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Commemoration of the first anniversary of the death of Raveenthiranathan Senthil Ravee held in Paris

World Socialist Web Site www.wsws.org

Commemoration of the first anniversary of the death of Raveenthiranathan
Senthil Ravee held in Paris.
By our reporter
3 March 2008

A gathering was held on February 24 in La Courneuve, in the
north Paris suburbs, to mark the first anniversary of the death
of Raveenthiranathan Senthil Ravee (Senthil), a member of the
International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI). He
was killed in a car accident in the early hours of February 28,
2007 on the London-bound M20 motorway. Born on October 12, 1969,
in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, Senthil belonged to a generation that paid
a heavy price for the betrayal of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party
(LSSP), which took the liquidationist politics of Pabloite revisionism
to its logical conclusion and joined the capitalist government
of Madam Bandaranaike’s Sri Lankan Freedom Party in 1964.

Some 150 family members, friends and comrades, from France
and also travelling from Germany, England and Switzerland, took
part in the memorial gathering, accompanying Senthil’s father
Arumugam Raveenthiranathan, his mother Raveenthiranathan Rasamma,
his wife Anparasi and their children Turphin, Ajann and Leon and
his elder sister Mrs Ratnaraja Karunathevi.

Those attending spanned three generations, but the majority
were in their 20s and 30s.

Although it was a family occasion, those who attended supported
the political struggle Senthil had carried out. The problems of
the life of an émigré refugee diaspora, driven from
its homeland by civil war and persecution, had made it difficult
for people to have full knowledge of Senthil’s contribution
to the struggle to give an orientation to his people and to integrate
them into the world movement of opposition to the ravages of imperialism.
In discussion with them during the occasion, it was evident that
they came because they wanted to better understand it and know
more about what he fought for.

Letters of greetings from Chris Marsden, secretary of the British
Socialist Equality Party, and Peter Schwarz, secretary of the
ICFI, were read out. They expressed sympathies for the pain caused
to the family, friends and comrades on the tragic death of one
so young.

Chris Marsden, emphasising that “we in Britain cherish
as our own” Senthil’s wife and children, wrote: “Senthil
was a substantial figure—someone who exuded a quiet confidence
and authority. This was because he was moved by deeply-held convictions—convictions
that were the product of his own bitter experiences with the nationalist
movement in Sri-Lanka and the political education he received
on this basis by the Trotskyist movement.

“He was amongst the first of a generation of young Tamils
that today are leading the struggle for socialist internationalism
and the unity of the world’s workers—in Sri Lanka itself,
in the Indian sub-Continent and amongst the émigré
population in Europe.

Moreover, as has become ever clearer, his role in developing
a cadre largely recruited from those forced into exile as a result
of the terrible tragedy inflicted upon the Tamil masses continues
to have a powerful impact on the development of the International
Committee and its influence in the French, British and German
working class.

“That is something for which Senthil will continue to
be honoured and for which not only his comrades, but all who knew
him should share a sense of pride. There are people with you today
who owe Senthil a great deal, for whom he was both a fellow fighter
and a political mentor. He was proud of them, just as we are so
very proud of him.”

Peter Schwarz wrote: “One year after Senthil’s death
it is still hard to grasp that we have lost him. He was working
with us for 15 years, always present, reliable and determined.

“Senthil’s life had a meaning, because he was fighting
for an aim. He was deeply convinced that there can be a better
future for mankind, if the working class overcomes national divisions
and unites in a common international struggle for socialism. He
was a convinced socialist and internationalist.” He said
that “Senthil’s name will always be remembered and cherished
by the International Committee.”

There were addresses from comrades, friends and family members
paying tribute to Senthil and making an assessment of the significance
and relevance of his life. Amuthan, chief editor of the Tamil
page of the WSWS, presiding over the occasion, said in his opening
remarks: “To honour Senthil is to carry forward the importance
and correctness of his perspective for which he fought among the
world working class.”

Amuthan stressed: “If one were to understand Senthil’s
life, experience and the political situation he was facing, we
should view the events in Sri Lanka not from a nationalist point
but from an internationalist standpoint. The internal political
developments in Sri Lanka were shaped by the changes in world
imperialist centres and changes in Stalinist bureaucratic centres:
certainly they were not the outcome of the subjective personal
likes and dislikes of local leaders. The Sinhala and Tamil leaders
are no exception to this.”

