Features
The significance of accents in the United States of America
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
At a recent press conference at the White House with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Trump dodged a question by Indian journalist, Raghubir Goyal of The India Globe, about anti-India activities in the United States. Okay, I agree the accent was a little thick, but when Goyal repeated the question, it was perfectly clear.
But Trump dismissed it with a contemptuous “Can’t understand a word you’re saying, It’s the accent, it’s a little bit difficult for me to understand. Next question”. Without the slightest effort to make an effort to respond, because he had understood enough to know that he had no plausible answer.
This is not the first time Trump used this ploy to downplay his ignorance. Two weeks ago, at a White House press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump dismissed a question from Afghan White House journalist, Nazira Karimi, with a condescending, backhanded compliment. Ms Karimi’s question was “Do you have any plans to change Afghanistan’s situation? Are you able to recognize the Taliban, because I am an Afghan journalist”?
Trump’s response: “It’s a beautiful voice, a beautiful accent. The only problem is that I can’t understand a word you’re saying”. Which not only enabled him to dodge a question which he was unable to lie his way out of, but also got a cheap laugh from the audience.
These exchanges took me back to the years I spent in England in my late teens and early twenties, and decades in the United States at the turn of the century. I was reminded of Mark Twain’s comment on the most widely-spoken language in the world today, when he said, “I have traveled more than anyone else, and I have noticed that even the angels speak English with an accent.”
Today, English is recognized as the universal language. It is certainly the international language of trade and commerce. However, the diverse accents with which the English language is spoken in various parts of the world, even in the country of its origin, make the “King’s English” sound as if it’s composed of several different languages, or, perhaps more accurately, different dialects.
Countries like the United States of America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, to name a few of the original colonies of the British Empire, have recognized English as at least one of their national languages. English of the original Anglo-Saxon immigrants, blended with special accents of their own.
The United States, the nation of immigrants, has attracted settlers, first from England, who most clinically committed genocide of the native Americans. When European settlers arrived in the Americas, for the first time in 1492, when Christopher Columbus landed in the Bahamas, historians estimate that there were 10 million Native Americans living in the Americas. By 1900, the number was 300,000.
The most cruel and disgusting methods used by these settlers to annihilate the natives would make the Nazis blush. As would the cruel treatment meted out to 12 million plus Africans imported as slaves in the 17th century, and forced to provide the free labor that made the United States the economic powerhouse of the world.
By the 21st century, the United States had become the beacon of hope for immigrants from every country in the world. “The tired, the poor, the huddled masses yearning to breathe free. The wretched refuse of the teeming shore”.
Many of those immigrants from nations of the old British Empire had a sufficient knowledge of the English language to pursue the American Dream. Others, from non-English speaking nations, especially those from the Central and South Americas, found living very hard, the Dream elusive. They were forced to take the most menial, back-breaking jobs, with low-paying wages, often illegally paid “under the table” by unscrupulous employers.
I emigrated to the USA in the 1990s, by which time the US government had started the process of restricting immigration. I was amused, sometimes perturbed at the attitudes of Americans to the English accents of recent immigrants.
Each new species of immigrants until about the middle of the 20th century added some of their own language/culture to the language now accepted as American English. The natives of the 50 states of this vast and diverse nation speak English in different accents, but American English had pretty much evolved into a uniform dialect.
As Theodore Roosevelt said at the turn of the 20th century, “We have room for but one language, the English language, for we intend to see that the crucible turns our people out as Americans, and not as dwellers in a polyglot boarding house”.
Generally, Americans have a combination of both inferiority and superiority complexes about the accents of English spoken by recent immigrants. When they arrive in the United States, recent immigrants speak in the English of the accents of their homelands. Although many do try to emulate the accents of the host country to demonstrate their eagerness to assimilate, integrate and better their fortunes.
Americans have formed their own perceptions, often stereotyped and fallacious, of the qualities these various accents represent. For example, they are generally in awe of people speaking in what they think is a British accent. Never mind that the accent is OxCam or Cockney, BBC, Welsh, Irish or Scots – these accents are all ridiculously regarded to be evidence of an upper-class education, even a status symbol.
