Features
Working in Multitudes: Rediscovering Martin Wickramasinghe
It was on the day before his birthday, in 2019, that I called Indunil.
“Here, are you free tomorrow? There’s a place I want to take you to.”
By Uditha devapriya
After finishing work the following day, I hired a tuktuk. Picking up Indunil, I proceeded to Kohuwela. There we stopped by the Keell’s building.I had not explained why we had come. As we got down from the tuktuk my friend gave me a bemused and puzzled stare. “Where are we going?”
I did not answer. We passed the Keell’s building. Soon he saw that my eyes were set on an old, decrepit building behind. It was the sort of building you never really noticed unless you strained your eyes. It did not just stand apart from the other buildings in the vicinity, it seemed to belong to an older period. It almost seemed on its way out.
We went up three flights of stairs. The closer we got to the top the more visible became its old and worn-out state. There seemed to be no soul in the building. Pigeons had made it their lair. One could see their droppings in every corner: stretches of white across old red polished floors. Hardly the sort of surprise for one’s 18th birthday.
This was the office and location of the old Tisara Bookshop. I did not tell Indunil until we reached the top floor. There, in a warehouse that had once served as one of the most sought after and popular book stores in the country, lay tons and tons, volumes and volumes, of reprints and old editions of books from a totally different era.
I beamed at him as he stared at the collection.
“Pick whatever you want,” I said, “and happy birthday.”
I had come here a week or so before in search of Vito Perniola’s 14-volume history of the Catholic Church in Sri Lanka. I had got what I wanted but had fallen into conversation with the lady who was more or less running the show here. Through her I had got to know that, at its peak years ago, Tisara had published reprints of old titles, all the way from Robert Knox to Leonard Woolf and beyond. I could see Woolf’s Diaries in Ceylon, Knox’s An Account of Ceylon, Antony Bertolacci’s A View of the Agricultural, Commercial, and Financial Interests of Ceylon, along with John Davy and Emerson Tennent. I had heard of these books as a child; seeing them in front of me, I could not resist buying and reading them.
But it was not after any of these writers that I was here. I noticed Indunil gaping at the whole collection. He seemed too lost for words. At the time I had money on my hands and I told him he could buy whatever he wanted, and however much he wanted. Then I pointed him out to the author and the books I specifically liked him to check out.
Unlike me, Indunil had been completely educated in Sinhala. He hence had a much greater awareness, knowledge, and appreciation of Sinhala literature. Yet as he pored over the titles and saw the name of their author, he became very surprised.
“I thought Martin Wickramasinghe only wrote novels,” he confessed to me after we had bought a ton or so of books – all at very low prices – and went downstairs.
I smiled. I had discovered Wickramasinghe just a few years earlier, but not through his fiction. “He was much more than a novelist,” I replied.
Indunil agreed. He must have had a bagful of books with him. He proceeded to read them a few days later. The last time I checked, which was around two weeks ago, he still had those books: some at his village home, some in his boarding place, a few scattered here and there at the many places he had stayed in after his A Levels in 2021.
Among the books I bought for Indunil that day was a large collection of Wickramasinghe’s English-language essays. These in turn had been collated from four essay collections that had been printed before, including Aspects of Sinhalese Culture, Buddhism and Culture, Sinhala Language and Culture, and his last anthology of English-language essays, Buddhism and Art. Having bought a copy a week or so before, I had become engrossed in these writings: not so much over what they had to say on their subjects as what they revealed about their author and his attitudes, his beliefs and his biases.
I discovered Martin Wickramasinghe, as I wrote before, somewhat late in life. Because of this I read his non-fiction before I read his novels. Much of his writings on art, culture, and history engrossed me, mostly owing to how he approached these subjects. Eventually, when I got around reading his Sinhala-language essays, I found the same attitudes, the very same world-view, in them. These writings easily made him a leading contrarian thinker, perhaps the pre-eminent public intellectual of his day in Sri Lanka.
But as Indunil noted for me more than once, among most Sri Lankans he remained, at best, a novelist, the author of Madol Doowa, Gamperaliya, and Viragaya. Landmarks though these works doubtless are, they offer only glimpses into a highly original if provocative mind. The novel is still one of the most enduring literary genres out there. Though it was at an incipient stage in Sri Lanka when Wickramasinghe began his writing career, he quickly raised the stature of the genre in the country, carrying forward the work of such predecessors as Piyadasa Sirisena and W. A. Silva. It is perhaps this that explains why we focus on his career as a novelist so much that we overlook his contributions as a critic.
