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词条 1958 anti-Tamil pogrom
释义

  1. Background

  2. Pogrom

     Attacks on trains  Farm massacres  Country-wide massacres and violence against Tamils  Attacks on Sinhalese 

  3. Government response

  4. Legacy

  5. See also

  6. Notes

  7. References

  8. External links

{{more footnotes|date=March 2019}}{{Use British English|date=May 2012}}{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2012}}{{Infobox civilian attack
| title = 1958 Anti-Tamil pogrom and riots
| image =
| caption = A Tamil home burnt by Sinhalese mobs in 1958.
| map = LocationSriLanka.png
| map_caption = Location of Ceylon
| location = Dominion of Ceylon
| coordinates =
| target = Primarily Tamil and some Sinhalese civilians
| date = May and June 1958
| time =
| timezone = +6 GMT
| type = Decapitation, burning, stabbing, shooting
| fatalities = 300 to 1500 [1][2]
| injuries = 1,000+
| perps =
| susperps =
| weapons = Knives, sticks, fire, guns
}}

1958 anti-Tamil pogrom and riots in Ceylon, also known as the 58 riots, refer to the first island wide ethnic riots and pogrom[2][3][4][5][6] to target the minority Tamils in the Dominion of Ceylon after it became an independent dominion from Britain in 1948. The riots lasted from 22 May until 27 May 1958 although sporadic disturbances happened even after the declaration of emergency on 1 June 1958. The estimates of the murders[7] range, based on recovered body count, from 300 to 1,500.[2] Although most of the victims were Tamils, some majority Sinhalese civilians and their property was also affected both by attacking Sinhalese mobs who attacked those Sinhalese who provided sanctuary to Tamils as well as in retaliatory attacks by Tamil mobs in Batticaloa and Jaffna.[8] As the first full-scale race riot in the country in over forty years, the events of 1958 shattered the trust the communities had in one another and led to further polarisation.

Background

{{See also|Sinhala Only Act}}

In 1956, Solomon Bandaranaike came to power in Ceylon, on a majority Sinhala nationalist platform. The new government passed the Sinhala Only Act, making Sinhala the sole official language of the country. This was done despite the fact that nearly a quarter of the population used Tamil as their primary language. The Act immediately triggered discontent among the Tamils, who perceived their language, culture, and economic position as being subject to an increasing threat.[9]

In protest, Tamil Federal Party politicians launched a satyagraha (Nonviolent resistance) campaign. This led to an environment of increased communal tensions and to the death of over 150 Tamils in the Gal Oya riots in the east of the country.[1] Eventually Bandaranaike entered into negotiations with them and the Federal party and agreed to the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayakam Pact of 1957, which would have made Tamil the administrative language in the Tamil-speaking north and east regions. But he was forced to cancel the pact under pressure from Sinhala nationalists and some Buddhist monks, particularly the United National Party, which organised a 'March on Kandy', led by JR Jayawardene.[9][10][11]

Meanwhile, 400 Tamil labourers were laid off when the British Royal Navy closed its base in Trincomalee. The government proposed to resettle them in the Polonnaruwa district. This angered the Sinhalese population there, which began forming gangs and threatening vigilante attacks on any Tamil migrants to the region.[12]

In the month preceding the riots, there were several isolated incidents of Tamils murdering Sinhalese in Kahawatte, Hatton, Trincomalee, and Chenkalady, further inflaming communal tension.[13]

Pogrom

Attacks on trains

{{Anti-Tamil riots in Sri Lanka}}

The Federal Party was to hold a convention in Vavuniya. Sinhala hardliners decided to disrupt party members travelling there by rail. Polonnaruwa station was the first to be attacked, on 22 May. The following night a train in Batticaloa was derailed, its passengers, mostly Sinhalese, were attacked, and two people were killed. Historian James Manor suggests that the perpetrators were Tamil who were retaliating for the earlier attack in Polonnaruwa.[14] The Polonnaruwa station was attacked again on 24 May, and nearly destroyed.[15]

Farm massacres

{{See also|Sri Lankan state sponsored colonisation schemes}}

Sinhalese gangs attacked Tamil labourers in Polonnaruwa farms. The Tamil labourers in the Polonnaruwa sugar-cane plantation fled when they saw the enemy approaching and hid in the sugar-cane bushes. The Sinhalese mobs however set the sugar cane alight and flushed out the Tamils. As they came out screaming, men, women and children were cut down with home-made swords, grass-cutting knives and katties,{{typo help inline|reason=few references online|date=March 2019}} or pulped under heavy clubs. Those who fled were clubbed down or hit by machetes. In Hingurakgoda, rioters ripped open the belly of an eight-month-pregnant woman, and left her to bleed to death.[20] One woman in sheer terror embraced her two children and jumped into a well. It has been estimated that 70 people died the night of 25 May.[16][17]

