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St. Maximilian Kolbe: ‘The Saint and Hero at Auschwitz’ and his visits to Sri Lanka in the 1930

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Franciszek Gajowniczek with Pope John Paul II at the canonisation ceremony of St.Maximilian Kolbe on October 100, 1982.Photo courtesy: reproduced with the permission of The Archives of MI Niepokalanów (Archiwum MI Niepokalanów) , Teresin, Poland

The 84th anniversary of the death of St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe- a Polish Franciscan priest who, during the Second World War, volunteered to die in place of a fellow prisoner, Franciszek Gajowniczek (a father of two, condemned to starve to death in the infamous “Death Bunker” at the Nazi concentration and extermination camp of Auschwitz), in order to save that prisoner’s life- fell on August 14, 2025. St. Maximilian Kolbe was no stranger to Sri Lanka. During his missionary journeys to and from Japan, China and India, he visited the Island (then known as Ceylon) in 1930, 1932 and 1933.

In July 1941, the Nazis discovered that a prisoner had escaped from the Auschwitz concentration and extermination camp. On such occasions, the Nazis enforced a brutal retaliatory policy they believed would serve as a deterrent: for every escapee, 10 men randomly chosen from the remaining prisoners would be starved to death. Following this cruel and inhuman policy, the SS officer, Karl Fritsch selected 10 men from among the prisoners who were standing in ranks for this unjust collective punishment. One of those chosen was a Polish prisoner Franciszek Gajowniczek, who pleaded in anguish, ‘My wife and children’.

Father Maximilian Maria Kolbe was a 47 year old Polish Franciscan priest who had been taken prisoner by Nazis for providing shelter to Jewish refugees at his monastery near Warsaw and for publishing articles critising the Nazi regime. He was not among those chosen for the cruel and vengeful punishment. Father Maximilian heard the desperate plea of his fellow prisoner- Franciszek Gajowniczek. Moved by compassion, he walked up to the Nazi officer.

When asked “Who are you?”, Father Maximilian replied, ‘I am a Catholic priest. I want to die for that man; he has a wife and children.’ The Nazi officer complied with Father Maximilian’s request and chose him in place of Franciszek Gajowniczek. Along with other nine prisoners condemned to death by starvation, Father Maximilian was led to a cell in the ‘Death Bunker’. A person who had served as an assistant janitor at Auschwitz at that time, later testified that in his prison cell, Father Maximilian led the prisoners in prayer. Each time the guards came to check, they saw him standing or kneeling in the middle of the cell. He and the other nine prisoners were starved and deprived of water for two weeks, and all but Fr. Maximilian and three others died. The guards, eager to empty the bunker as quickly as possible, administered lethal injections of carbolic acid to Father Maximilian and the three remaining prisoners, ending their lives.

Father Maximilian passed away on August 14, 1941. His mortal remains were cremated the following day, August 15, the Feast of the Assumption of Mary. Gajowniczek, whose life was spared through Father Maximilian’s supremely heroic and sacrificial act of love, remained imprisoned at Auschwitz until he was transferred from there to Sachsenhausen concentration camp on October 25, 1944. He remained a prisoner there until the camp was liberated by the Allied forces following Germany’s surrender on May 7, 1945. Six months later, when he reunited with his wife Helena, who had survived the war, he learnt that their two sons had been killed in a Soviet bombardment of Rawa Mazowiecka in January 1945 before his release.

Gajowniczek dedicated the rest of his life to sharing the story of Father Maximilian’s supreme act of love and sacrifice – how one man laid down his life so that another man might live. Father Maximilian’s sacrifice was a living example, an epic realization of what Christ said: ‘Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends’ [John 15:13]. It was also a profound imitation of what Christ himself did.

On October 17, 1971, Pope Paul VI beatified Father Maximilian Kolbe. Eleven years later, on October 10, 1982 Pope John Paul II canonized him proclaiming that he was a ‘martyr of charity’. Franciszek Gajowniczek was present in Rome to witness both the beatification and canonization ceremonies. St. Maximilian Kolbe is one of the 20th century Christian martyrs commemorated in statues erected above the Great West Door of Westminster Abbey, a cathedral of the Church of England.

When one looks at the life of St. Maximilian Kolbe, it becomes clear that his supreme act of laying down his life to save another man was not a spontaneous, isolated or impulsive gesture. It was unequivocally the cumulative outcome of a deeply rooted and well-formed spiritual life he lived from early on.

Early Years

Raymond Kolbe, who took the religious name Maksymilian (transliterated as Maximilian in English) upon entering the novitiate in 1910, and later the additional name Maria at his ordination as a Franciscan priest in the Order of Friars Minor Conventual (OFM Conv.) in 1914, was born on January 8, 1894 in the Polish town of Zduńska Wola then situated in the Russian-occupied part of Poland. At that time, Poland was partitioned and divided between the Russian, Prussian and Austro-Hungarian empires.