My reading of Wickramasinghe did not begin in 2019. I had come across him before as a child, even if sporadically. But reading his essays in a fresh light, I realised there was more to him to discover. Like Chekhov, Tolstoy, Andre Gide, and the other novelists he read and was influenced by, Martin Wickramasinghe did not stand idly by a corner as history moved on. He commented on all the raging topics of the day and was not afraid of identifying himself on this or that side of the spectrum. I knew that the task of rediscovering him would have to be undertaken someday, and that Wickramasinghe’s work deserved no less.
What I did not know is that Indunil and I would be brought together in this task. I had met and been introduced to him in 2018. Back then he was barely 17 years. How I met him, in what circumstances, and how things evolved from there are for another day. What is important is that, from the first day, I discerned in him an almost insatiable interest in art, culture, history – and more than anything, literature and poetry.
Like most of his friends who had introduced me to him, Indunil was a product of a world outside Colombo. Born in Kurunegala, near Wariyapola, in 2001, the son of a principal and a local government officer, he was initially educated at the local government school. In 2011 he appeared at the Grade V Scholarship Exam. Being the son of a principal meant that he got the resources he needed from home for the test. As it turned out, Indunil not just passed it but secured enough marks to enter a better school.
The following year he entered Royal College. Boarded as a hosteller – like most of his friends whom I would meet before him – Indunil found himself adapting to a different culture. From early on at Royal, he displayed an interest in art, culture, and literature. At home he had come across and read newspapers and magazines which dwelt on these topics. At Royal he began making friends with people who fuelled his interests more. Through them, he made his way to various clubs. By the time Indunil sat for his O Level Exams, he had settled in the Sinhala Dramatic Society. One of the most distinguished clubs at Royal, the Sinhala Dramatic Society encouraged him to discover his talents in performance art. Meanwhile, from Hostel Prefect to Steward to Senior Prefect, he coveted and claimed all the top leadership positions at school, the highest honours a student could claim at Royal.
By the time I met him Indunil was about to become a Steward. We connected on and off thereafter, attending public discussions and engaging each other on the topics which interested us. Then I met him after he left school, when he became Prefect in 2021: the year after Covid-19 began to spread across Sri Lanka. Somewhere towards the end of that year, when the country was slowly getting used to the pandemic, we met at the Race Course, where he was doing the rounds in his school prefect duties. Taking a small break, we ate a light lunch before thinking of the future. Indunil was doing his A Levels again, and he suggested that someday, we get together and engage in a research project.
I did not then see how this was possible. I was unemployed at the time, writing on and off to newspapers. He, too, did not have many bright prospects before him. Yet in 2024, three years later, we began working on a project on Martin Wickramasinghe. How we wound up doing this project is, again, for another essay and time.
I decided on the parameters of the research before I got in touch with Indunil. For too long, Wickramasinghe had been limited to bookshelves and book fairs, his reputation resting on the Koggala Trilogy – Gamperaliya, Kaliyugaya, Yuganthaya – and Viragaya, and a few short stories. I felt, for better or worse, that we needed to focus on his non-fiction, including but not limited to his writings on science and evolution, and that these writings would offer us a glimpse into the way he thought as a novelist, critic, and journalist.
I felt the timing could not have been more suitable. The year 2025 marked Wickramasinghe’s 135th birth anniversary, while 2026, the next year, would mark his 50th death anniversary. Initially we thought of two short books. Then we hit upon the idea of a large, comprehensive study, delving not so much into Wickramasinghe’s writing as the social, culture, and political context within which he evolved. Taking as the main – though not the sole – source, his two memoirs, Upan Da Sita and Ape Gama, we explored the manuscripts, the letters and correspondences, belonging to Wickramasinghe. We also explored his personal book collection at the National Library. In all this, we were and continue to be helped, and guided, by the Martin Wickramasinghe Trust at Nawala.
Where has this research led me, and led us? Last week I was in New Delhi, where I delivered on 20 November a lecture on Wickramasinghe, framing him as a South Asian modernist different to his contemporaries in Sri Lanka. The week before I delivered a webinar on the man and his writings for SOAS. The following week, on 27 November, we headed another lecture at Lakmahal. These will be followed by a lecture at the Social Scientists’ Association on 10 December, and several other presentations elsewhere.
