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Keerthi Balasuriya as revolutionary fighter during 1970-1971
By Vilani Peiris
21 December 2007
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Keerthi Balasuriya
was the general secretary of the Revolutionary Communist League
(RCL), the forerunner of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP), from
its founding in 1968, until his premature death on December 18,
1987, at the age of 39. His death deprived the Trotskyist movement
of one of its most brilliant representatives of the post-war period.
In this article, Vilani Peiris recalls Keerthis life
in 1970-1971, a critical period in the RCLs formation. Keerthi,
then in his early 20s, led the party through these testing experiences
and made important contributions to the perspective of the International
Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI), the world Trotskyist
movement, in Sri Lanka, South Asia and internationally. Peiris
is an SEP Political Committee member and was Keerthis companion
from 1971 until his death.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and the International
Students for Social Equality (ISSE) are holding a public meeting
in Colombo on December 23 at the Mahaveli Centre at 3 p.m. to
commemorate the 20th anniversary of the death of comrade Keerthi
Balasuriya.
I first met Keerthi in 1969 at an RCL meeting to plan the partys
educational work. It was my first meeting with RCL members outside
my own town of Moratuwa.
The meetings chair explained at the beginning that he
hoped everyone would stay until the discussion ended. My sister
and I got up and asked to leave early. The chair agreed, but a
slight, young comrade in a black-checked shirt stood up in the
audience and objected.
In an emphatic voice,
he insisted women had to work in the leadership of the Trotskyist
movement, then explained in brief the huge contribution of Rosa
Luxemburg to the Marxist movement. That was the Keerthi Balasuriya.
We left early that day, but I was deeply impressed by Keerthis
remarks.
I participated in an RCL study circle in 1969. There were two
groups, one of which was led by Keerthi. He lectured on Lenins
position of revolutionary defeatism during the First
World War and its political significance. In opposition to the
betrayals of the parties of the Second International, Lenin insisted
that the duty of workers in every country was to fight against
their own bourgeois government by turning the imperialist war
into a civil war.
Many comrades were inspired by Keerthis teaching of Marxism.
Before I joined the RCLs Moratuwa branch, he discussed with
me the ICFIs struggle against Pabloite revisionism in 1953
and 1963. The Pabloites, he explained, had rejected the revolutionary
role of the working class, abandoned the struggle for its political
independence and capitulated to Stalinism. In economically backward
countries like Sri Lanka, the Pabloites had ceded the historic
tasks of the proletariat to various bourgeois and petty bourgeois
nationalist leaders.
Keerthi insisted that without learning the lessons of the political
struggle against Pabloism it was impossible to understand the
betrayal of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP). The LSSPs
entry into the bourgeois government led by Madam Sirima Bandaranaike
and her Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) in 1964 was the product
of a protracted degeneration that had been sanctioned by the Pabloites.
In 1970 Keerthi held several discussions with older workers,
including in the railways, who had a history in the Trotskyist
movement. They had been members of the Bolshevik Leninist Party
of India (BLPI), the section of the Fourth International on the
Indian subcontinent in the 1940s, and of the LSSP when the BLPI
fused with it in 1950. Following the 1964 betrayal, they had broken
from the LSSP and joined the LSSP(R) of Bala Tampoe and Edmond
Samarakkody.
By 1970, these workers had become thoroughly demoralised not
just by the LSSPs betrayal, but the LSSP(R)s abandonment
of the struggle for Trotskyism. Tampoe and Samarakkody had opposed
the LSSPs decision to join the Bandaranaike government,
but rejected the ICFI and its analysis and pursued their own nationalist
agenda. These discussions gave Keerthi a first-hand insight into
the way in which the LSSP and LSSP(R) had disoriented hundreds
of Trotskyists who had been dedicated to the movement.
Keerthi based himself on the necessity of international party
and stressed the significance of the ICFIs intervention
in Sri Lanka. He continually referred to the articles of Newsletter,
the organ of the Socialist Labour League (SLL), the British section
of the ICFI, about the struggle against the LSSPs betrayal.
SLL national secretary Gerry Healy had visited Sri Lanka in
June 1964 during the LSSP conference that took the decision to
join the coalition. Wilfred Spike Pereira and Sisira
Jayasuriya, both of whom became founding members of the RCL, met
him. Jayasuriya, who was a few years older than Keerthi, met him
later at his school, Ananda College, while organising the literary
association.