Polonnaruwa had only a small police presence. Requests for reinforcements were not heeded as the Government seemed reluctant to take the situation in the North Central Province seriously.[23] Those Sinhalese policemen who tried to protect Tamils were attacked by the mobs; a few had severe head injuries causing their deaths. The thugs displayed a temerity which was quite unprecedented. They had complete assurance that the police would never dare to open fire.

The next morning, a small army unit of 25 men arrived, but found itself confronted by a civilian Sinhalese mob of over 3,000.[23] The crowd dispersed after the soldiers fired a Bren gun at them, killing three.[18]

Country-wide massacres and violence against Tamils

On 26 May, Prime Minister Bandaranaike said the riots had started with the death of Nuwara Eliya mayor D.A. Seneviratne the previous day (actually the riots had begun three days before). This gave people the impression that Tamils were behind the riots. Soon gangs began beating Tamils in Colombo and several of its suburbs. Shops were burned and looted.[19] Tamil women were subjected to rape and their babies were murdered by dumping them in hot tar.[5] Widespread rioting along the coast from Colombo to Matara was mainly triggered by the return of Sinhalese fishermen who had been chased to the ocean by Tamil rioters in the Eastern Province.[14] In Kantale, Sinhalese rioters stopped buses that were entering the city and killed anyone who was unable to recite a Buddhist verse, including Sinhalese Christians.[20]

In Panadura, a rumor[19] spread that Tamils had cut off the breasts and murdered a female teacher in Batticaloa. In revenge, a Sinhalese gang tried to burn down the Hindu Kovil; unable to set fire to the building, they pulled out a Brahmin priest and burned him alive instead.[21] Subsequent investigations showed there was no female teacher from Panadura stationed in Batticaloa. Gangs roamed Colombo, looking for people who might be Tamil. The usual way to distinguish Tamils from Sinhalese was to look for men who wore shirts outside of their pants, or men with pierced ears, both common customs among Tamils. People who could not read a Sinhala newspaper (which included some Sinhalese who were educated in English) were beaten or killed.[22]

One trick used by the gangs was to disguise themselves as policemen. They would tell Tamils to flee to the police station for their safety. Once the Tamils had left, the empty houses were looted and burned. Across the country, arson, rape, pillage and murder spread. The state police is accused of being complicit and even fanning the riots in several places.[2][5] Some Sinhalese did try to protect their Tamil neighbours, often risking their own lives to shelter them in their homes. Sinhalese who were believed to be hiding Tamils "had their brains strewn about".[23]

Sinhalese laborers of the Land Develop­ment and Irrigation Department from Padaviya formed a mob armed with guns and began roaming the northern border areas in trucks on May 29th. Though they planned on going to Anuradhapura, they took an indirect route on the Padaviya—Kebitigollewa—Vavuniya Road to outmaneuver the army, attacking whatever Tamils they could find on the way.[24] The army and police intercepted the rioters south of Kebitigollewa. They killed 11 rioters, and arrested 343.[25] Some of the prisoners later confessed that they would have gone further south to Matale and Kandy had they not been stopped.[26]

Attacks on Sinhalese

Beginning on May 23, Tamil rioters began a series of attacks on Sinhalese officials and civilians in Eravur. On the 24th, a truck and car were blown up, and on the 25th, D. A. Seneviratne, former mayor of Nuwara Eliya, was murdered, though this is suspected to have been a personal issue.[14] Fishermen from the two communities fought on the seashore. In the same town, Tamil gangs set up roadblocks, beating up motorists believed to be Sinhalese. A Sinhalese man and his wife were set on fire, and many other Sinhalese, including children, were mercilessly killed by Tamil rioters. In Valaichchenai, Muslims sheltered Sinhalese who fled from Tamil mobs.[27] 56 cases of arson and attacks were registered in the Batticaloa district, and 11 murders were recorded, but it is believed that the actual number of murders in Karativu alone is far larger than the official statistic.[28] Many Sinhalese had managed to flee by water and land on the southern coast, but others had fled into the jungle, where they had succumbed to hunger and wild animals.[29]