His parents, Julius Kolbe and Maria Kolbe (née Dabrowska) were weavers by trade; his mother later worked as a midwife. They were devout Catholic Christians. Of their five sons, two died in infancy. The three surviving sons – Francis, Maximilian and Joseph – began their early informal education at home, and were later sent to the Franciscan Fathers in Lwow for formal education in the hope that they would become priests. Julius and Maria Kolbe inculcated in their three sons a profound love for and faith in God. They also planted in them a streak of patriotism, a love for their Fatherland, Poland. Julius and Maria entered the religious life in their lives later. Julius entered a Franciscan monastery as a religious brother and Maria joined a Felician Sisters’ convent as an extern.

Apparition of Mary

St. Maximilian Kolbe, at times, was as mischievous as any child could be. On one day in 1903 when he was only nine years old, his mother, exasperated by his pranks, asked him ‘What is going to become of you?’ Little Maximilian, who took this question to heart, began to spend time before the family altar praying. His mother, observing her son spending long hours in solitude, praying and weeping at the family altar in solitude, became concerned about what was troubling him. When she asked him what disturbed him, Maximilian told her:

‘When you said to me, ‘What will become of you?’ I prayed very hard to Our Lady to tell me what would become of me. And later in the church I prayed again. Then the Virgin Mother appeared to me holding in her hands, two crowns, one white, one red. She looked at me with love and she asked me if I would like to have them. The white [one] meant that I would remain pure and the red that I would be a martyr. I answered “yes, I want them.” Then the Virgin looked at me tenderly and disappeared.’

[Treece, Patricia, ‘A Man for Others: Maximilian Kolbe: Saint of Auschwitz in the Words of Others who knew Him’ , Harper & Row, New York,1982]

Nazi Officers standing near Auschwitsz Concentration Camp Photo courtesy: reproduced with the permission of The Archives of MI Niepokalanów (Archiwum MI Niepokalanów) , Teresin, Poland

This experience undoubtedly left an indelible imprint on St. Maximilian Kolbe’s spiritual journey.

Education, Rome, Ordination and ‘Militia Immaculata of the Immaculata’

St. Maximilian Kolbe was a bright pupil at the Franciscan Minor Seminary in Lwow, where he displayed notable excellence in mathematics and science. In 1912, he was sent to Rome for higher studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University where he received a doctorate in philosophy in 1915. While in Rome, on April 28, 1918, he was ordained a priest in the Order of Friars Minor Conventual (OFM Conv.). He pursued further studies at the Pontifical University of St. Bonaventure, where he was awarded a doctorate in theology in 1919.

St. Maxilian Kolbe Photo courtesy: reproduced with the permission of The Archives of MI Niepokalanów (Archiwum MI Niepokalanów) , Teresin, Poland

When World War I broke out, St. Maximilian Kolbe was still studying in Rome. At that time, Józef Piłsudski’s Polish Legions were engaged in battle against the Russians for the independence of Poland. His father, Julius Kolbe, who had by then become a Franciscan brother, left his religious life and joined Józef Piłsudski’s forces to fight for his country’s freedom. Julius Kolbe, who was only 43 years old, was captured and executed by the Russians. His death was a traumatic event for young St. Maximilian Kolbe.

The year 1917 marked a crucial turning point for the Church and for the world. In Europe, the rise of materialism and the Russian revolution which brought Lenin and atheistic communism to power resulted in an open “war” against religion and the Church. Meanwhile in Italy, the unresolved “Roman Question”, which arose from the military occupation of the Papal States by the Kingdom of Italy in 1870, had created a political climate and social opinion hostile towards the Catholic Church and the Papal authority. Some intellectuals, political parties, groups (notably Italian Freemasons) and activists in Italy openly launched vigorous campaigns against the Church and the Papal authority. The response of the young student and Franciscan friar, St. Maximilian Kolbe to this global and moral challenge, was the founding of the Militia of the Immaculata.

On October 16, 1917, St. Maximilian Kolbe, together with six fellow Franciscan friars, founded the Militia of the Immaculata (The Army of the Immaculate Blessed Virgin Mary), a non-violent spiritual army waging a battle of love for the conversion of sinners and opponents of the Catholic Church, using as weapons the preaching of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, prayer (particularly prayers invoking the intercession of the Blessed Immaculate Mother Mary), evagelisation through modern media (magazines, newspapers, books, radio), missionary and pastoral outreach, personal sanctification, Eucharistic devotion and charitable apologetics. Members of the Militia of the Immaculata are called The Knights of the Immaculata.