Much like the awe that Mexicans display when they are in the presence of a person speaking the Spanish of Spain, not the self-despised Espanol Mexicano of Mexico. Or, closer to home, like the admiration that elite Sri Lankans, many more British than the British in their culture and traditions, have for an English accent.
A French accent is admired as the mellifluous language of love and romance. Such an accent, when accompanied with a bow and a gallant kiss on the hand, is enough to make any lady, not just an American, swoon.
The Australian and New Zealand accents, which to my perhaps uneducated ears, are just variations of the London Cockney, are also held in high regard by Americans. While the guttural German accent is indicative of cold, even brutal efficiency.
Other accents are held in varying degrees of esteem, depending on the perception of their national stereotypes. One accent that is universally enjoyed is the Jamaican, which brings to mind vistas of warm beaches, cocktails with little umbrellas, calypso music, wild parties with a surfeit of sex and pot, lots of pot.
Sadly, the accents held in least esteem in the US are the discordant sounds of the English language spoken by first generation immigrants from the Indian sub-continent. Contemptuously imitated by Apu in the popular TV show of yesteryear, “The Simpsons”, it is an accent most mocked by racist Americans, which has often proved to be demoralizing, even humiliating, both in the school and in the workplace.
Truth be told, this accent of the Subcontinent, which is English spoken with a combination of smatterings of Hindi, Urdu, Tamil, Sinhala and a host of native languages, is not an attractive sound. It is jarring. It is not pleasing to the ear. It has been disdainfully described, with an element of reality, as the accent, when used by a man pursuing a lady, would be the least likely to help him getting laid. Unless, of course, the lady of his desire hails from the Subcontinent herself, in which event his accent would prove to be the least of his problems.
When I first arrived in Los Angeles in 1990, alone, on a tourist visa with a few dollars in my pocket, my first friends were Sri Lankans in similar circumstances. Living in the twilight zone of the undocumented immigrant, making great efforts in the pursuit of the elusive American Dream. They were immigrants of the so-called “lower orders”, with little English but much perseverance.
I was unable to obtain employment on a tourist visa, and I would not have survived without the help of these Sri Lankans, who had little but gave much, who ultimately became close friends. They were all determined to succeed, and as far as I know, they all did.
They never got over the wonderment of their new home. I remember one of them, fresh out of LAX Airport, heard a dog barking. He exclaimed, with a sense of awe, “Aday, machang, even the dogs here bark with an American accent”. Sounded much more amusing in Sinhala.
It was entirely due to the help of these friends with more heart than money, combined with a little bit of help from my mother, that I was able to survive till my family joined me in Los Angeles, ten months later. Ten months that I had brought upon myself; but ten months I was proud to have been able to negotiate and survive, in circumstances of privations I never had to contend with in the privileged life of comparative luxury I had led in Colombo.
We applied for asylum on the arrival of my family, which was granted almost immediately with authorization for employment. Ten hard years later, we survived, got the Green Card that Donald Trump is now selling for $5 million, renamed the “Gold Card”. We were finally able to keep up with the Sri Lankan Joneses. Most importantly, our children grasped the wonderful educational opportunities available to smart kids during the Clinton years, and equipped themselves with a world-class education that money couldn’t buy.
Forty years later, the tables seem to have turned. Second-generation immigrants from the Indian Subcontinent are now recognized as the most esteemed of immigrants to the United States. The last Vice-President and the Democratic candidate for the Presidency in 2020, Kamala Harris, was raised in Hindu traditions by her single mother, a lady from Chennai. The current Second Lady, Usha Vance is of Indian heritage, her parents having emigrated from Andhra Pradesh in the 1980s. She is a practicing Hindu, although her husband Vice-President Vance is a converted Roman Catholic.
The medical and legal professions, academia, the Silicon Valley, the highest of political levels, even Hollywood abound with practitioners with origins from the Subcontinent. In fact, they have achieved the ultimate tribute of being considered “honorary white”. A great many proudly display their new-found whiteness by donning the famous red MAGA (Make America Great Again) baseball cap, the symbol of the Trump white supremacist cult.
Most of these second-generation immigrants from the Subcontinent speak in perfect American English without a trace of the old despised Indian accent. But I am proud that my children, who have made America their home, still speak English with the unmistakable hint of that beautiful English accent they learnt at Royal and St. Bridget’s.