No deaths were reported in Jaffna district, but some Sinhalese merchants had their inventories burned. Mobs would order Sinhalese out of their properties, loot valuables, and then burn the properties. The behavior of the mobs led politicians in Colombo to suspect that the violence was organized. Several Sinhalese were severely beaten, including members of Marxist parties, who stood for parity of status. A Tamil mob destroyed the Buddhist Naga Vihare temple, which was rebuilt afterwards. The mob tried to kill a Buddhist monk there, but he was saved by the police.[30]

Government response

For five full days the government did nothing. Finally, on 27 May, a state of emergency was declared. The Federal Party and Jatika Vimukti Peramuna were both banned. Most of the country's senior Tamil politicians were Federal Party members and were later arrested. Within two days, the military had restored order in Colombo and eventually the rest of the country. Nearly 12,000 Tamil refugees had fled to camps near Colombo. The government secretly commissioned six European ships to resettle most of them in Jaffna in early June. The army was eventually withdrawn from civilian areas in the rest of the country, but remained present in Jaffna for 25 years.{{cn|date=May 2018}}

On 3 September 1958 the Tamil Language (Special Provisions) Act – which provided for the use of the Tamil language as a medium of instruction, as a medium of examination for admission to the Public Service, for use in state correspondence and for administrative purposes in the Northern and Eastern Provinces – was passed, substantially fulfilling the part of the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayagam Pact dealing with the language issue.[31]

Legacy

{{See also|Sri Lankan Tamil Nationalism|Sri Lankan civil war}}

As the first full-scale race riot in Ceylon in over forty years, the events of 1958 shattered the trust the communities had in one another.[32] Both major ethnic groups blamed the other for the crisis, and became convinced that any further compromises would be interpreted as a sign of weakness and be exploited. Thus, the path to the Sri Lankan Civil War was clear. Velupillai Prabhakaran, a small boy at the time of the riots, said later that his political views as an adult were shaped by the events of 1958.{{cn|date=May 2018}}

The famous book “Emergency ‘58” records the events of this pogrom. Popular journalist Tarzie Vittachi who published the book was expelled by the Sri Lankan Government soon after the pogrom.[5] The book also explores into the manifestation of Sinhalese nationalism in the form of anti-Tamil movement in a large-scale pogrom as a result of closely coordinated action of politicians, Buddhist monks, and rural Sinhalese.[2]

See also

  • List of anti-minority pogroms in Sri Lanka
  • Black July
  • Sri Lankan Civil War