St. Maximilian Kolbe, early on as a child, had adopted five ideals in life: a military career in defence of his beleaguered and divided homeland; ordination as a Franciscan priest; championing the causes of the Catholic Faith; holiness; and martyrdom. As events unfolded in his life, all these ideals except the military career in a secular army to fight for the freedom of his country came to fruition. His military inclination, however, found expression in a non-violent spiritual form through the Miliitia of the Immaculata.

Towards the final stages of his studies in Rome, he contracted tuberculosis, an infection that afflicted him throughout the rest of his life from time to time. Despite the physical suffering, poor health and weakness caused by bouts of this infection, St. Maximilian Kolbe unwaveringly laboured for and served the causes to which he was profoundly committed and dedicated.

Return to Poland, Niepokalanov, Apostle of Media, and Missionary Endeavours in Japan and India

After completing his studies in Rome, St. Maximilian Kolbe returned to Poland in 1919, and began serving as a teacher at the Franciscan Seminary in Kraków, a position he held till 1922 whilst actively promoting the work of the Militia of the Immaculata. In 1922, he launched the popular Catholic periodical Rycerz Niepokalanej (The Knight of the Immaculata). In 1927, he founded a new Franciscan monastery called ‘Niepokalanów’ (The City of Mary Immaculate) near Warsaw, which grew into a large and influential religious centre for Catholic media operating both a publishing house and a radio station, Radio Niepokalanów. Niepokalanów eventually attracted a community of about 700 friars and workers.

He and his fellow friars, whilst practising strict religious poverty, made use of the most modern equipment, printing machines and administrative strategies in their media work at the Niepokalanów. The periodical Rycerz Niepokalanej (The Knight of the Immaculate) achieved a spectacular monthly circulation of one million. The daily newspaper Mały Dziennik (the Small Diary) launched by the monastery at Niepokalanów later reached a significant circulation of 137,000 on weekdays, and nearly double that, 225,000, on weekends.

As St. Maximilian Kolbe’s vision for the Militia of the Immaculata was global and missionary in its scope, naturally he began to extend its work to foreign lands. In 1930, he travelled to Japan with four Franciscan brothers. There, he launched a Japanese version of his periodical Rycerz Niepokalanej entitled Seibo no Kishi, and founded a Franciscan monastery of the Order of the Friars Conventual Minor called Mugenzai no Sono (The Garden of Mary Immaculate) on a hill near Nagasaki. Although this monastery did not grow into a large institution like its parent Niepokalanów near Warsaw, it nevertheless developed into an active Catholic publishing house.

St. Maximilian Kolbe travelled to India in 1932 and during his visits there, he met with Kerala’s Archbishop of the Syrian Rite and the Archbishop of the Latin Rite. He had lengthy discussions with them on the possibilities of establishing a friary on the lines of Niepokalanów and starting publishing an Indian version of The Knight of the Immaculate. Although both Archbishops had initially expressed their willingness to gift pieces of land for his project, his vision of starting a Franciscan monastery named Amalam on lines of Niepokalanów in India did not materialise during his lifetime due to some obstacles and delays that intervened.

[The writer expresses his sincere gratitude to Fr. Krzys Flis, Director of MI Niepokalanów in Teresin, Poland and Sister Annamaria Mix, Archivist, Archiwum MI Niepokalanów in Teresin, Poland for providing him with access to the writings of St. Maximilian Kolbe relating to his visits to Sri Lanka and the photographs with permission for reproduction]

(To be continued next week)

By Prabhath de Silva ✍️

“Greater love has no one than this,
than to lay down one’s life for his friends”

-Jesus Christ [John 15:13]



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The Silent Shadow: The threat of the Nipah virus in Asia

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In the quiet woods of West Bengal and the lush countryside of Kerala, a lethal pathogen is once again testing the limits of modern biosafety. The Nipah virus (NiV), a shadow that has flickered across South and South-East Asia for decades, is currently the subject of heightened international surveillance. With a case fatality rate that can soar up to 75%, this virus Nipah is not just a regional concern; it is a priority pathogen on the World Health Organization (WHO) Research and Development Blueprint, alongside Ebola and COVID-19, due to its epidemic potential.

To understand the much-justified fear Nipah inspires in the scientific community, one needs to look at its molecular machinery. Nipah is a negative-sense, single-stranded RNA virus belonging to the genus Henipavirus. In a kind of “Instruction Manual” analogy, Positive-Sense (+RNA) arrive with an instruction manual already written in the cell’s language. As soon as they enter the cell, the cell can start reading the RNA and “printing” viral proteins immediately. In contrast, Negative-Sense (-RNA) viruses like Nipah, Influenza, or Rabies, arrive with an instruction manual that is written backwards or as a “mirror image.” The cell’s machinery cannot read it directly. It cannot dictate terms to the cell. It needs a “translator” to get the cell to do what the virus wants. If the translator is deactivated, the virus becomes inert. However, with the help of the active translator, a replication pathway is created. This specific replication pathway is a major area of study for antiviral drugs. If we can find a way to “jam” that specific viral translator without hurting the host cell’s own functions, we can effectively stop the virus, so to speak, in its tracks.