Features
Disaster-proofing paradise: Sri Lanka’s new path to global resilience
iyadasa Advisor to the Ministry of Science & Technology and a Board of Directors of Sri Lanka Atomic Energy Regulatory Council A value chain management consultant to www.vivonta.lk
As climate shocks multiply worldwide from unseasonal droughts and flash floods to cyclones that now carry unpredictable fury Sri Lanka, long known for its lush biodiversity and heritage, stands at a crossroads. We can either remain locked in a reactive cycle of warnings and recovery, or boldly transform into the world’s first disaster-proof tropical nation — a secure haven for citizens and a trusted destination for global travelers.
The Presidential declaration to transition within one year from a limited, rainfall-and-cyclone-dependent warning system to a full-spectrum, science-enabled resilience model is not only historic — it’s urgent. This policy shift marks the beginning of a new era: one where nature, technology, ancient wisdom, and community preparedness work in harmony to protect every Sri Lankan village and every visiting tourist.
The Current System’s Fatal Gaps
Today, Sri Lanka’s disaster management system is dangerously underpowered for the accelerating climate era. Our primary reliance is on monsoon rainfall tracking and cyclone alerts — helpful, but inadequate in the face of multi-hazard threats such as flash floods, landslides, droughts, lightning storms, and urban inundation.
Institutions are fragmented; responsibilities crisscross between agencies, often with unclear mandates and slow decision cycles. Community-level preparedness is minimal — nearly half of households lack basic knowledge on what to do when a disaster strikes. Infrastructure in key regions is outdated, with urban drains, tank sluices, and bunds built for rainfall patterns of the 1960s, not today’s intense cloudbursts or sea-level rise.
Critically, Sri Lanka is not yet integrated with global planetary systems — solar winds, El Niño cycles, Indian Ocean Dipole shifts — despite clear evidence that these invisible climate forces shape our rainfall, storm intensity, and drought rhythms. Worse, we have lost touch with our ancestral systems of environmental management — from tank cascades to forest sanctuaries — that sustained this island for over two millennia.
This system, in short, is outdated, siloed, and reactive. And it must change.
A New Vision for Disaster-Proof Sri Lanka
Under the new policy shift, Sri Lanka will adopt a complete resilience architecture that transforms climate disaster prevention into a national development strategy. This system rests on five interlinked pillars:
Science and Predictive Intelligence
We will move beyond surface-level forecasting. A new national climate intelligence platform will integrate:
AI-driven pattern recognition of rainfall and flood events
Global data from solar activity, ocean oscillations (ENSO, MJO, IOD)
High-resolution digital twins of floodplains and cities
Real-time satellite feeds on cyclone trajectory and ocean heat
The adverse impacts of global warming—such as sea-level rise, the proliferation of pests and diseases affecting human health and food production, and the change of functionality of chlorophyll—must be systematically captured, rigorously analysed, and addressed through proactive, advance decision-making.
This fusion of local and global data will allow days to weeks of anticipatory action, rather than hours of late alerts.
Advanced Technology and Early Warning Infrastructure
Cell-broadcast alerts in all three national languages, expanded weather radar, flood-sensing drones, and tsunami-resilient siren networks will be deployed. Community-level sensors in key river basins and tanks will monitor and report in real-time. Infrastructure projects will now embed climate-risk metrics — from cyclone-proof buildings to sea-level-ready roads.
Governance Overhaul
A new centralised authority — Sri Lanka Climate & Earth Systems Resilience Authority — will consolidate environmental, meteorological, Geological, hydrological, and disaster functions. It will report directly to the Cabinet with a real-time national dashboard. District Disaster Units will be upgraded with GN-level digital coordination. Climate literacy will be declared a national priority.
People Power and Community Preparedness
We will train 25,000 village-level disaster wardens and first responders. Schools will run annual drills for floods, cyclones, tsunamis and landslides. Every community will map its local hazard zones and co-create its own resilience plan. A national climate citizenship programme will reward youth and civil organisations contributing to early warning systems, reforestation (riverbank, slopy land and catchment areas) , or tech solutions.