Notes

1. ^{{cite news |title = An evolving army and its role through time|work=The Sunday Times | date = 16 October 2005 |url = http://sundaytimes.lk/051016/plus/4.html|accessdate =29 October 2008|quote = The outbreak of island wide ethnic violence from May 24–27, 1958, saw for the first time the deployment of military personnel under emergency proclamations throughout the entire island, where Colombo and the North and East of the country witnessed the worst violence leading to over 300 deaths.}}
2. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.ptsrilanka.org/images/documents/massacres_pogroms_en.pdf | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160428050130/http://www.ptsrilanka.org/images/documents/massacres_pogroms_en.pdf | archive-date=2016-04-28 |title=Genocide Against Tamil People: Massacres, Pogroms, Destruction of Property, Sexual Violence and Assassinations of Civil Society Leaders | publisher=People's Tribunal on Sri Lanka (PTSL) | accessdate=8 May 2015 |df=dmy-all}}
3. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.tamilguardian.com/files/File/NorthernProvincialCouncil/NPC%20resolution%20genocide%20of%20Tamils%20by%20GOSL%2010%20Feb%202015.pdf | title=NPC Resolution on Tamil Genocide | publisher=TamilGuardian | accessdate=8 May 2015}}
4. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.sangam.org/FACTBOOK/timeline.htm | title=History of the National Conflict in Sri Lanka | publisher=Sangam.org | accessdate=8 May 2015}}
5. ^{{cite book | last = | first = | authorlink = NESHOR | title = Massacres of Tamils(1956-2008) | publisher = Manitham Publications | series = | volume = | edition = | location = Chennai | year = 2009 | page = 15 | doi = | isbn = 978-81-909737-0-0 | mr = | zbl = }}
6. ^{{cite book | last = | first = | authorlink = Alka Kurian | title = Narratives of Gendered Dissent in South Asian Cinemas | publisher = Routledge Publications | series = | volume = | edition = | location = New York | year = 2012 | page = 126 | doi = | isbn = | mr = | zbl = }}
7. ^Chattopadhyaya, H. Ethnic Unrest in Modern Sri Lanka: An Account of Tamil-Sinhalese Race Relations, p. 54
8. ^Roberts, M. Exploring Confrontation: Sri Lanka: Politics, Culture and History , p.331
9. ^Vittachi, pp. 2–8
10. ^Bartholomeusz, T. In Defence of Dharma: Just-War Ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka, pp. 93–94
11. ^{{cite web|title=DBS Jeyaraj, 'JR’s Kandy March and the tale of "Imbulgoda Veeraya"', The Nation, 4 November 2007. |url=http://www.nation.lk/2007/11/04/newsfe1.htm |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/5hLGWvnsa?url=http://www.nation.lk/2007/11/04/newsfe1.htm |archivedate=7 June 2009 |deadurl=no |accessdate=1 June 2009 |df=dmy }}
12. ^Vittachi, p. 10
13. ^{{Cite Hansard |jurisdiction=Dominion of Ceylon|house=House of Representatives |date=June 4, 1958 |speaker=S. W. R. D. Banadaranaike|position=Prime Minister}}
14. ^{{cite book |last1=Manor |first1=James |title=The Expedient Utopian: Bandaranaike and Ceylon |publisher=Cambridge University Press}}
15. ^Vittachi, pp. 35–36
16. ^Vittachi, p. 20
17. ^Chattopadhyaya, H. Ethnic Unrest in Modern Sri Lanka: An Account of Tamil-Sinhalese Race Relations, p. 53
18. ^Vittachi, p. 21
19. ^Vittachi, p. 26
20. ^{{cite journal |last1= Ratnapalan|first1= Laavanyan M. |date= |title=Memories of Ethnic Violence in Sri Lanka Among Immigrant Tamils in the UK|url=https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00713344/document#page=20 |journal=Ethnic and Racial Studies |volume= |issue= |pages=20|doi= |access-date= }}
21. ^Vittachi, p. 24
22. ^Volkan, V. Bloodlines: From Ethnic Pride To Ethnic Terrorism, p. 109
23. ^Vittachi, p. 20
24. ^Vittachi, p. 35
25. ^Vittachi, p. 36
26. ^Vittachi, p. 72
27. ^{{cite news |last= Soysa|first= W.D.|date= September 4, 2003|url= http://www.island.lk/2003/09/04/Feat2.pdf|title=1958 Riots in Polonnaruwa and Sinhala Muslim unity in Valachenai|location= |access-date= }}
28. ^Vittachi, p. 28
29. ^Vittachi, p. 27
30. ^Vittachi, p. 33
31. ^P. A. Ghosh, 'Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka and role of Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF)', APH Publishing, 1999; {{ISBN|81-7648-107-6}}, {{ISBN|978-81-7648-107-6}}
32. ^{{cite journal | last = Roberts | first = Michael| title = Blunders in Tigerland: Papes muddles on suicide bombers | journal = Heidelberg papers on South Asian and comparative politics | volume = 32 | pages = 14 | publisher = University of Heidelberg|date=November 2007}}

References

  • {{cite book | last=Vittachi | first=Tarzie | title=Emergency '58: The Story of the Ceylon Race Riots | year=1958 | publisher=Andre Deutsch |oclc=2054641}}
  • {{cite book | last=Roberts | first=Michael | title=Exploring Confrontation: Sri Lanka: Politics, Culture and History (Studies in Anthropology and History, V. 14) | year=1995| publisher=Routledge | isbn= 3-7186-5506-3 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Volkan |first=Vamik |title=Bloodlines: From Ethnic Pride To Ethnic Terrorism |publisher=Basic Books |year=1998 |isbn=0-8133-9038-9 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Bartholomeusz |first=Teresa |title=In Defense of Dharma: Just-War Ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka|publisher=RoutledgeCurzon |year=2002 |isbn=0-7007-1681-5}}
  • {{cite book |last=Chattopadhyaya|first=Haraprasad |title=Ethnic Unrest in Modern Sri Lanka: An Account of Tamil-Sinhalese Race Relations|publisher=South Asia Books |year=1994 |isbn=81-85880-52-2}}

External links

  • Biography of Tarzie Vittachi, author of book on the riots
{{Sri Lankan coups}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Ceylon}}

11 : 1958 riots|1958 in Ceylon|History of Sri Lanka (1948–present)|Sri Lankan Tamil politics|Ethnic riots|Riots and civil disorder in Sri Lanka|Civilian massacres in Sri Lanka|Origins of the Sri Lankan Civil War|Mass murder in 1958|May 1958 events|June 1958 events

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