Nipah is a “Biosafety Level 4” agent; the highest risk category requiring maximum containment. The virus targets the host’s cells lining of blood vessels and the nerve tissues. Once it enters the human body, typically through the binding of its attaching glycoprotein to host receptors, it initiates a devastating cascade. The infection often presents as a dual-threat, namely acute respiratory problems with features of severe “atypical pneumonia,” and potentially fatal involvement of the brain. In its most sinister form, the virus crosses the blood-brain barrier which routinely protects against invasion of the central nervous system by infective organisms, causing massive inflammation of the brain. Symptoms progress rapidly from fever and headache to drowsiness, disorientation, and seizures, often culminating in a coma within 24 to 48 hours.

As of January 2026, the epidemiological map of Asia shows several distinct hotspots. India is currently managing two distinct geographical risks. In West Bengal, a recent cluster in Kolkata and Barasat involving healthcare workers has triggered a massive “trace and test” operation. This region, bordering Bangladesh, has a history of outbreaks dating back to 2001. Simultaneously, Kerala in Southern India has become a recurrent epicentre, with four confirmed cases and two deaths reported in mid-2025 across the Malappuram and Palakkad districts.

Bangladesh remains the most consistently affected nation. In 2025 alone, four fatal, unrelated cases were reported across the Barisal, Dhaka, and Rajshahi divisions. Unlike the hospital-based transmission often seen elsewhere, Bangladesh’s outbreaks are frequently linked to a cultural staple, which is the consumption of raw date palm sap.

The current clusters have sent warning currents across the continent. Airports in Thailand (Suvarnabhumi and Phuket), Nepal, and Singapore have reinstated COVID-style health screenings for travellers arriving from affected Indian states. Taiwan has gone a step further, proposing to categorise Nipah as a “Category 5” notifiable disease; the highest level of public health alert.

The natural reservoir of Nipah is the Pteropus genus of fruit bats, commonly known as flying foxes. These bats carry the virus without falling ill themselves, shedding it in their saliva, urine, and excrement. The “spillover” to humans typically occurs via three routes:

= Contaminated Food: Eating fruit partially consumed by bats or drinking raw date palm sap where bats have urinated into the collection pots.

= Intermediate Hosts: In the 1998 Malaysia outbreak, pigs acted as “amplifying hosts” after eating contaminated fruit, later passing the virus to farmworkers.

= Human-to-Human: This is the greatest concern for urban centres. Close contact with the bodily fluids or respiratory droplets of an infected patient, often enough in a home care or hospital setting, can trigger secondary clusters.

While Sri Lanka has not yet recorded a human case of Nipah, the island cannot afford complacency. The risks are grounded in both biology and regional connectivity. Surveillance studies have confirmed that Pteropus bat species are indigenous to Sri Lanka. While the presence of the bat does not guarantee the presence of the virus, the ecological apparatus for a spillover event exists on the island. Environmental changes, such as deforestation, can drive these bats closer to human settlements in search of food, increasing the probability of contact.

Sri Lanka’s proximity to South India, particularly Kerala and Tamil Nadu, creates a constant flow of people and goods. With direct flights and maritime links to regions currently monitoring outbreaks, the risk of an “imported case” is quite considerable. A single undetected traveller in the incubation period, that is the period between the infection and production of the disease, which can last from 4 to 14 days, and in rare cases up to 45, could theoretically introduce the virus into a local clinical setting.

The primary challenge for Sri Lanka lies in looking at what doctors call a “differential diagnosis”, which looks at all possible conditions that have a similar clinical presentation. Early symptoms of Nipah mimic common tropical illnesses like dengue, Japanese encephalitis, or even severe influenza. Without high-level biocontainment labs (BSL-3 or BSL-4) and rapid Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing protocols specifically tuned for Henipaviruses, a localised outbreak could gain significant momentum before it is correctly identified. Incidentally, PCR is a sort of molecular photocopier which allows scientists to take a tiny, almost undetectable amount of viral genetic material (RNA or DNA) from a patient’s swab or blood sample and amplify it millions of times until there is enough to be detected and identified.

Currently, there is no licensed vaccine or specific antiviral drug in the treatment for Nipah. Management is limited to intensive supportive care. However, the “One Health” approach offers a roadmap for prevention:

=For the Public: Ensure all fruits are thoroughly washed and peeled, and discard any fruit that shows signs of bird or animal bites (“bat-bitten” fruit).

=For Healthcare Workers: Strict adherence to Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) measures. Wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) when treating patients with unexplained encephalitis or respiratory distress is vital.