Keerthi used all his talents to expose the LSSP and Tampoe
and Samarakkody, the opportunist LSSP(R) leaders, firmly based
on Leon Trotskys theory of Permanent Revolution.
In 1970, Tampoe started an opportunist collaboration with Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), a petty bourgeois group known in those
days as the Che Guevara movement, which hailed Mao
Zedong, Ho Chi Minh and Fidel Castro as Marxist leaders.
The JVP combined the nationalist outlook of these Stalinist and
guerrillaist movements with its own Sinhala chauvinism.
The LSSPs betrayal had opened the door for outfits such
as the JVP, which were orientated to the oppressed rural youth,
not to the working class. Likewise the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) emerged in the north and east among Tamils, advancing
a separate statelet. Both the JVP and the LTTE pointed to the
LSSPs entry into the Bandaranaike government as proof of
the failure of Trotskyism.
Keerthi wrote a series of articles in Kamkaru Puwath
(Workers News), the RCLs Sinhala language newspaper, entitled
The JVPs politics and class character, which
brilliantly analysed the grouping. Against the JVPs insistence
that the peasantry was the revolutionary force in
the backward countries, Keerthi reviewed the lessons of the Marxist
movement going back to the defeat of the 1927 Chinese revolution.
He established that it was only the working class that could address
the democratic aspirations and social needs of the rural masses
by mobilising them in the struggle for power on a socialist perspective.
I remember internal party discussions in which Keerthi opposed
several leading members who underestimated the analysis of the
JVP and argued that long articles would decrease the popularity
of the Kamkaru Puwath. Keerthi insisted that we would orient
our newspaper not toward backward layers but toward advanced workers
and intelligent youth.
What Keerthi analysed more than three decades ago has proven
to be correct. The JVP has all but abandoned its Marxism
and radical phrasemongering and is part of the political establishment,
openly espousing the most backward forms of Sinhala chauvinism
and demanding an intensification of communal war.
Keerthis articles on the JVP were eventually published
as a book, which was popular among young people. In response,
the JVP resorted to physical violence to try to intimate the RCL.
An RCL meeting at Vidyodaya University (now Jayawardenepura University)
was broken up by JVP supporters, including Buddhist monks. At
Peradeniya University in Kandy, however, the JVP provocations
failed because of the support that the RCL had won among students.
Despite the JVPs action, the RCL took a principled stand
in defending it from state repression, firstly under the United
National Party government and then the second Bandaranaike coalition,
which took power in 1970. The RCL warned in Kamkaru Puwath
that today the forces who are repressing the Che Guevara
movement tomorrow will be suppressing the working class and organisations
of the oppressed masses.
JVP uprising
That is exactly what took place when the JVP staged an armed
uprising of rural youth in April 1971. The coalition government,
which included LSSP ministers, responded with a reign of terror
that resulted in the deaths of an estimated 15,000 youth. The
repression was not limited to the JVP, but was directed against
all political opposition, forcing the RCL to work underground.
The police raided Keerthis room and library at Moratuwa,
but he was not there at the time. On April 13, the CID [Criminal
Investigation Division], together with armed police, also raided
the home of Keerthis mother in Demetagoda and threatened
his family members. The government used its emergency powers to
ban the RCLs newspapers and its youth movement. The party
office was raided. Two RCL members were killed by police at Kandy
prison.
Keerthi managed to evade arrest, hiding in various places around
Colombo with the help of comrades and party sympathisers. His
courage in the midst of this state repression was an inspiration
to all. His optimism in a revolutionary perspective was grounded
on an understanding that the convulsions in Sri Lanka were part
of a broader international crisis of capitalism.
In 1971, US President Richard Nixon ended the gold backing
for the US dollar, which had been one of the pillars of the post-war
order established at Bretton Woods in 1944. Capitalist rule in
France had been shaken to the core by the mass strikes of May-June
1968. Strikes and political struggles were emerging in country
after country in the early 1970s. The unrest among rural youth
in southern Sri Lanka reflected international processes.
