This is by far the best informed post and I am humbly grateful at not having to work too hard to reply.
Thanks for the information.
In order to help your case study.
Very kind thought, but there was no effort at a case study, it was just a correction of egregiously mistaken statements.
1. Sri Lanka's conflict has much older origins, actually it goes far back to 1920s.
2. The quest for Eelam started in 1922 by a tamil leader called Arunachalam in 1922. Interestingly it includes Parts of Singapr31 Sri Lanka got universal suffrage that means every one has a vote. Tamil leaders went to London to protest against this decision and asked British not to do that. And asked at least not to give voting rights to women and low castes
4. With voting rights the political power in the country became more balanced with 75 percent sinhala holding more power and 25 percent minority holding 25 percent power. The tamil politicians did not like this. That is why they acted against universal suffrage.
5. In 1945 Tamil leaders asked for 50-50 which means 50 percent seats for 75 percent sinhalese and 50 percent seats for 25 percent minority. The british commissioner himself rejected it calling it ridiculous as it was an attempt at minority rule over majority.
http://www.colomboherald.com/world-politics/tamil-caste-discrimination
6. Sri Lanka saw the first Sinhala tamil riot in 1939. That was as a result of a tamil leader called GG Ponnambalam publicly claiming Sinhalese are a mongrel race and Sri Lanka is a Tamil country. They created a false history of Sri Lanka.
7. In 1947 , tamil politician GG ponnambalam publicly states that he is not a ceylonese and that he was a Dravida person
All these happened BEFORE Sri Lanka got independance...and hence nothing to do with any perceived discrimination.
That the Tamils did their bit to dig their own grave is undeniable. However, there is a lot that happened AFTER what you have narrated, as well. Before going on to discuss some of the points made by you, may I share with you my sense of delicious irony at what you have written and where you have written it. You might like to spend a future idle hour looking at a summary of the history of Indian independence, starting with the Minto-Morley Reforms of 1919, through the period of dyarchy, ending with the Government of India Act, 1935. You will find a minority seeking parity with the majority, to the extent where when they did not get it through reserved seats in the electorate, they sought it through reservations in the educational institutions, finding that ineffective, they wanted an equal number of seats in the legislature, to reflect the reality, according to their perception, that there were in effect two separate 'nations' within the geographical boundaries of a state.
Does it sound familiar? And are you aware of how Pakistan came into being? And would you share my delight at your unintended effrontery in putting up this injured and victimised defence of a majority that sought to keep the minority in its place, in, of all the zillions of places that you might have selected on the Internet, on a Pakistani forum?
Actually Sri Lanka has been inhabited 100000 years ago. Balangoda man is one such fossilized remains of such a man. The sinhala people come from them and of course immigrants were absorbed.
It is not possible to summarise the genetic growth of different types of evolutionary humanity. You may select Homo Sapiens, if that is your preference; or Homo Habilis, or Homo Erectus, perhaps the most (again unintentionally) appropriate for the place and time in which you are commenting; what you see in Balangoda can be summarised below:
The Paleolithic or Palaeolithic; pronunciation:
/ˌpeɪliəˈlɪθɪk, ˌpæ-, -lioʊ-/) Age, Era or Period is a prehistoric
period of
human history distinguished by the development of the most primitive
stone tools discovered (
Grahame Clark's Modes I and II), and covers roughly 95% of human technological
prehistory. It extends from the earliest known use of stone tools, probably by
Homo habilis initially, 2.6 million years ago, to the end of the
Pleistocene around 10,000
BP.
What you are, and what I am, can be traced to less than 200 families in Africa around 40,000 years ago (perhaps 50,000; it is in that region). That group sent emigrants out who traced their path along the sea-coast and covered most of Asia and Europe, up to Australia, within 50,000 to 40,000 BC. In doing that, they first co-existed with, then contested with and finally eliminated the earlier species of humans, for instance, Neanderthals.
Balangoda Man was not a Neanderthal species; he was from the Mesolithic age.
The Paleolithic era is followed in the
Mesolithic. The date of the Paleolithic–Mesolithic boundary may vary by locality as much as several thousand years.