=For Authorities: Strengthening surveillance of bat populations and enhancing the diagnostic capacity of national laboratories.

Nipah virus is a reminder of the permeable borders between the wild and the urban. As Asia watches the current clusters in India and Bangladesh, the lesson for Sri Lanka is clear: preparedness is the only antidote to a virus that currently has no cure.

We need to make the general public well aware of preventive guidelines for travellers to other countries, most particularly for those traveling to or from Kerala, West Bengal, or Bangladesh. Before travel, it is necessary to monitor the Sri Lankan Ministry of Health (Epidemiology Unit) website for travel advisories. Currently, screening is focused on passengers arriving from Kolkata and Kerala. It is essential to ensure that travel insurance covers medical evacuation and high-intensity supportive care, as Nipah management requires ICU facilities.

During the stay in an area of another country that is a high-risk area, avoid “Bat-Bitten” Fruit and do not purchase or consume fruit that has visible puncture marks, scratches, or missing chunks. In regions where fruit bats (Pteropus) are active, they often taste fruit and discard it, leaving saliva and virus behind. It is essential to only eat fruit that you have washed thoroughly with clean water and peeled yourself. Avoid pre-sliced fruit platters in street markets. Stay away from pig farms and bat roosting sites such as large trees where “flying foxes” gather. If you visit rural areas, do not touch surfaces under these trees which may be contaminated with bat urine.

Once a traveller returns to Sri Lanka, the authorities at the ports of entry have to be most vigilant. As for the traveller, it is best to self-monitor for about a month. The incubation period can be long. If you develop a fever, severe headache, or cough within three weeks of returning, isolate yourself immediately. If you seek medical care, the very first thing you should tell the doctor is: “I have recently returned from a region where Nipah cases were reported.”

Healthcare workers have to be extremely careful. This is crucial for doctors and nurses in Sri Lankan Outpatient Departments (OPD) and Emergency Treatment Units (ETUs). Careful medical triage of sorting out possible cases is mandatory. It is necessary to maintain a High Index of Suspicion: In any patient presenting with Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) or Encephalitis (confusion, seizures, or coma), immediately check their travel history or contact with travellers. It is essential that the health staff do not rule out Nipah just because a patient has a “simple” cough or a “sore throat” as these often precede the neurological crash by 24–48 hours.

Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) measures have to be employed compulsorily. Because Nipah has a high rate of nosocomial (hospital-acquired) spread, the following “Standard Plus” precautions are mandatory for suspected cases:-

=Meticulous hand hygiene before and after patient contact.

=Use of medical masks and eye protection (goggles or face shields).

=Double gloving and the use of fluid-resistant gowns.

If a patient is suspected to suffer from Nipah virus infection, the patient needs to be moved to a dedicated isolation ward immediately. Do not “cohort” (group) them with other encephalitis or flu patients until Nipah is ruled out by PCR. Treat all bodily fluids (blood, urine, saliva) as highly infectious biohazards. Use 0.5% sodium hypochlorite for surface disinfection. Under the Infectious Diseases Act, Nipah is a notifiable disease in Sri Lanka. Contact the regional Medical Officer of Health (MOH) or the Epidemiology Unit immediately upon suspicion. DO NOT WAIT FOR LAB CONFIRMATION.

One final but absolutely vital and life-saving declaration and truism is that the Nipah virus is very sensitive to common soaps and detergents. Regular handwashing with soap for at least 20 seconds is one of the most effective ways to break the chain of transmission, even for a virus that is this lethal.

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India shaping-up as model ‘Swing State’

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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi with foreign political leaders at India’s 77th Republic Day celebrations. (PMO via PTI Photo)

The world of democracy is bound to be cheering India on as it conducts its 77th Republic Day celebrations. The main reasons ought to be plain to see; in the global South it remains one of the most vibrant of democracies while in South Asia it is easily the most successful of democracies.

Besides, this columnist would go so far as to describe India as a principal ‘Swing State.’ To clarify the latter concept in its essentials, it could be stated that the typical ‘Swing State’ wields considerable influence and power regionally and globally. Besides they are thriving democracies and occupy a strategic geographical location which enhances their appeal for other states of the region and enables them to relate to the latter with a degree of equableness. Their strategic location makes it possible for ‘Swing States’ to even mediate in resolving conflicts among states.

More recently, countries such as Indonesia, South Africa and South Korea have qualified, going by the above criteria, to enter the fold.

For us in South Asia, India’s special merit as a successful democracy resides, among other positives, in its constitutionally guaranteed fundamental rights. Of principal appeal in this connection is India’s commitment to secularism. In accordance with these provisions the Indian federal government and all other governing entities, at whatever level, are obliged to adhere to the principle of secularism in governance.

