I think many of the youth in Sri Lanka today would agree with me if I were to state that we are all pretty much tired of our parents, uncles, aunts and neighbours complaining, on and on, about the rising cost of living, poor infrastructure and basic facilities, and the generally lackluster attitude to service shown by public servants.

True, these issues which give way to all these complaints and long faces are causing our elders to fret over the fact that they might not be able to sustain any quality of life in the future. They are justifiably worried about these issues because they have to feed, clothe and protect their beloved children, us. But would complaining about these issues actually help in the improvement of life in general? Has this complaining and incessant worrying ever caused the relevant authorities to make a concerted effort in improving infrastructure, public service, education and health? The answer is, for the most part, no.

When one seriously ponders on how the political system of our country really works, one is presented with a politician requesting votes to be elected to office by promising various projects aimed at the development of the general public’s life standards. Once voted in, the politician is rarely seen at all by the people who actually put him/her in their respective posts. Needless to say next to nothing is done with regard to fulfilling these campaign pledges. When election time is back on however, the politico is mighty interested about people’s welfare again and brags on about the supposed ‘services’ he rendered to the public.

The preceding paragraph is but a paraphrasing of the oft told story of how ‘democracy’, ‘politics’, and ‘governance’ work in Sri Lanka. I have mentioned it again, however, not to complain or state my view of how useless the system is in the country but merely to state, enough is enough. We as the youth of this country have heard enough of how the system runs, who runs it and how bad and inefficient it is. This has to stop and drastic measures have to be taken by us, as a responsible and free thinking society, to change this system radically enough so as to send a strong message to anyone trying to fool us that we cannot be fooled as easily as in the past.

One of the fundamental changes I aim to propose is that we, as concerned and responsible citizens of a world recognized, sovereign nation, must change ourselves and our attitudes in order to develop this country and take it forward in the global arena. I propose a more concerted effort in taking responsibility for our own actions that directly or indirectly affect the development of the nation. We must start governing our individual selves’ better without asking others to govern us. We must assume responsibility for the law and order of this country in its entirety before complaining about the high crime rate as a result of an inefficient police. We must be our own police. We must be the change we want to see. We must be the self-respecting ordinary citizen we want to see walking the streets of Lanka. It is up to us, and only us, to see that our brothers and sisters throughout the country obtain a decent education, reliable healthcare and better infrastructure, and not that someone in Sri Jayawardhanapura who has absolutely no regards as to what happens to normal ordinary human beings in the country.

We should start governing ourselves better, tarring our own village roads, erecting our own electricity wire posts, cleaning our own drains, washing our own public toilets, finding alternative and better transport methods of the present central government sponsored ones are ineffective. We must find our own, innovative and home-grown solutions to our own problems. Villages must learn to be self-sustaining without relying helplessly on government hand-outs. We, on our own should repair the damages on the roads and bridges that we use. We have to be self-sufficient as individuals, families, villages and societies instead on voting on, relying on, and complaining to the government. We must be our own government. A people’s government. What I am proposing is the gradual shifting from being citizens dependent on welfare of the government and foreign powers to being citizens dependent on ourselves. Only then would we have real progress anywhere. It is only when the people complaining about others’ mistakes shoulder on responsibility in solving their own problems will there be any development in Sri Lanka.

Just came across this interview of Ameena Hussain by Sanjana Hattotuwa on groundviews and I have to say that I was amazed at the fact that Ms. Hussain has absolutely no clue of what her supposed ‘culture’ and ‘community’ is.

She says in to the interview that she wrote an entire novel detailing her ‘community’ which she claims to be Muslim, simply because she thought, or has a fear of, this community being lost in its entirety. This so called ‘community’ that Ms. Hussain is referring to is supposedly the ‘old’ Marakkala society that never required its girls to wear the Hijab. She goes on to say that she wrote this novel because she sees political posters with ‘peace and harmony’ being the themes including pictures of Hijab clad girls being depicted as Muslims.She also claims that she finds girls donning the Hijab to be ‘disturbing‘.

I personally do not find women and girls donning the Hijab to be disturbing even in the least and firmly believe that it is one of the obligations and duties of a Muslim woman to conceal her person according to her respective religious belief. What she does can also be compared indirectly with a Muslim man’s duty of circumcision, maintaining of the entire family, growing of beard, etc, etc.

Just because Ms. Hussain very obviously doesn’t give a hoot as to what her obligations are regarding her supposed ‘religion’ does not give her any right to find anything regarding her supposed ‘culture’ ‘disturbing‘ or to find fault with actual practicing Muslims within the Sri Lankan community.

The issue of Tuition classes has been quite a a talking point among the public as well as in the media for some time now and I thought that I should air a few of my thoughts and my own analysis regarding this from a purely student’s point of view which fortunately or unfortunately I seem to posses as a 17 year-old just after his Local Sinhalese, English mix O/Ls.

One of the main reasons behind writing this is that most, if not all, of the literature concerning this issue has been created by journalists and other professionals who were educated way before the “Tuition Revolution”.

The following are just some of the demographics involved and an attempt to analyze how they contributed to TR.