And I am not very sure why you have confused the earlier human habitations, which apparently range back to as much 300,000 years ago, securely in the Palaeolithic Age, with Balangoda Man, whose dates were around 34,000 years ago, and who was culturally a Mesolithic tool-maker, and a hunter-gatherer.
The contentious part of human development in Sri Lanka has to do with the transition into the Iron Age, to the cultural characteristics of the human beings of that time, and their relationships with linguistic groups of today. It is NOT proven that those who speak Tamil today were not among the original inhabitants of the island. There is a clear case for their having been among groups who migrated, not into an empty land, but one with hunter-gatherer tribes in place, and the rudiments of early agriculture in place by 8,000 years ago, along with agglomerated dwelling places centred around mineral extraction activity. Two quotes will illustrate the main stream of thought (if you leave out Sinhala revisionism, an exact counterpart of Indian Hindutva revisionism):
Fluctuations in
sea level led to
Sri Lanka being linked to the
Indian subcontinent from time to time over the past million years. The last such link occurred about 5000 BC.
It is difficult to imagine that when Homo Habilis had pushed into Australia by 40,000 years ago, Sri Lanka would remain with only her original Palaeolithic inhabitants in occupation.
Regarding language use, this might help, but it will clash with the Out Of Lanka ideology that is apparently being promoted by Sinhala nationalists of today (in an eerie mirroring of cultural kampf in India):
A large
settlement appears to have been founded before 900 BC at the site of
Anuradhapura where signs of an
Iron Age culture have been found. The size of the settlement was about 15
hectares at that date, but it expanded to 50 ha, to 'town' size within a couple of centuries. A similar site has been discovered at Aligala in
Sigiriya.
The earliest chronicles the
Dipavamsa and
Mahavamsa say that the island was inhabited by tribes of
Yakkhas(demons),
Nagas (cobras) and devas (gods). These may refer to
totemist Iron Age
autochthones.
Pottery dating back to 600 BC has been found at
Anuradhapura, bearing
Brāhmī script (among the earliest extant examples of the script) and non-Brahmi writing, which may have arisen through contact with
Semitic trading scripts from
West Asia.
The emergence of new forms of pottery at the same time as the writing, together with other artifacts such as red glass beads, indicate a new cultural impulse, possibly an invasion from
North India.
It is difficult to segregate this cultural impulse from the abrupt appearance of an Aryan language on the island. Nobody is saying that it did not graft onto other, older languages. That was precisely what took place with the Indo-Iranian derivative Indo-Aryan, which entered India some time in the 2500 BC to 1500 BC window, perhaps in a number of pulses, a phenomenon that was represented as an 'invasion' by colonial authors seeking to justify the legitimacy of colonial political authority. The Indo-Aryan language, very close to Avestan, was transmuted by admixture with the underlying Dravidian, according to some students; it was transmuted by admixture with a language largely Dravidian, but itself transmuted by its own admixture with an even older sub-stratum, that is associated with the Santhal languages.
Why should that not have happened in Sri Lanka? Especially when it is so unmistakably aligned to your myths? That the earliest inscriptions are in Prakrit, using Brahmi script, must have some significance?
It is difficult to understand how there can be a rogue occurrence of a member of the Indo-Aryan family of languages in Sri Lanka through spontaneous development, with no connect to the other members of that language family.
Sri Lanka cannot be compared with Singapore. Singapore is a modern nation with no historical baggage. Chinese came from china, tamils from india and malays from Malaysia. Sri Lanka is different it is the native homeland of Sri Lankan people.
Please can we ignore the negative contributions of some fribbles?
It is the tamils' ego centric misinterpretation of country's history that makes problems.
Speaking as a neutral observer, with no dog in this fight, it does seem that there is misinterpretation on more than one side. The claims, in their essence, are not irreconcilable; the same two linguistic groups co-exist in the sub-continent just to the north.
LOL do you have any evidence to back your claim? If tamils were before Sinhalese, they would be living in the south of the country. It is the first comers who were pushed into the interior due to invasions.
Please.
Just consider the probability of constant immigration, not in one mammoth wave, but in dribbles. Because that is the most likely model of what actually happened.
What do you know about Sinhala lanaguge? the evolution of Sinhala langauge can be found all over the island in inscriptions. It is the case with tamils
And the point is?