That is, governing bodies are obliged to keep an ‘equidistance’ among the country’s religions and relate to them even-handedly. They are required to reject in full partiality towards any of the country’s religions. Needless to say, practitioners of minority religions are thus put at ease that the Indian judiciary would be treating them and the adherents of majority religions as absolute equals.

To be sure, some politicians may not turn out to be the most exemplary adherents of religious equality but in terms of India’s constitutional provisions any citizen could seek redress in the courts of law confidently for any wrongs inflicted on her on this score and obtain it. The rest of South Asia would do well to take a leaf from India’s Constitution on the question of religious equality and adopt secularism as an essential pillar of governance. It is difficult to see the rest of South Asia settling its religious conflicts peacefully without making secularism an inviolable principle of governance.

The fact is that the Indian Constitution strictly prohibits discriminatory treatment of citizens by the state on religious, racial, caste, sex or place of birth grounds, thus strengthening democratic development. The Sri Lankan governing authorities would do well to be as unambiguous and forthright as their Indian counterparts on these constitutional issues. Generally, in the rest of South Asia, there ought to be a clear separation wall, so to speak, between religion and politics.

As matters stand, not relating to India on pragmatic and cordial terms is impossible for almost the rest of the world. The country’s stature as a global economic heavyweight accounts in the main for this policy course. Although it may seem that the US is in a position to be dismissive of India’s economic clout and political influence at present, going forward economic realities are bound to dictate a different policy stance.

India has surged to be among the first four of global economic powers and the US would have no choice but to back down in its current tariff strife with India and ensure that both countries get down to more friction-free economic relations.

In this connection the EU has acted most judiciously. While it is true that the EU is in a diplomatic stand-off of sorts with the US over the latter’s threat to take over Greenland and on questions related to Ukraine, it has thought it best to sew-up what is described as an historic free trade agreement with India. This is a truly win-win pact that would benefit both parties considering that together they account for some 25 percent of global GDP and encompass within them 3 billion of the world’s population.

The agreement would reduce trade tariffs between the states and expand market access for both parties. The EU went on record as explaining that the agreement ‘would support investment flows, improve access to European markets and deepen supply chain integration’.

Besides, the parties are working on a draft security and defence partnership. The latter measure ought to put the US on notice that India and the EU would combine in balancing its perceived global military predominance. The budding security partnership could go some distance in curbing US efforts to expand its power and influence in particularly the European theatre.

Among other things, the EU-India trade agreement needs to be seen as a coming together of the world’s foremost democracies. In other words it is a notable endorsement of the democratic system of government and a rebuffing of authoritarianism.

However, the above landmark agreement is not preventing India from building on its ties with China. Both India and China are indicating in no uncertain terms that their present cordiality would be sustained and further enriched. As China’s President Xi observed, it will be a case of the ‘dragon and the elephant dancing together.’

Here too the pragmatic bent in Indian foreign policy could be seen. In economic terms both countries could lose badly if they permit the continuation of strained ties between them. Accordingly, they have a common interest in perpetuating shared economic betterment.

It is also difficult to see India rupturing ties with the US over Realpolitik considerations. Shared economic concerns would keep the US and India together and the Trump administration is yet to do anything drastic to subvert this equation, tariff battles notwithstanding.

Although one would have expected the US President to come down hard on India over the latter’s continuing oil links with Russia, for instance, the US has guarded against making any concrete and drastic moves to disrupt this relationship.

Accordingly, we are left to conclude from the foregoing that all powers that matter, whether they be from the North or South, perceive it to be in their interests to keep their economic and other links with India going doubly strong. There is too much to lose for them by foregoing India’s friendship and goodwill. Thus does India underscore its ‘Swing State’ status.

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Securing public trust in public office: A Christian perspective – Part III

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Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Professor, Dept of Public & International Law, Faculty of Law, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka and independent member, Constitutional Council of Sri Lanka (January 2023 to January 2026)

This is an adapted version of the Bishop Cyril Abeynaike Memorial Lecture delivered on 14 June 2025 at the invitation of the Cathedral Institute for Education and Formation, Colombo, Sri Lanka.

(Continued from yesterday)

Conviction

I now turn to my third attribute, which is conviction. We all know that we can have different types of convictions. Depending on our moral commitments, we may think of convictions as good or bad. From the Bible, the convictions of Saul and the contrasting convictions of Paul (Saul was known as Paul after his conversion) provide us with an excellent illustration of the different convictions and value commitments we may have. As Christians we are required to be convinced about the values of the Kingdom of God, such as truthfulness and rationality, the first and second attributes that I spoke of. We are also called to act, based on our convictions in all that we do.