Indunil is now in university. He has progressed well, somewhat different to the impudent, mischievous boy I came across seven years ago. Yet he remains as sharp-minded (and sharp-tongued) as he always was, keen and devoted to whatever subjects take his fancy. To a large extent, he and his friends were responsible, in those early years, for anchoring me in the culture and society of my country – in the ways of seeing and thinking there. I think I have dwelt on this in countless articles elsewhere, so I will not repeat it here.
Meanwhile, as I keep reading Wickramasinghe, I remain mindful of the different worlds his writings have opened us to. I believe Whitman’s line sums him up well: like the American poet, he worked in multitudes. As Indunil and I continue in our research, we are conscious of how big a thinker he was, and how much more about him we have yet to discover.
(Uditha Devapriya is a writer, researcher, and analyst whose work spans a range of topics, including art, culture, history, geopolitics, and anthropology. At present he is working on a study of Martin Wickramasinghe. He can be reached at udakdev1@gmail.com.)
Features
Buddhist Approach to Human Challenges
Life, by its very nature, invariably presents a myriad of challenges that are fundamental to the human experience. The various social ills that afflict humanity cannot be understood without recognizing the profound human dynamics at play. Navigating these challenges according to Buddhism involves shifting from attempting to control external circumstances to mastering one’s internal responses. Central to these challenges are certain detrimental drives stemming from pernicious distortions in the functioning of the human mind.
According to Buddhism, human suffering—both on a personal and societal level—arises from three unwholesome roots: greed, hatred, and ignorance or delusion. These roots manifest primarily as the unbridled proliferation of these negative states, serving as the foundation for our conduct. The Buddhist perspective offers profound insights for confronting these difficulties by emphasizing the nature of suffering, known as dukkha. Buddhism teaches that suffering (dukkha) is an inevitable part of life and is fueled by greed, hatred, and ignorance or delusion. This approach promotes mental transformation through mindfulness, ethical living, and the cultivation of wisdom, empowering individuals to confront their struggles with clarity and resilience.
Furthermore, accepting that suffering and difficulty are inherent parts of the human experience—while expecting life to be free of challenges—is, in itself, a cause of suffering. It is also important to recognize that all situations, whether good or bad, are temporary. This understanding helps reduce anxiety when facing difficult times, as these will eventually pass, and it prevents possessiveness during happy moments. Cultivating mindfulness (sati) and living in the present moment without dwelling on the past or worrying about the future is essential.
Understanding that all things—emotions, situations, relationships, and physical bodies—are constantly changing and in a state of flux helps reduce the fear of loss and provides comfort during difficult times, ensuring that we know pain will pass. Moreover, recognizing that the self, or ego, is not a fixed entity minimizes selfish grasping, arrogance, and the tendency to perceive challenges as personal attacks.
At the core of many human challenges lie the three unwholesome mental qualities identified by Buddhism: greed (raga), hatred (dovesa), and ignorance or delusion (avijja or moha). These states of mind serve as obstacles to spiritual progress and underlie a spectrum of harmful thoughts and actions. The Buddha employed powerful metaphors to illustrate these forces, referring to them as the three poisons or fires that ignite suffering and trap beings in the cycle of samsara.
Greed leads to insatiable desires that obscure our awareness of others’ needs, creating a cycle of frustration. Greed encompasses all forms of appetite, such as desire, lust, craving, and longing, manifesting in both physical and mental forms. It embodies the concept of grasping, leading to clinging and an inability to let go. As an unwholesome mental state, greed can become insatiable and inexhaustible. People are often drawn to pleasant things, and no amount of forms, sounds, smells, tastes, tangibles, or mental objects can satisfy their desires. In their intense thirst for possession or gratification of desire, individuals may become trapped in the wheel of samsara, overlooking the needs of marginalized groups based on religion and ethnicity (as noted by Piyadassi Thera). Those who overcome greed realize that all mundane pleasures are fleeting and transient. In a society driven by consumerism, people may find themselves endlessly chasing after things of little value, becoming enslaved by them.
Hatred is another unwholesome mental state that fosters division and conflict, distancing us from genuine relationships. It encompasses unwholesome mental states such as ill will, enmity, hostility, and prejudice. Hatred can be subtle, lying dormant in a person’s mind until it finds expression in unexpected moments. This destructive emotion can degenerate into mass-scale violence and bloodshed within society. Today, hatred and hostility against minorities based on religion and ethnicity are prevalent in many countries. People are often targeted by bigotry and hate, leading to a rise in antagonistic and derogatory behavior toward certain religious and ethnic groups. Hatred, enmity, and retaliation do not foster spiritual well-being; rather, they vitiate our own minds. Buddhists are encouraged to cultivate metta (loving-kindness). Greed and hatred, coupled with ignorance, are the chief causes of the evils that pervade this deluded world. As noted by Narada, “The enemy of the whole world is lust (greed), through which all evils come to living beings. This lust, when obstructed by some cause, transforms into wrath.”