Reviving Ancient Ecological Wisdom
Sri Lanka’s ancestors engineered tank cascades that regulated floods, stored water, and cooled microclimates. Forest belts protected valleys; sacred groves were biodiversity reservoirs. This policy revives those systems:
Restoring 10,000 hectares of tank ecosystems
Conserving coastal mangroves and reintroducing stone spillways
Integrating traditional seasonal calendars with AI forecasts
Recognising Vedda knowledge of climate shifts as part of national risk strategy
Our past and future must align, or both will be lost.
A Global Destination for Resilient Tourism
Climate-conscious travelers increasingly seek safe, secure, and sustainable destinations. Under this policy, Sri Lanka will position itself as the world’s first “climate-safe sanctuary island” — a place where:
Resorts are cyclone- and tsunami-resilient
Tourists receive live hazard updates via mobile apps
World Heritage Sites are protected by environmental buffers
Visitors can witness tank restoration, ancient climate engineering, and modern AI in action
Sri Lanka will invite scientists, startups, and resilience investors to join our innovation ecosystem — building eco-tourism that’s disaster-proof by design.
Resilience as a National Identity
This shift is not just about floods or cyclones. It is about redefining our identity. To be Sri Lankan must mean to live in harmony with nature and to be ready for its changes. Our ancestors did it. The science now supports it. The time has come.
Let us turn Sri Lanka into the world’s first climate-resilient heritage island — where ancient wisdom meets cutting-edge science, and every citizen stands protected under one shield: a disaster-proof nation.
Features
The minstrel monk and Rafiki the old mandrill in The Lion King – I
Why is national identity so important for a people? AI provides us with an answer worth understanding critically (Caveat: Even AI wisdom should be subjected to the Buddha’s advice to the young Kalamas):
‘A strong sense of identity is crucial for a people as it fosters belonging, builds self-worth, guides behaviour, and provides resilience, allowing individuals to feel connected, make meaningful choices aligned with their values, and maintain mental well-being even amidst societal changes or challenges, acting as a foundation for individual and collective strength. It defines “who we are” culturally and personally, driving shared narratives, pride, political action, and healthier relationships by grounding people in common values, traditions, and a sense of purpose.’
Ethnic Sinhalese who form about 75% of the Sri Lankan population have such a unique identity secured by the binding medium of their Buddhist faith. It is significant that 93% of them still remain Buddhist (according to 2024 statistics/wikipedia), professing Theravada Buddhism, after four and a half centuries of coercive Christianising European occupation that ended in 1948. The Sinhalese are a unique ancient island people with a 2500 year long recorded history, their own language and country, and their deeply evolved Buddhist cultural identity.
Buddhism can be defined, rather paradoxically, as a non-religious religion, an eminently practical ethical-philosophy based on mind cultivation, wisdom and universal compassion. It is an ethico-spiritual value system that prioritises human reason and unaided (i.e., unassisted by any divine or supernatural intervention) escape from suffering through self-realisation. Sri Lanka’s benignly dominant Buddhist socio-cultural background naturally allows unrestricted freedom of religion, belief or non-belief for all its citizens, and makes the country a safe spiritual haven for them. The island’s Buddha Sasana (Dispensation of the Buddha) is the inalienable civilisational treasure that our ancestors of two and a half millennia have bequeathed to us. It is this enduring basis of our identity as a nation which bestows on us the personal and societal benefits of inestimable value mentioned in the AI summary given at the beginning of this essay.
It was this inherent national identity that the Sri Lankan contestant at the 72nd Miss World 2025 pageant held in Hyderabad, India, in May last year, Anudi Gunasekera, proudly showcased before the world, during her initial self-introduction. She started off with a verse from the Dhammapada (a Pali Buddhist text), which she explained as meaning “Refrain from all evil and cultivate good”. She declared, “And I believe that’s my purpose in life”. Anudi also mentioned that Sri Lanka had gone through a lot “from conflicts to natural disasters, pandemics, economic crises….”, adding, “and yet, my people remain hopeful, strong, and resilient….”.
“Ayubowan! I am Anudi Gunasekera from Sri Lanka. It is with immense pride that I represent my Motherland, a nation of resilience, timeless beauty, and a proud history, Sri Lanka.
“I come from Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka’s first capital, and UNESCO World Heritage site, with its history and its legacy of sacred monuments and stupas…….”.
