Page 30 - rohana_journal_No_12-2020-final
P. 30

Research Journal of the University of Ruhuna, Sri Lanka- Rohana 12, 2020


                     Impact of War Memorialisation Events in Post War Ethnic
                                   Reconciliation Process of Sri Lanka



                                                                                                2
                                                                             1*
                                                        Gunasekara, AMAS and Pannilage, U
                       1 Head, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences,

                                                                            University of Ruhuna
                   2 Professor, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

                                                                            University of Ruhuna

                                                                   Email: suranjith@soci.ruh.ac.lk


               Abstract


               Memorialization is not a new phenomenon in Sri Lanka. Historically, memorialization has
               been witnessed over the years in various forms. Erasing memories of specific communities

               took place in the post-independent political process as a result of ethnopolitics. However,
               the politics of memory and memorialization continue even to date in the post-war context.
               Erasing  the  memory  of  particular  communities  from  the  commemoration  process  in  the

               post-war  Sri  Lankan  social  context  is  the  core  research  theme  of  this  study.  The  war
               memory represents the sensitive and emotional assets of both the victorious and the defeated
               parties of the war. The commemoration of the deceased is a value long being established by

               any  community.  The  memory  and  the  memorialization  of  war  heroes  have  acquired  a
               political  significance  under  the  norms  of  a  nation-state  and  ethno-nationalist  secessionist
               movements.    This  study  examines  the  memorialization  process,  power  relations  and

               hegemonic formations that are part of the war memorialization in Sri Lanka and discusses
               social, political as well as psychological implications of the parties resorting to the conflict

               in their attempt to maintain war memories in the post-conflict context. The main objective
               of the study is to understand the nature of the war commemoration in post-war Sri Lanka by
               exploring the historical and political reasons. The study revealed that memorialization has

               amounted to hegemonic cultural Memory and the Memory and efforts of memorialization of
               "the other's memory are being erased".

                                                       21
   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35