The most profound of these afflictions, ignorance (avijja) or delusion (moha), clouds our judgment and obscures our capacity for understanding, causing us to harm ourselves and others through misguided actions. Addressing bhikkhus, the Buddha declared, ” I do not perceive any single hindrance other than the hindrance of ignorance by which mankind is obstructed, and for so long as in samsara, it is indeed through the hindrance of ignorance that humankind is obstructed and for a long time runs on, wanders in samsara. No other single thing exists like the hindrance of ignorance or delusion, which obstructs humankind and make wander forever. This unwholesome mindset generates negative speech, actions, and thoughts, perpetuating our own suffering. As stated in the Dhammapada, “All mental phenomena have mind as their forerunner; if one speaks or acts with an evil mind, suffering follows.”
Buddhism urges us to go beyond merely addressing the symptoms of our problems. Instead, it invites us to explore the roots of our suffering and examine how greed, hatred, and ignorance manifest in our lives. By uncovering these sources of distress, we can cultivate essential qualities such as compassion, loving-kindness (metta), and acceptance. These virtues are crucial for ethical engagement with significant societal issues, including environmental challenges and social inequality.
In a world marked by material prosperity and emotional chaos, many individuals may feel lost or overwhelmed. The teachings of the Buddha remain relevant today, reminding us that the origins of our struggles often reside within our own minds. By practising ethical self-discipline and steering clear of destructive emotions like jealousy, anger, and arrogance, we can transform our experiences and relationships.
Buddhism teaches that cultivating wholesome mental qualities is essential for spiritual advancement. The positive counterparts to the three unwholesome states are non-greed (alobha), non-hatred (adosa), and non-delusion (amoha). These virtues represent not merely the absence of negativity but also the active presence of beneficial qualities such as generosity (dana), loving kindness (metta), and wisdom (panna). Each of these six mental states serves as a foundation for both personal growth and societal harmony.
Human beings are often tempted by moral transgressions rooted in unwholesome qualities. Actions driven by greed, hatred and ignorance require wisdom and mindful awareness to overcome them, allowing us to see the interconnectedness of all beings and act accordingly.
As we strive to abandon these unwholesome states of mind and cultivate awareness, we contribute positively to our lives and the broader world. By embracing Buddhist teachings, we learn that transforming our minds can significantly impact our experiences and the lives of those around us. Through this mindful practice, we can aspire to create a more compassionate, harmonious existence, transcending the limitations of unwholesome mental states and fostering a deeper connection with ourselves and others.
by Dr. Chandradasa Nanayakkara
Features
How does the Buddha differ?
Buddhism, perhaps, is not a religion if the definition of religion is strictly applied. However, by an extension of that definition, as well as by consensus, Buddhism is considered a religion and is the fourth largest religion with about half a billion followers worldwide. Of the four great religions in the world, Christianity is still way ahead with 2.6 billion adherents, followed by Islam with 1.9 billion and Hinduism with 1.2 billion followers. In most Western Christian countries church attendances are on the decline whilst the numbers following Islam are increasing with Islamic youth displaying signs of increasing religious ardour. There are recent reports that Buddhism has also joined the ranks of shrinking religions. Is this cause for concern? Is this happening by the very nature of Buddhism?
Hinduism, the world’s oldest living religion rooted in the Indus Valley Civilization and dating back at least four millennia, is considered to have evolved from ancient cultural and religious practices than being founded by a single individual, unlike the other three religions. The Buddha differs from Jesus Christ and Prophet Mohammed in many ways, the most important being that there is no higher power involved in what the Buddha discovered.
Jesus Christ is considered the ‘Son of God’ and Christianity is built on the life, resurrection and teachings of Christ with emphasis on the belief in one God expressed through the Trinity: God the Father, Jesus the Son and the Holy Spirit. Therefore, there is no room for questioning the words of the Almighty passed through the Son.
Islam, with its Five Pillars of faith, frequent daily prayers, charity, fasting during Ramadan and pilgrimage to Mecca, is founded on revelations made by Almighty God, Allah, to Mohammed, the last of his Prophets, which are recorded in verse in the Holy Book, Quran. Muslims consider the Quran to be verbatim words of God and the unaltered, final revelation. This leaves even less room for questioning.