The “inspiring words” that Anudi quoted are from the Dhammapada (Verse 183), which runs, in English translation: “To avoid all evil/To cultivate good/and to cleanse one’s mind -/this is the teaching of the Buddhas”. That verse is so significant because it defines the basic ‘teaching of the Buddhas’ (i.e., Buddha Sasana; this is how Walpole Rahula Thera defines Buddha Sasana in his celebrated introduction to Buddhism ‘What the Buddha Taught’ first published in1959).
Twenty-five year old Anudi Gunasekera is an alumna of the University of Kelaniya, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in International Studies. She is planning to do a Master’s in the same field. Her ambition is to join the foreign service in Sri Lanka. Gen Z’er Anudi is already actively engaged in social service. The Saheli Foundation is her own initiative launched to address period poverty (i.e., lack of access to proper sanitation facilities, hygiene and health education, etc.) especially among women and post-puberty girls of low-income classes in rural and urban Sri Lanka.
Young Anudi is primarily inspired by her patriotic devotion to ‘my Motherland, a nation of resilience, timeless beauty, and a proud history, Sri Lanka’. In post-independence Sri Lanka, thousands of young men and women of her age have constantly dedicated themselves, oftentimes making the supreme sacrifice, motivated by a sense of national identity, by the thought ‘This is our beloved Motherland, these are our beloved people’.
The rescue and recovery of Sri Lanka from the evil aftermath of a decade of subversive ‘Aragalaya’ mayhem is waiting to be achieved, in every sphere of national engagement, including, for example, economics, communications, culture and politics, by the enlightened Anudi Gunasekeras and their male counterparts of the Gen Z, but not by the demented old stragglers lingering in the political arena listening to the unnerving rattle of “Time’s winged chariot hurrying near”, nor by the baila blaring monks at propaganda rallies.
Politically active monks (Buddhist bhikkhus) are only a handful out of the Maha Sangha (the general body of Buddhist bhikkhus) in Sri Lanka, who numbered just over 42,000 in 2024. The vast majority of monks spend their time quietly attending to their monastic duties. Buddhism upholds social and emotional virtues such as universal compassion, empathy, tolerance and forgiveness that protect a society from the evils of tribalism, religious bigotry and death-dealing religious piety.
Not all monks who express or promote political opinions should be censured. I choose to condemn only those few monks who abuse the yellow robe as a shield in their narrow partisan politics. I cannot bring myself to disapprove of the many socially active monks, who are articulating the genuine problems that the Buddha Sasana is facing today. The two bhikkhus who are the most despised monks in the commercial media these days are Galaboda-aththe Gnanasara and Ampitiye Sumanaratana Theras. They have a problem with their mood swings. They have long been whistleblowers trying to raise awareness respectively, about spreading religious fundamentalism, especially, violent Islamic Jihadism, in the country and about the vandalising of the Buddhist archaeological heritage sites of the north and east provinces. The two middle-aged monks (Gnanasara and Sumanaratana) belong to this respectable category. Though they are relentlessly attacked in the social media or hardly given any positive coverage of the service they are doing, they do nothing more than try to persuade the rulers to take appropriate action to resolve those problems while not trespassing on the rights of people of other faiths.
These monks have to rely on lay political leaders to do the needful, without themselves taking part in sectarian politics in the manner of ordinary members of the secular society. Their generally demonised social image is due, in my opinion, to three main reasons among others: 1) spreading misinformation and disinformation about them by those who do not like what they are saying and doing, 2) their own lack of verbal restraint, and 3) their being virtually abandoned to the wolves by the temporal and spiritual authorities.
(To be continued)
By Rohana R. Wasala ✍️
Features
US’ drastic aid cut to UN poses moral challenge to world
‘Adapt, shrink or die’ – thus runs the warning issued by the Trump administration to UN humanitarian agencies with brute insensitivity in the wake of its recent decision to drastically reduce to $2bn its humanitarian aid to the UN system. This is a substantial climb down from the $17bn the US usually provided to the UN for its humanitarian operations.
