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Lanka
SEP-ISSE memorial meeting in Colombo
Commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the death of Keerthi
Balasuriya
By our correspondents
27 December 2007
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The Sri Lankan Socialist
Equality Party (SEP) and the International Students for Social
Equality (ISSE) held a powerful public meeting on December 23
to mark the twentieth anniversary of the death of Keerthi Balasuriya.
Keerthi was general secretary of the Revolutionary Communist League
(RCL), the forerunner of the SEP, from the time of its founding
in 1968 until his untimely death at the age of 39 from a massive
heart attack, while working at the RCLs Colombo offices
on December 18, 1987.
Nearly 200 workers, youth and professional people attended
the meeting, which was held at the Mahaweli Centre in Colombo,
to pay tribute to the memory of this leading member of the world
Trotskyist movement. Among the participants were Nandawathie Attanayake,
Keerthis 82-year-old mother, and several other family members.
I am very happy to see this number of people gathered
to pay their respects to my son twenty years after his death.
I know that you [the SEP] have commemorated him every year...
I am somewhat emotional at the moment and cannot say any more.
Thank you very much for inviting me and organising this event,
Keerthis mother told the World Socialist Web Site.
Party members and supporters from Colombo and other parts of
the island gathered in the meeting hall, along with old contacts
who had known Keerthi in the early years, and others who had come
to know of his role in the party more recently. Many people could
be seen deep in discussion, exchanging their memories of the RCL
leader.
SEP General Secretary and WSWS International Editorial Board
(IEB) member Wije Dias was the main speaker, and K. Ratnayake
from the SEP political committee chaired the meeting. Vilani Peiris,
an SEP political committee member and Keerthis life partner
also addressed the meeting, along with political committee member
M. Thevarajah and Kapila Fernando, convener of the ISSE in Sri
Lanka.

Ratnayake opened the proceedings by calling for a minutes
silence to pay tribute to Keerthi Balasuriyas memory. After
describing the circumstances of his unexpected death, Ratnayake
emphasised that on the twentieth anniversary of that tragic event,
it was critical that the lessons of Keerthis political struggle
be thoroughly assimilated.
The international working class was passing through a decisive
period, he said. In South Asia, the ruling classes had been driven
into serious crises, while the Sri Lankan government of President
Mahinda Rajapakse had dragged working people and the oppressed
masses into renewed civil war.
Only the SEP is advancing a socialist perspective for
the working class in Sri Lanka and South Asia as part of the struggle
of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI)
throughout the world. This is no accident. The SEP represents
the continuation of the struggle led by Keerthi to form the RCL,
based on the lessons of the ICFIs fight against Pabloite
opportunism and the betrayal of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP)
when it renounced Trotskyism and entered into the bourgeois coalition
government in 1964, Ratnayake explained.
Keerthi was very happy during the last few years of his
life because of the successful struggle waged in collaboration
with other leaders of our international movementparticularly
David North, national secretary of the Workers League in the US,
now the Socialist Equality Partyto defend Trotskyism against
the opportunism represented by the Workers Revolutionary Party
(WRP) in Britain.
Comrade Keerthi studied philosophy, history, art and
literature. He told us that, as Lenin insisted, We are preparing
the working class for the greatest task in historythe socialist
revolution. For that, an international party armed with the most
advanced theory is required.
Ratnayake read messages sent by Nick Beams, national secretary
of the Australian SEP, Chris Marsden, national secretary of the
British SEP, Ulrich Rippert, national secretary of the German
SEP (PSG) and Peter Schwarz, the secretary of the ICFI. Ratnayake
also referred to the two-part article written by David North,
and published on the WSWS on December 18 and 19.
SEP member Chandrasekar sent a message on behalf of party members
in the war-ravaged north of the island, because they were unable
to participate and Arun Kumar, secretary of the Socialist Labor
League in India, which is in political solidarity with the ICFI
also sent greetings.
Political independence of the working class
Vilani Peiris told
the meeting that Comrade Keerthis teachings were today being
vindicated, and that he continued to live in the struggles of
the ICFI and the SEP in Sri Lanka, and through the daily work
of the WSWS.
Peiris concentrated on Keerthis struggle to expose the
Sinhala extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), referring to
his book, The Class Nature and Politics of the JVP. She
pointed out that in 1970 Keerthi understood that the JVP was part
of an international phenomenon. He analysed its emergence in the
context of the various petty-bourgeois radical movements that
called for women power for women, black power
for black people and student power for students
in both the advanced and backward capitalist countries in the
late 1960s as world capitalism entered a deep-going crisis and
millions of young people were being radicalised.
He pointed out how the JVP was a petty-bourgeois organisation
hostile to the struggle of the working class for socialism.
Assessing the JVPs chauvinist politics, side by side with
its socialist rhetoric, Keerthi warned that it could be used in
the coming period by the extreme right wing to attack the working
class. This evolution was demonstrated in the period of
1988-1990 when the JVP carried out fascistic attacks against the
RCL and the working class, Peiris explained.
Peiris reviewed the principled campaign launched by the RCL
under Keerthis leadership to demand the release of rural
youth arrested and detained by the former Sri Lanka Freedom Party
(SLFP)-led coalition government in its brutal efforts to crush
the JVP-led rebellion in 1971.
She referred to an open letter written by Keerthi in reply
to an invitation from H.N. Fernando, former leader of the pro-JVP
Ceylon Teachers Union, to the RCL to join his alliance with the
Christian church in the name of releasing political prisoners.
Thoroughly rejecting Fernandos invitation, Comrade Keerthi
pointed out that political prisoners could be released only through
the independent mobilisation of the working class. He insisted
on the revolutionary role of the working class, its independence
from all other classes and the necessity of an internationalist
orientation and the fight for socialism.
One of the most critical issues confronting the RCL/SEP in
Sri Lanka has been the Tamil question.
Political committee member M. Thevarajah told the audience:
In 1987 Indian troops were brought to northern and eastern
Sri Lanka to crush the Tamil struggle against the racial oppression
that was being implemented under the Indo-Lanka accord and to
release Sri Lankan troops to carry out their repression in the
south. This was a testing time for all political parties.
Comrade Keerthi pointed out that the only way to fight
the Indian invasion and to defend the democratic rights of the
Tamil people was through the unified struggle of Sinhala and Tamil
workers to overthrow capitalist rule and establish a Socialist
Republic of Sri Lanka-Eelam as a part of a Union of Socialist
Republics in South Asia. He exposed the bankruptcy of the various
armed petty bourgeois movements, such as the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam.
Addressing the meeting, ISSE convenor Kapila Fernando stated:
Comrade Keerthi grappled with the burning problems facing
mankindexploitation, war, unemployment, education, health,
problems related to art and culture. The most important thing
was how he approached these problems. Contrary to the conceptions
of armed struggle spread among the youth by various
radical movements, Keerthi developed his approach based on scientific
socialism, Marxism, Trotskyism.
Referring to the political campaigns conducted by the RCL and
its youth movement, the Young Socialists (YS) against the United
National Party (UNP) governments attacks on free education,
like the 1982 Education White Paper, Fernando said: The
RCL and YS fought to turn the students towards the working class.
Following the other speakers, Wije Dias delivered the main
report. As mentioned in the messages sent by leading comrades
in the various countries of the world Trotskyist movement,
Dias began, the death of comrade Keerthi Balasuriya was
a serious loss, not just for the Revolutionary Communist League
and the SEP, not just for the working class and oppressed masses
in Sri Lanka and the Indian sub-continent, but also for the working
class movement throughout the world... For more than two decades
we fought alongside Comrade Keerthi, learnt from him and learnt
with him to struggle for the resolution of the crisis of leadership
of the working class and for the future of mankind.

