute to Rasendrans three decades in the
Trotskyist movement, Dias pointed to the political difficulties
of the early 1970s, during which Rasendran, a young Tamil student,
joined the Revolutionary Communist League (RCL), the forerunner
to the SEP. Class struggles were erupting in many countries around
the world fuelled by the beginnings of the break-up of the postwar
economic order. But these struggles lacked a revolutionary socialist
perspective and were dominated by Stalinist, Social Democratic
or petty bourgeois movements based on Maoism and Castroism.
In Sri Lanka, Dias explained, the betrayal of Trotskyist principles
by the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP), which entered a bourgeois
government headed by Madame Bandaranaike in 1964, gave rise to
communal tendenciesin the south, the rise of the Sinhala
chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), and in the north,
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) espousing a separate
Tamil state.
Rasendran refused to react to the grave crisis by adopting
pragmatic solutions. Instead he engaged himself in probing the
historical root causes of this crisis to find a way out,
Dias said. He was drawn to the scientific approach of Marxism,
studied the programs of different socialist tendencies and came
to the conclusion that Leon Trotskys Theory of Permanent
Revolution provided the key to solving the problems facing the
oppressed masses and minority nationalities such as the Tamils
in Sri Lanka. It was on this basis that Rasendran joined the RCL.
In the present situation, when the clouds of a third
imperialist war are beginning to gather and the Indian subcontinent
is ravaged by communal conflicts, the historical validity of the
perspective for which Rasendran fought has become ever more clear,
the SEP general secretary said.
Rasendran saw the rise and fall of the so-called big
movementsthe LSSP, the Stalinist Communist Party and nationalist
groups during the last three decades. He saw how the JVP, which
started by proclaiming to be an alternative socialist movement
to the treacherous old leaderships, degenerated into a fascistic
movement during the 1987-89 period.
During the same period he saw how those Tamil groups,
including the LTTE, which claimed to be fighting for the liberation
of Tamils connived with both the Indian and Sri Lanka regimes
to bring Indian troops to the North and East of the island under
the Indo-Sri Lanka accord. And also how these Tamil parties backed
the Peoples Alliance and Chandrika Kumaratunga to come to power
in 1994 and similarly helped the present regime during the last
elections. The policies of all these nationalist parties, whether
Sinhala or Tamil, have brought only destruction and intolerable
suffering to working people irrespective of their nationality.
Dias said Rasendrans conviction in the correctness of
the Trotskyist perspective of unifying Sinhala and Tamil workers
on the basis of a socialist program had only been strengthened
by these experiences. Despite his illness, he had played a crucial
role in preparing articles for the World Socialist Web Site
and translating material for the Tamil language website. Even
in hospital he continued to follow political developments and
was optimistic that he would be able to continue his work.
SEP Central Committee member M. Aravinthan also paid tribute
to Rasendrans personal qualities and his commitment to principle.
Hundreds of copies of the SEPs obituary to Rasendran, published
on the WSWS, were distributed in Sinhala, Tamil and English. Those
present were keen to understand what had motivated Rasendran to
become a Trotskyist and the role that he had played.
Widespread respect
Rasendrans political work had a significant impact on
many people from different walks of life and parts of the country.
In the five days between his death and the funeral, nearly a thousand
people came to his home to personally express their condolences
to his wife and their children.
Several hundred mourners took part in the funeral procession,
walking the one kilometre to the cemetery behind the hearse carrying
Rasendrans body. A party comrade carried a red flag at the
front and the Internationale was played throughout the
march. Many onlookers and passing vehicles stopped to watch the
possession with great interest and curiosity.
In attendance at the funeral were not only mourners from Colombo,
but workers and young people from plantations in the central hill
areas such as Hatton, Bandarawela, Badulla, as well as from remote
villages such as Tangalla in the south and Udappuwa in the northwest.
One SEP sympathiser made the difficult journey from Vavuniya,
which borders the war-torn northern province. Well-known Sri Lankan
film director Dharmasiri Bandaranayaka came to pay his last respects.
SEP members in the northern city of Jaffna, who had a close
relationship with Rasendran for decades, attempted to travel to
Colombo but were prevented from doing so by transport restrictions.
Two young Tamils from the plantation areas, Ponniah Sarawanakumar
and Arunasalam Logeswaran, who were detained without trial for
more than three years, heard of Rasendrans death in prison.
They were finally released this week as a result of the SEPs
campaign on their behalf and immediately sent their condolences
to the party and his family.
Many of those at the funeral not only expressed sorrow at Rasendrans
death but commented on his self-sacrifice and firmness. A former
coworker at the Inland Revenue Department commented: Rasendran
was well known for his political views. From the very beginning
he opposed the trade union bureaucracy and explained issues of
political program to the members.
Many signed the condolence book. The memory of Rasendran,
who dedicated his whole life to the revolutionary cause as an
international Trotskyist, will enlighten the coming struggles
and give great inspiration, one worker wrote. In Mr.
Rasendran we had a man with infinite patience, unlimited compassion,
firm and resolute in all his stands, dedication to the committed
cause and above all that much coveted characteristichumanitarianism
towards all, a neighbour commented. Uncle Rasendran
was one of the most gentle and compassionate men I have seen.
He was very firm and steadfast in his beliefs, a young person
wrote.
Though Rasendrans family came from a Hindu background,
there were no religious rituals. The SEP thanked his family, especially
his wife Janaki, for their cooperation in organising the funeral.
A Hindu tradition insists that the wife of a dead man and other
women do not go to the cemetery, but Janaki nevertheless took
part. She told a party member: I am coming to the cemetery.
I am fully convinced of the correctness of the policies that Rasendran
fought for.

Rasendran was well known in Sri Lanka. The two main Tamil daily
newspapers, Virakasari and Thinakkural, and a popular
Tamil radio station, Surian FM, announced Rasendrans
death. As well as noting his party affiliation and skills as a
journalist and translator, the reports quoted from SEP General
Secretary Dias saying that Rasendrans death would be an
immense loss to the international working class and the world
Trotskyist movement. Thinakkural and Surian added
their own tribute to Rasendran as a Trotskyist fighter dedicated
to developing the political consciousness of the working class.
See Also:
Sabaratnam Rasendran 1947--2002
Veteran Sri Lankan Trotskyist dies in Colombo
[2 March 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |