![]() Through a state-orchestrated process, involving competition for fishing grounds, the third generation became not only Sinhalese but also anti-Tamil. What happened in the western coast is the forerunner to what happened and what is happening to the geographical contiguity of Tamils in the East. The closing down of the traditional coastal highway between Colombo and Mannaar / Jaffna, in the guise of the Wilpattu sanctuary, cut down the contiguity. Their Sinhalicisation was systematic, abetted by an ingenious scheme of disruption of communication. All along the western coast, up to Colombo, there were traditional villages of Tamil Christians. They come from the coastal areas of Northwestern and Western Provinces. Most of the Sinhala Catholics, who make the pilgrimage to Madu, were Tamils three or four generations ago. Over the centuries Madu became the most important pilgrim centre for Catholics, both Tamils and Sinhalese, throughout the island. ![]() A lady among the latter group called Santa Lena (St Helena) built a small church for the statue, which then became Our Lady of Madu. The settlement soon received further Catholic refugees from Jaffna, fleeing Dutch persecutions. She was kept at a place Marutha-madu (meaning, the deep tank in the locality of Maruthu / Terminalia arjuna trees), which at that time was in the border of the territories of the king of Kandy. The persecution of Catholics by the Dutch in the 17th century made her worshippers to carry her deep into Vanni in the year 1670. In the 16th century, the image, which was then known as Our Lady of Good Health, was in a church at Maanthai. The origin of the icon of Our Lady of Madu is traced back to the times of the advent of Catholic Christianity in Mannaar in the 15th century. Its descendants are the Syrian Christians of Malabar. Ancient Tamil Christianity survived in the old Tamil society. Some excerpts from a TamilNet feature from 2008 follow: Tamil Christianity is a concept that had come into being since the time of the birth of Christianity in West Asia. The latest ‘Sri Lankanisation’ move on Madu is a nothing else than a premeditated assault on Tamil Christianity. The Sinhala establishment wants to erode this, step-by-step, to become Colombo-centric through effecting a series of deceptive ‘transitions’. The administration of Madu Shrine has always been with the Mannaar Diocese. As such, it has already got the status of a pan-island pilgrim centre. The Holy shrine of Madu already comes under Pilgrimage Ordinance of 1982. One has to only look at what has happened to the ancient Easwarams of Tamils and the post-2009 Sinhala twist given to mythical Ravana (One of the extremist Sinhala outfits is now named Ravana Balaya). They talk of ‘Sri Lankanisation’ of Madu, which is the first step. The Sinhala establishment, which looks at its heritage through the prism of Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa in the North Central Province, wants to accomplish the first phase of deceptive transition under cover of declaring it as sacred area during the presidency of Sirisena, who hails from Polonnaruwa district. The Sanctity of Madu (Madhu) has always been beyond the scope of the boundary of a non-secular state apparatus and it should remain so also in the future is the general opinion being whispered within the ranks of Mannaar Diocese, the sources further said. Sections of Tamil Catholic priests in Mannaar have already sensed the heat in Sinhala establishment in Colombo and advocate caution without much public attention, informed sources in Mannaar told TamilNet. The sinister move is based on the advice coming from the Sinhala Theravada Buddhist establishment, which wants to assert a mythical ‘Pathini Deiyo’ legacy in the next phase through the ‘Anuradhapura’ perception of so-called Sinhala heritage. ![]() SL President Maithiripala Sirisena and a section of Sinhala Catholics in Colombo are pushing to demarcate the Madu area, where Our Lady of Madu shrine is located. Sirisena brings ‘sacred area’ deception to subvert Madu Shrine into ‘Anuradhapura’ paradigm ![]()
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