Dias elaborated how a group of young comrades including Keerthi,
along with the veteran Trotskyist Wilfred Pereira (Spike), struggled
to draw the lessons of the great betrayal by the Lanka Sama Samaja
Party in 1964. This struggle led to the founding of the RCL in
1968 as a section of the ICFI, under its political and theoretical
guidance.
Referring to the unanimous election of Keerthi as the general
secretary of the RCL by its founding congress in 1968, at the
very young age of less than 20, Dias stated: It meant that
he was politically and theoretically mature enough then to become
the secretary of an IC section. This involved taking responsibility
for not only Sri Lanka, but the Indian sub-continent as a whole.
And this was no accident. Comrade Keerthi had shown from the very
beginning an intense interest in studying the historical experiences
of the working class and drawing the necessary conclusions from
them.
Dias recalled many of the experiences of the RCL under Keerthis
leadership, including the political struggle he waged to clarify
the petty bourgeois nature of the politics and perspective of
the JVP, and his principled response to the political differences
that arose with the former British section of the ICFI in 1971.
Opportunities were opening up for the SEP and the ICFI, Dias
emphasised, to politically penetrate deep into the working class
and youth in Sri Lanka and internationally under conditions where
they were entering into growing struggles against war and militarism
and for their basic rights. He concluded by urging those in attendance
to recognise their own responsibilities in this decisive political
situation by joining the SEP and taking forward the struggle to
build the ISSE.
In a clear demonstration of the warm response to the meeting,
more than 18,000 rupees ($US165)a considerable amount in
Sri Lankan termswas raised for the partys development
fund. Many books were also sold, including 46 copies of Keerthis
book on the JVP. Its third edition was released to coincide with
his memorial meeting.

See Also:
Greetings to Colombo memorial meeting
for Keerthi Balasuriya
[27 December 2007]
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