In contrast, the Buddha achieved everything by himself with no help from any higher source. Rebelling against some of the practices in the religion to which he was born and seeking a solution to the ever-pervading sense of dissatisfaction, Prince Siddhartha embarked on a journey of discovery that culminated in Enlightenment, under the Bodhi tree on the full moon day of the month of Vesak.
Hinduism, or Sanatana Dharma as traditionally referred to by followers, encompasses the concepts of Karma, Samsara, Moksha and Dharma with a creator Brahma, preserver Vishnu and destroyer Shiva. In addition, there are multitudes of gods serving various functions and there are ritual practices of Puja (worship), Bhakti (devotion), Yajna (sacrificial rites) in addition to meditation and Yoga. The one thing that has blighted Hinduism, on top of sacrifices, is the caste system. The uncompromising attitude of Brahmins led to the formation Sikhism as well, long after the establishment of Buddhism.
Prince Siddhartha studied under eminent teachers of the day, of which there were many, but realised the limitations of their knowledge. Having already given up the extreme of luxury, he went to the other extreme of self-deprivation which after a search for six years, he realised also was not the solution to the problem. Exploring through his mind he realised the truth and came up with the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. He shunned extremes and proposed the Middle Path which seems to hold sway in many spheres of life, even today.
Buddha’s greatest achievement was the analysis of the mind and scientists are only now establishing the accuracy of the concepts the Buddha elucidated, not with the help of supernatural powers or sophisticated machinery at the disposal of modern-day scientists but by the exploration of the mind by turning the searchlight inwards.
Having discovered the cause of universal dissatisfaction and the path to overcome it, the Buddha walked across vast swathes of India, most likely barefoot, preaching to many, in terms they could understand, as evidenced by the different suttas illustrating the same fact in different ways; to the intelligent it was a short explanation but for others it was a more detailed discussion.
In sharp contrast to all other religious leaders, the Buddha encouraged discussion and challenge before acceptance. What the Buddha stated in the Kalama Sutta, acceptance only after conviction, laid the foundation for scientific thinking.
The Buddha, being a human not supernatural, never claimed infallibility as evidenced by his agreement with his father King Suddhodana that ordaining his son Rahula without permission was a mistake and took steps to ensure that this did not happen again. In fact, the entire Vinaya Pitaka is not an arbitrary rule book laid down by the Buddha, but are the rules the Buddha laid down for the Sangha, based on errant actions by Bhikkhus. Long before the legal concept of retroactive justice was established, the Buddha implemented it in the Vinaya Pitaka.
In an interesting video on YouTube titled “Nature of Buddhism”, Bhante Dhammika of Australia (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KY8WfGJq2FI) discusses some unique aspects of Buddhism. Some religions are ‘high demand’ religions where the followers are required to strictly adhere to certain rules which is not the case in Buddhism and he opines that this has led to the gentleness of Buddhists, at times leading to even being lackadaisical! Interestingly, as a widely travelled person, he describes his personal experience of the change of people’s attitudes on going from places with Buddhist influence to others. Speaking of Sri Lanka, where he spent many years, he commends the traditional hospitality as well as lack of cruelty to animals. He refers to “Law based religions” where some things are compulsory whereas in Buddhism there is no compulsion. Buddha was not a lawgiver but recommended good behaviour, giving reasons why and encouraged thinking. Some religions are exclusivist, claiming that there is nothing in other religions. Buddhism is not and Bhante Dhammika refers to an incident where the Buddha encouraged a disciple who converted from Jainism to continue to give alms to his former Jain colleagues.
Have all these strengths of Buddhism become its weakness and the reason for the shrinking number of followers? Had Buddhism demanded more from followers would it have flourished better? Is the numbers game that important? These are interesting questions to ponder over and I am sure, in time, researchers would write theses on these.
Whilst total numbers may diminish in traditional Buddhist areas, more people in the West are recognising the value of the philosophy of Buddhism. Mindfulness, a concept the Buddha introduced is gaining wide acceptance and is increasingly applied in many spheres of modern life. Perhaps, what is important is not the numbers that practise Buddhism as a religion but the lasting influence of the Buddha’s concepts and foundations he laid for modern scientific thinking and analysis of the mind!
By Dr Upul Wijayawardhana
Features
Political violence stalking Trump administration
It would not be particularly revelatory to say that the US is plagued by ‘gun violence’. It is a deeply entrenched and widespread malaise that has come in tandem with the relative ease with which firearms could be acquired and owned by sections of the US public, besides other causes.