He recalled that “when Senthil came towards our movement
over a decade ago, the questions he raised were so important for
the working class, peasants and oppressed masses in the former
colonies: How to bring about peace in Sri Lanka permanently?,
How to stop war?, Why has it not been possible for Sinhalese-Tamil
working class to come together and fight for their rights without
nationalist, racist divisions?, What is our perspective with reference
to national liberation struggles?, Why did Soviet Union come to
this tragic end?, etc.

“Senthil was not one to accept anything easily. For over
three years we had discussions over these issues.

“He came to the firm conclusion that the struggle to resolve
the unresolved problems of the democratic rights of Tamil people
is inseparably linked with the struggle for uniting the working
class in the Indian sub-continent in the struggle for socialism
and that as a part of this the Tamil and Sinhalese working-class
and oppressed people must be united in a common struggle against
their own native bourgeoisie and their imperialist masters.

“Our task to defend the Tamil people against the oppression
of the Sri Lankan bourgeoisie never depends upon the programmes
and policies of national liberation movements. The task of our
perspective is not to form separate petty nation states for each
nationality. On the contrary, our perspective has been to unite,
independently of their national bourgeoisies, workers and students
worldwide to overthrow the outdated capitalist nation-state system.”

Amuthan concluded: “It is for this historical responsibility
that Senthil had dedicated himself. He will be remembered forever
as the fighter who fought for a socialist, international perspective.”

Stephane Hugues, speaking for the ICFI in France, gave an account
of the fifteen years of his work with Senthil: “I first met
Senthil in the spring of 1992 in a small park by the boulevard
Sebastopol in Paris. Senthil had been through the Indo-Sri Lanka
accord and the betrayal of the Tamil national movements. He understood
that the bourgeois nationalist movement was bankrupt, but he did
not know why.

“In discussing with the ICFI, he began to understand the
historical questions and he turned to the program of Trotskyism.
At the centre of this perspective was the theory of the permanent
revolution which Trotsky developed in 1905/6 reviewing the 100
years of history since the French Revolution. The theory acknowledged
that the bourgeoisie had been a revolutionary class and had led
the English and then the French revolutions. Trotsky was able
to show that since then, in the revolutions in France in 1830,
throughout Europe in 1848, and the Paris Commune of 1871, the
role of the bourgeoisie had changed profoundly. From a revolutionary
class that led national revolutions they had become the exploiters
and oppressors of the working class and peasantry. The bourgeoisie
now defended the status quo rather than fighting for democracy
and rights for all.

“Trotsky, basing himself on Marx, understood capitalism
as a global system. The theory of the permanent revolution considered
the role of the bourgeoisie on a global basis. In both backward
and advanced countries the bourgeoisie was incapable of fighting
for the toiling masses. Thus, in Russia the bourgeoisie was impotent
and incapable of leading its own bourgeois revolution. Only the
working class, fighting on the basis of a socialist and internationalist
program, could lead anti-feudal and anti-colonial struggles even
if it was a small minority as in Sri Lanka.

“Today, democracy and well-being can only be achieved
on a global level.

“Once Senthil understood this, the crisis of bourgeois
nationalism became much clearer. The LTTE was incapable of addressing
these issues. It was too concerned about its relationship with
the Indian, the European and the US bourgeoisies. The LTTE served
the selfish interests of the Tamil bourgeoisie just as Rajapakse’s
Sri Lankan government served the interests of the Sinhala bourgeoisie.

“Now, even the most radical and once respected nationalist
movements, such as the PLO, are discredited. The question of political
perspectives was essential. Senthil grasped this. He understood
that the only viable perspective was one based on the international
working class and the fight to overthrow the whole system: capitalism
was at the end of the road and was historically bankrupt. Only
the working class can break the stranglehold of the whole capitalist
system on the world’s population.

“To do this, the working class must be conscious of this
historical necessity: that is the role of our party and the WSWS.
I’m saying this because that is what he would want us to
understand. If he had been here today, Senthil would have been
telling you this. Thus, the meeting in the little park in 1992
was the most important in his life.”

Athiyan, a leading member of the ICFI in the Tamil community
in France, told the gathering that to honour Senthil’s memory
they were publishing a book detailing his life. He stressed that
“In this era of integrated globalized economy, he understood
scientifically that a true liberation of oppressed Tamil people
in Sri Lanka would not be possible by forming a small Tamil state.
Senthil’s answer was that there was a revolutionary perspective:
that is none other than the perspective of the International Committee
of the Fourth International.”

Athiyan posed the question: “What do the aggressions on
Afghanistan and Iraq and threat to Iran by American Imperialism
teach us? It makes the whole of humanity confront the next great
disaster for mankind.In this imperialist epoch the solution for
this crisis lies in the development of the political consciousness
of the world working class and the building of its own party.To
continue its exploitation capitalism has divided the working class
through race, religion, caste, colour and other differences and
has subjected them within national boundaries.”