I used to associate conviction with fearlessness, courage or boldness. But in the last two to three years of my own life, I have had the opportunity to think more deeply about the idea of conviction and, increasingly, I am of the view that conviction helps us to stand by certain values, despite our fears, anxieties or lack of courage. Conviction forecloses possibilities of doing what we think is the wrong thing or from giving up. Recall here the third example I referred to, of Lord Wilberforce and his efforts at abolishing the slave trade and slavery. He had to persevere, despite numerous failures, which he clearly did. In my own experiences, whether at the university or at the Constitutional Council, failures, hopelessness, fear or anxiety are real emotions and states of mind that I have had to deal with. In Sri Lanka, if convictions about truth, rationality and justice compel a public official to speak truth to power and act rationally, chances are that such public official has gone against the status quo and given people with real human power, reason to harm them. Acting out of conviction, therefore, can easily give rise to a very human set of reactions – of fear for oneself and for one’s family’s safety, anxiety about grave consequences, including public embarrassment and, sometimes, even regret about taking on the responsibilities that one has taken on. In such situations, such public officials, from what I have noticed, do not ever regret acting out of conviction, but rather struggle with the implications and the consequences that may follow.

When we consider the work of Lord Wilberforce, Lalith Ambanwela and Thulsi Madonsela we can see the ways in which their convictions helped them to persist in seeking the truth, in remaining rational and in seeking justice. They demonstrate to us that conviction about truth and justice pushes and even compels us to stand by those ideals and discharge our responsibilities in a principled and ethical way. Convictions help us to do so, even when the odds are stacked against us and when the status quo seems entrenched and impossible to change. This is well illustrated in how Wilberforce persisted with his attempts at law reform, despite the successive failures.

Importantly, some public officials saw the results of acting out of conviction in their lifetime, but others did not. Wilberforce saw the results of his work in his lifetime. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German theologian who opposed Hitler’s rule, was executed, by hanging, by the Nazi German state, a couple of weeks before Hitler committed suicide. Paul spent the last stage of his life as a prisoner of the Romans and was crucified. These examples suggest that conviction compels us to action, regardless of our chances of success, and for some of us, even unto death. Yet, conviction gives us hope about the unknown future. Conviction, indeed, is a very powerful human attribute.

I will not go into this, but the Christian faith offers much in terms of how a public official may survive in such difficult situations, as has been my own experience thus far.

Critical Introspection

I chose critical introspection as the fourth attribute for two reasons. One, I think that the practice of critical introspection by public officials is a way of being mindful of our human limitations and second it is a way in which we can deepen and renew our commitment to public service. Critical introspection, therefore, in my view, is essential for securing public trust and it is an attribute that I consider to be less and less familiar among public officials.

In Jesus, and in the traditions of the Church, we find compelling examples of a commitment to critical introspection. During his Ministry, he was unapologetic about taking time off to engage in prayer and self-reflection. He intentionally went away from the crowds. His Ministry was only for three years and he was intentional about identifying and nurturing his disciples. These practices may have made Jesus less available, perhaps less ‘productive’ and perhaps even less popular. However, this is the approach that Jesus role-modelled and I would like to suggest to you today, that there is value in this approach and much to emulate. Similarly, the Biblical concept of the Sabbath has much to offer to public officials even from a secular perspective in terms of rest, stepping away from work, of refraining from ‘doing’ and engaging with the spiritual realm.

Importantly, critical introspection helps us to anticipate that we are bound to make mistakes. no matter how diligent we may be and of our blind spots. Critical introspection creates space for truth, rationality and conviction to continue to form us into public officials who can secure public trust and advance it.

In contrast, I have found, in my work, that many embrace, without questioning, a relentless commitment to working late hours and over the weekends. This is, of course, at the cost of their personal well-being, and, equally importantly, of the well-being of their families. Relentless hard work, at the cost of health and personal relationships, is commonly valorised, rather than questioned, from what I can see, ironically, even in the Church.

One of the greatest risks of public officials not engaging in critical introspection is that they may lose the ability to see how power corrupts them or they may end up taking themselves too seriously. I have seen these risks manifest in some public officials that I work with – power makes them blind to their own abuse of power and they consider themselves to be above others and beyond reproach.

Where a public official does not practice critical introspection, the trappings of public office can place them at risk of taking themselves too seriously and losing their ability to remain service-oriented. Recall the trappings of high constitutional office – the security detail, the protocol and sometimes the kowtowing of others. It is rare for us to see public officials who respond to these trappings of public office lightly and with grace. Unfortunately for us, we have seen many who thrive in it. In my own work, I have come across public officials who are extremely particular about their titles and do not hesitate to reprimand their subordinates if they miss addressing them by one of their titles. Thankfully, I also know and work with public officials who are most uncomfortable with the trappings of public office and suffer it while preserving their attitude of humility and service.