However, a third apparent attempt on the life of US President Donald Trump in around two and a half years is both thought-provoking and unsettling for the defenders of democracy. After all, whatever its short comings the US remains the world’s most vibrant democracy and in fact the ‘mightiest’ one. And the US must remain a foremost democracy for the purpose of balancing and offsetting the growing power of authoritarian states in the global power system, who are no friends of genuine representational governance.
Therefore, the recent breaching of the security cordon surrounding the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington at which President Trump and his inner Cabinet were present, by an apparently ‘Lone Wolf’ gunman, besides raising issues relating to the reliability of the security measures deployed for the President, indicates a notable spike in anti-VVIP political violence in particular in the US. It is a pointer to a strong and widespread emergence of anti-democratic forces which seem to be gaining in virulence and destructiveness.
The issues raised by the attack are in the main for the US’ political Right and its supporters. They have smugly and complacently stood by while the extremists in their midst have taken centre stage and begun to dictate the course of Right wing politics. It is the political culture bred by them that leads to ‘Lone Wolf’ gunmen, for instance, who see themselves as being repressed or victimized, taking the law into their own hands, so to speak, and perpetrating ‘revenge attacks’ on the state and society.
A disproportionate degree of attention has been paid particularly internationally to Donald Trump’s personality and his eccentricities but such political persons cannot be divorced from the political culture in which they originate and have their being. That is, “structural” questions matter. Put simply, Donald Trump is a ‘true son’ of the Far Right, his principal support base. The issues raised are therefore for the President as well as his supporters of the Right.
We are obliged to respect the choices of the voting public but in the case of Trump’s election to the highest public position in the US, this columnist is inclined to see in those sections that voted for Trump blind followers of the latter who cared not for their candidate’s suitability, in every relevant respect, and therefore acted irrationally. It would seem that the Right in the US wanted their candidate to win by ‘hook or by crook’ and exercise power on their behalf.
By making the above observations this columnist does not intend to imply that voting publics everywhere in the world of democracy cast their vote sensibly. In the case of Sri Lanka, for example, the question could be raised whether the voters of the country used their vote sensibly when voting into office the majority of Executive Presidents and other persons holding high public office. The obvious answer is ‘no’ and this should lead to a wider public discussion on the dire need for thoroughgoing voter education. The issue is a ‘huge’ one that needs to be addressed in the appropriate forums and is beyond the scope of this column.
Looking back it could be said that the actions of Trump and his die-hard support base led to the Rule of Law in the US being undermined as perhaps never before in modern times. A shaming moment in this connection was the protest march, virtually motivated by Trump, of his supporters to the US Capitol on January 6th, 2021, with the aim of scuttling the presidential poll result of that year. Much violence and unruly behaviour, as known, was let loose. This amounted to denigrating the democratic process and encouraging the violent take over of the state.
In a public address, prior to the unruly conduct of his supporters, Trump is on record as blaring forth the following: ‘We won this election and we won by a landslide’, ‘We will stop the steal’, ‘We will never give up. We will never concede. It doesn’t happen’, ‘If you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.’
It is plain to see that such inflammatory utterances could lead impressionable minds in particular to revolt violently. Besides, they should have led the more rationally inclined to wonder whether their candidate was the most suitable person to hold the office of President.
Unfortunately, the latter process was not to be and the question could be raised whether the US is in the ‘safest pair of hands’. Needless to say, as events have revealed, Donald Trump is proving to be one of the most erratic heads of state the US has ever had.
However, the latest attempt on the life of President Trump suggests that considerable damage has been done to the democratic integrity of the US and none other than the President himself has to take on himself a considerable proportion of the blame for such degeneration, besides the US’ Far Right. They could be said to be ‘reaping the whirlwind.’
It is a time for soul-searching by the US Right. The political Right has the right to exist, so the speak, in a functional democracy but it needs to take cognizance of how its political culture is affecting the democratic integrity or health of the US. Ironically, the repressive and chauvinistic politics advocated by it is having the effect of activating counter-violence of the most murderous kind, as was witnessed at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Continued repressive politics could only produce more such incidents that could be self-defeating for the US.
Some past US Presidents were assassinated but the present political violence in the country brings into focus as perhaps never before the role that an anti-democratic political culture could play in unraveling the gains that the US has made over the decades. A duty is cast on pro-democracy forces to work collectively towards protecting the democratic integrity and strength of the US.
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