Tuition Teachers

The tuition teachers themselves are one segment to be discussed under this issue. Most of the teachers who conduct tuition classes have now officially created an industry for themselves through effective marketing and publicity, etc. Brainwashing too comes into play here. Yep. A Maths Tuition master whose O/L classes I attended kept on telling us that the teachers we get at school are too old for teaching and that most of them memorize the lesson the day before and teach us the next day. How one memorizes a Math lesson is beyond me but this Master kept on harping on it and no matter what our own personal views were, some of the students in the class started to actually hate their school teacher and never took notice of her during school hours. These tactics are very unethical in nature but in the absence of any regulating body for these classes anything whatsoever can be said and done during tuition classes.

So we can definitely agree on the fact that around 90 percent of tuition teachers have capitalized on the boom of the industry and have quickly adapted at increasing the numbers of students in their classes.

Ane can we start having the Sinhala blog posts on another column and have a two-columned kottu.org. I know, I know, it sucks to break from tradition, but please consider it as the average amount of blog posts on Kottu are increasing with each drag the Kottu Robot does of the syndicated blogs. Pleash.

Daniel Tammet is a true, gifted genius of our time. The guy speaks nine languages, including one which he created. Apparently he sees individual numbers as shapes and forms and therefore he can perform advanced calculations in a matter of seconds because when presented with two numbers to be multiplied, he sees the result as a shape and then he immediately knows the number corresponding to that shape. So that’s retardedly awesome, isn’t it. He’s gay too.

As amazing as the Internet is and as vastly informative it is, it just can’t give me enough material relative and focused on my English Medium Local Sri Lankan A/Ls in the Commerce stream (Business Studies, Economics, Accounting).  Almost a year of googling has proved useless on my quest to find some material and help related to the Local A/Ls, even the NIE doesn’t have the English Medium Syllabus! Ahh…but then this is Sri Lanka and that’s absolutely fine.

This dilemma (or de-leeema as my Lit. miss would drone ((again, Sri Lanka!))) got me thinking in the lines of starting a site just for the Local Sri Lankan A/Ls where the 5 people interested in passing them, excluding the 3 without internet access, could actually benefit and gain immensely from.

Problem is, I have absolutely no idea on how to register a domain name, design a site, publish and manage it daily as I am still a……………..wannabe :-) . I was also wondering whether such a site would be successful because of the very low internet penetration in Sri Lanka and lack of funds. Hmmmm……..

You’ve probably been wondering what the fuss is all about with Muslims being so against the drawing or pictorial representations of the Messenger of Allah (pbuh*). Whilst personally being against the drawings, I would like to make it clear that one of the main reasons Muslims tend to regard this as taboo is because the creating of pictures and statues of the Prophet (pbuh) would ultimately lead some people to worship, prostrate to and ask help from these material forms or idols. This is the last thing that the Prophet (pbuh) wanted and it is mentioned that he (pbuh) was sent down to earth to destroy such practices and idols.

This fear is very much justified as pictures and statues of Jesus are being used as idols of worship by people where as he never commanded the worship of him from anyone.

* PBUH – Peace Be Upon Him

Anay people so listen. A lot has been said and little has been done in even trying to start dreaming of making Sri Lanka a better country wholly. People have said that we can’t be developed like India because of our size. People say that we can try to be like Singapore instead (forgetting the size factor though). You see my fren, Sri Lanka is 65,610 sq km while Singapore is 710.2 km sq km, meaning that we are 92 times the size of Lee Kuan Yew’s sandbox.

So what to do. One of the best possible ways to try to start dreaming of making some progress would be to identify strategic regions within the Island and assign a central location, i.e. a city or major town, and develop the said region from that central location. Take for example Hambantota and the areas surrounding it. Okay, it’s been ‘developed’ bloody fast right now because Someone and Co. came from there, but still it could be a model of development to be used around the Island as well.

We could develop a specific region within the country to be like Singapore instead of remodeling the entire nation to suit the style of Singapore simply due to the size difference. One of the main advantages that Singapore had in it’s path to progress was it’s size. It’s a city for God’s sake! But it’s GDP is 2.488 times ours and that should speak volumes about it’s development. Areas such as Kandy, Galle, Matara, Hambantota, Trincomalee, Batticaloa, Ratnapura, Jaffna, Badulla, Nuwara Eliya, Negambo, Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa, etc, etc, have amazing potential to be life size replicas of Singapore in terms of infrastructure, housing, sanitation, health, town planning, transport, technology, education, etc. True, said area cannot be an exact replica of Singapore due to cultural and social differences, Singaporeans are much more Westernized than average Sri Lankans, they speak English fluently as well but we can always capitalize on the hospitality, friendliness and tolerant nature of our peoples.

Just hopped in to Pettah, the informal downtown of Colombo. Boy is it filled to the brim even at 9.00 in the morning! While buying my year’s supply of notebooks from an excellent kade I couldn’t help but feel like I was in a living laboratory of economics. Buying, selling, producing, consuming, spitting betal….the last one sucks a bit and has not much to do with econ though. Slipped into a little junction side cafe and had a role and a Milo and suddenly remembered Business Studies. Then looked out and thought again of Economics! I couldn’t see anything Accounting-ly so I guess that could wait. Not much of a numbers person anyways. :-)

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