Permit me to add a personal note here. In April 2022 a group of Christians and Catholics decided to celebrate Maundy Thursday by washing the feet of some members of the public. I was invited to come along. On that hot afternoon, in one corner of public place where people were milling about, the few of us washed the feet of some members of the public, including those who maintain the streets of Colombo. I do not know what they thought of our actions but I can tell you how it made me feel. The simple act of kneeling before a stranger and one who was very obviously very different to me, and washing their feet, had a deep impact on me. Many months later, when I was called, most unexpectedly, to be part of Sri Lanka’s Constitutional Council and had to struggle through that role for the better part of my term, that experience of washing feet of member of the public became a powerful and personal reminder to me of the nature of my Christian calling in public service. I do think that the Christian model of servant leadership has much to offer the world in terms of what we require of our public officials.

Compassion

Due to limitations of time, I will speak to the fifth attribute only briefly. It is about compassion – an aspect of love. Love is a complex multi-dimensional concept in Christianity and for today’s purposes, I focus on compassion, an idea that is familiar to our society more generally in terms of Karuna or the ability to see suffering in oneself and in others. The Gospels, at one point, record that when Jesus saw the crowds that he was ministering to, that he had compassion on them.

Of course, we know that the people are not always mere innocent victims of the abuse of power but can be active participants of the culture of patronage and corruption in our society. Nevertheless, for public officials to secure public trust, I think compassion, is essential. Compassion, however, is not about bending the rules, arbitrarily, or about showing favouritism, based on sympathy. In Sri Lanka we are hard pressed to find examples of compassion by public officials, at high levels, despite the horrors we have experienced in this land. However, in the everyday and at lower layers of public service, I do think there are powerful acts of compassion. An example that has stayed with me is about an unnamed police officer who is mentioned in the case of Yogalingam Vijitha v Wijesekera SC(FR) 186/2001 (SC Minutes 28 August 2002). In 2001, Yogalingam Vijitha was subject to severe forms of sexual torture by the police. After one episode of horrific torture, including the insertion of the tip of a plaintain-flower dipped in chilli to her vagina, the torturers left her with orders that she should not be given any water. This unnamed police officer, however, provided her with the water that she kept crying out for. In a case which records many horrific details about how Yogalingam Vijitha was tortured, this observation by the Court, about the unnamed police office, stands out as a very powerful example of compassion in public office.

Compassion for those who seek our services whether at university, at courts or at the kachcheri, should be an essential attribute for public officials.

Aspects not explored

There is much more that can be said about what a Christian perspective has to offer in terms of securing public trust in public office but due to limitations of time, I have only spoken about truthfulness, rationality, conviction, critical introspection and compassion – and that, too, in a brief way. I have not explored today several other important attributes, such as the Christian calling to prioritise the vulnerable and the Christian perspectives on confession, forgiveness and mercy that offers us a way of dealing with any mistakes that we might make as public officials. I have also not spoken of the need for authenticity – public officials ought to maintain harmony in the values that they uphold in their public lives with the values that they uphold their personal lives, too. Finally, I have not spoken of how these attributes are to be cultivated, including about the responsibility of the Church in cultivating these attributes, practice them and about how the Church ought to support public officials to do the same.

Securing Public Trust

Permit me to sum up. I have tried to suggest to you that cultivating a commitment to truthfulness, rationality, conviction about the values of public service, critical introspection and compassion – are essential if public officials are to secure public trust.

The crisis of 2022 is a tragic illustration of the pressing need in our society to secure trust in public office. In contrast, the examples of Thulsi Madonsela, former Public Protector of South Africa, of late Lalith Ambanwela, former Audit Superintendent from Sri Lanka and Lord Wilberforce illustrate that individual public officials who approach public service can and have made a significant difference, but, of course, at significant personal cost. Given the mandate of this memorial lecture, I drew from the Christian faith to justify and describe these five attributes. However, I do think that a similar secular justification is possible. Ultimately, secular or faith-based, we urgently need to revive a public and dynamic discourse of our individual responsibilities towards our collective existence, including about the ways in which can secure public trust in public office. I most certainly think that the future of our democracy depends on generating such a discourse and securing the trust of the public in public office.

If any of you here have been wondering whether I am far too idealistic or, as some have tried to say, ‘extreme’ in the standard that I have laid out for myself and others like me who hold public office – I will only say this. Most redeeming or beautiful aspects of our human existence have been developed mostly because individuals and collectives dared to dream of a better future, for themselves and for others. Having gone through what has easily been the toughest two-three years of my life, I know that, here in Sri Lanka, too, we have among us, individuals and collectives who dare to dream of a better future for this land and its peoples – and they are making an impact. Three years ago, you could have dismissed what I have had to say as being the musings of an armchair academic – but today, given my own experiences in public office with such individuals who have dared to dream of a better future for us, I can confidently tell you – these are not mere musings of an armchair academic but rather insights drawn from what I have been witness to.

(Concluded)

by Dinesha Samararatne

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