Considering that the US has hitherto been the UN’s biggest aid provider, it need hardly be said that the US decision would pose a daunting challenge to the UN’s humanitarian operations around the world. This would indeed mean that, among other things, people living in poverty and stifling material hardships, in particularly the Southern hemisphere, could dramatically increase. Coming on top of the US decision to bring to an end USAID operations, the poor of the world could be said to have been left to their devices as a consequence of these morally insensitive policy rethinks of the Trump administration.
Earlier, the UN had warned that it would be compelled to reduce its aid programs in the face of ‘the deepest funding cuts ever.’ In fact the UN is on record as requesting the world for $23bn for its 2026 aid operations.
If this UN appeal happens to go unheeded, the possibilities are that the UN would not be in a position to uphold the status it has hitherto held as the world’s foremost humanitarian aid provider. It would not be incorrect to state that a substantial part of the rationale for the UN’s existence could come in for questioning if its humanitarian identity is thus eroded.
Inherent in these developments is a challenge for those sections of the international community that wish to stand up and be counted as humanists and the ‘Conscience of the World.’ A responsibility is cast on them to not only keep the UN system going but to also ensure its increased efficiency as a humanitarian aid provider to particularly the poorest of the poor.
It is unfortunate that the US is increasingly opting for a position of international isolation. Such a policy position was adopted by it in the decades leading to World War Two and the consequences for the world as a result of this policy posture were most disquieting. For instance, it opened the door to the flourishing of dictatorial regimes in the West, such as that led by Adolph Hitler in Germany, which nearly paved the way for the subjugation of a good part of Europe by the Nazis.
If the US had not intervened militarily in the war on the side of the Allies, the West would have faced the distressing prospect of coming under the sway of the Nazis and as a result earned indefinite political and military repression. By entering World War Two the US helped to ward off these bleak outcomes and indeed helped the major democracies of Western Europe to hold their own and thrive against fascism and dictatorial rule.
Republican administrations in the US in particular have not proved the greatest defenders of democratic rule the world over, but by helping to keep the international power balance in favour of democracy and fundamental human rights they could keep under a tight leash fascism and linked anti-democratic forces even in contemporary times. Russia’s invasion and continued occupation of parts of Ukraine reminds us starkly that the democracy versus fascism battle is far from over.
Right now, the US needs to remain on the side of the rest of the West very firmly, lest fascism enjoys another unfettered lease of life through the absence of countervailing and substantial military and political power.
However, by reducing its financial support for the UN and backing away from sustaining its humanitarian programs the world over the US could be laying the ground work for an aggravation of poverty in the South in particular and its accompaniments, such as, political repression, runaway social discontent and anarchy.
What should not go unnoticed by the US is the fact that peace and social stability in the South and the flourishing of the same conditions in the global North are symbiotically linked, although not so apparent at first blush. For instance, if illegal migration from the South to the US is a major problem for the US today, it is because poor countries are not receiving development assistance from the UN system to the required degree. Such deprivation on the part of the South leads to aggravating social discontent in the latter and consequences such as illegal migratory movements from South to North.
Accordingly, it will be in the North’s best interests to ensure that the South is not deprived of sustained development assistance since the latter is an essential condition for social contentment and stable governance, which factors in turn would guard against the emergence of phenomena such as illegal migration.
Meanwhile, democratic sections of the rest of the world in particular need to consider it a matter of conscience to ensure the sustenance and flourishing of the UN system. To be sure, the UN system is considerably flawed but at present it could be called the most equitable and fair among international development organizations and the most far-flung one. Without it world poverty would have proved unmanageable along with the ills that come along with it.
Dehumanizing poverty is an indictment on humanity. It stands to reason that the world community should rally round the UN and ensure its survival lest the abomination which is poverty flourishes. In this undertaking the world needs to stand united. Ambiguities on this score could be self-defeating for the world community.
For example, all groupings of countries that could demonstrate economic muscle need to figure prominently in this initiative. One such grouping is BRICS. Inasmuch as the US and the West should shrug aside Realpolitik considerations in this enterprise, the same goes for organizations such as BRICS.
The arrival at the above international consensus would be greatly facilitated by stepped up dialogue among states on the continued importance of the UN system. Fresh efforts to speed-up UN reform would prove major catalysts in bringing about these positive changes as well. Also requiring to be shunned is the blind pursuit of narrow national interests.
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