Keerthi intransigently fought any tendency toward pessimism
or to make political concessions. He was furious when he found
out that two leading comrades including Sisira Jayasuriya, had
met with a LSSP leader to present a letter explaining that the
RCL was not a JVP organisation. I was present at the meeting at
Spikes home, having come from my hiding place in Galle to
meet Keerthi.
Keerthi stressed that the action was completely contrary to
the struggle for the political independence of the working class.
The RCL had to expose the LSSP and its pretensions of being a
workers party while actually defending the capitalist state. We
had to demand that the LSSP break with the ruling coalition. It
was completely wrong, Keerthi explained, to appeal for protection
from the LSSP, which was part of the government unleashing state
violence. He insisted that workers would turn on the LSSP and
predicted that entry into the coalition would be the last days
of the LSSP.
While Sisira Jayasuriya and several other members succumbed
to the enormous pressures and quit the party, the experiences
of the early 1970s steeled the RCL for the struggles ahead. Keerthi
closely worked with Spike on the partys perspective. Nanda
Wickremasinghe, Kamalasiri Ratnayake and Ananda Wakkumbura collaborated
closely with Keerthi. Wije Dias, the current SEP general secretary,
was in London and exchanged letters frequently with Keerthi.
The RCL began publishing an illegal bulletin for distribution
among workers and youth. Keerthi and I lived in a very backward
area where there was no electricity and no running water but we
were protected. Wakkumbura and two other comrades lived with us.
The RCLs principled stand attracted a growing response
from workers, students and intellectuals. At the government printing
establishment and Colombo port, RCL members won the leadership
of the trade unions. There was also strong support at the Central
Bank and in the railways. Keerthi was invited for discussions
by several Colombo University lecturers.
Following the end of emergency rule, Keerthi sought to deepen
the partys political understanding of the experiences through
which it had passed. He began work on a history of the RCL and
completed two parts before being instructed by the British SLL
to work on a perspectives document. The perspectives document,
which was adopted unanimously at the RCLs third conference
in late 1972, reviewed the theoretical struggles of the Trotskyist
movement and emphasised the need to combat any tendency toward
nationalism within the party.
Keerthis political life was bound up with the strategic
experiences of the 20th century. He offers an inspiration, particularly
for young people to devote their talents to the struggle for socialism
through the building of the international Trotskyist movement.
When I met Keerthi late 1969, he was already a profoundly cultured
man. He had a good library of Marxist writings and those of political
opponents. He also used Spikes library and university libraries
and encouraged all comrades to build a library and scientifically
study Marxism.
Keerthi loved culture and art. His library contained many works
of great literature. He loved Russian novels, particularly those
by Tolstoy, Dostoevsky and Pushkin. He was also attracted to the
works of D.H. Lawrence and the art of Picasso. He had a good knowledge
of Sinhala literature and ancient Indian poetry. He was particularly
fond of classical Indian music.
Before joining the Trotskyist movement, Keerthi was a talented
young artist. His first poem on Sri Lankas famous ancient
cultural work Isurumuniya Pemyuwals (loving
couple at Isurumuniya), was published in the Sunday newspaper
Silumina in 1962. He was just 14.
He kept writing poems for newspapers and published a book of
poetry in 1963. He was one of the editors of the publication Kauluwa,
which dealt with cultural issues. I particularly liked his short
story Prisoner written in 1966 and published in the
Danuma (knowledge) magazine. The theme of the story is
that under capitalism women are prisoners of society. His artistic
endeavours ended amid all his responsibilities in the Trotskyist
movement, but his love for culture and art never stopped.
It is difficult to believe that 20 years have passed since
his death. After his death, the movement to which he devoted his
whole adult lifethe RCL, now the SEPhas made many
developments. This is above all revealed in the extraordinary
collaborative effort involving all sections of the ICFI that has
produced the World Socialist Web Site. In its daily contribution
to the political education of workers and youth around the world,
his theoretical work and political struggles continue to live
on.
See Also:
Sri Lankan SEP marks 20th anniversary
of Keerthi Balasuriya's death
[20 December 2007]
Twenty years since the death of Keerthi
Balasuriya
Part one
[18 December 2007]
Twenty years since the death of Keerthi
Balasuriya
Part two
[19 December 2007]
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