“Senthil understood, in particular, that the perspective
of Tamil nationalism was just a trap for Tamil people and was
firm on the need to develop a perspective for the people of the
Indian subcontinent. So long as the Indian and other world imperialist
powers which support the racist government in Sri Lanka are not
overthrown, there will be no liberation of oppressed people in
Sri Lanka. It is in this struggle that Senthil stands tall as
an internationalist.”

Chezhian, a close friend and comrade of Senthil, and who had
been with him when he was killed, told the gathering: “When
myself and Senthil moved towards the Marxist movement, the problem
that confronted us was to find out the causes for the collapse
of Soviet Union, the bankruptcy of Tamil nationalist movements
in Sri Lanka. Also we had a question on what basis the true liberation
of the oppressed people could be attained. When we got the clarity
in these questions, we joined the ICFI.”

Chezhian recalled “Till the last minute Senthil was constantly
thinking about the future of mankind. He was deeply committed
to his convictions. He fondly remembered those who shaped him.
Till our vehicle met with an accident, he was talking about how
to build our party in the Indian sub-continent. He will live with
us through every one of our successes.”

Senthil’s cousin, acknowledging the grief of his comrades
in struggle, asked “How can I, who knew him from his very
childhood, forget him? I knew him when his mother was carrying
him. From his childhood he was very honest. He always listened
patiently. His demise was a great loss.” She put great value
on the Tamil cultural heritage and pointed out that “History
records that Sri Lanka got separated from India about 6,000 years
ago. Similarly Tamil is a very old language. It is said that once
it was spoken up to the Himalayas. It has been a spoken language
for 50,000 years and a written language for 3,000 years.”

She said “To survive as a person one must help others;
that is socialism.” She proposed “We should create a
trust to protect his wife and children.”

Kanda said that he had had a strong friendship with Senthil
for over 20 years. Senthil was in opposition to the immense inequality
in the world: “In 1997 the richest one fifth of the world’s
population received 86 percent of world income, with the poorest
fifth receiving just 1.3 percent. More than 1.3 billion people
are forced to subsist on less than $1 per day—a life-threatening
situation.” In order to solve this crisis Senthil “was
very much convinced by the perspective of permanent revolution.
So he fought for the world socialist revolution which is the only
solution for the working class to free itself from the sufferings
of social polarization existing on a world scale. So he proudly
joined in the ICFI and fought for the world socialist perspective.”

The addresses were followed by a meal, and in discussions there
was a lively interest in the theory of permanent revolution. People
were particularly in agreement with Stephane Hugues’s observation
that the LTTE leadership represented the selfish interests of
the Tamil bourgeoisie and the Rajapakse government those of a
tiny privileged Sinhala elite and not those of the mass of the
Sri Lankan people.

Talking with Senthil’s father, after the ceremony, he
said that he was not politically involved. He had always encouraged
Senthil to read. He himself had started to read some of Senthil’s
books. He said that there were many religions: Hindu, Muslim,
Christian, but it was necessary to meditate and bring out what
was scientific in them. He thought that the Fourth International
was very important.

He had been the principal of a school and is now retired. He
had not known about Trotskyism: if he had he would not have let
his students go to the nationalists, but he had not been aware
that there was an alternative.

There was a situation of civil war in the north of Sri Lanka
but he thought that it was essential that the people there should
have contact with the outside world. For this we had to find a
way of bringing the WSWS into the civilian population and translate
it into all languages for people all over the world.

The memorial gathering had really showed who Senthil was, he
said. Senthil’s father reads the WSWS all the time and has
already read the first two chapters of Trotsky’s “Third
International after Lenin” which has been translated for
the first time into Tamil by the Tamil WSWS editorial board to
coincide with the 20th anniversary of the death of Keerthi Balasuriya.
This has made him very proud of his son’s achievements. He
said that he would prepare a report on Senthil’s development
for the fifth anniversary of his death.

In discussion, Amuthan pointed out that the people at the gathering
had experienced 25 years of deaths in their families and communities.
News has just come in that a comrade from the Sri Lankan SEP has
lost 8 members of his family due to an indiscriminate bombing
raid carried out by the Sri Lankan air force in LTTE-held territory.

However, they recognised that the death of Senthil was a particular
tragedy and loss because of the struggle that he had been carrying
out. Many said that they would be attending the March 16 meeting
in Paris commemorating the 20th anniversary of Keerthi Balasuriya’s
death.

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1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
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Comments

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