It is with great sadness that I heard of the death
of Professor Eliezer on 10.3.2001.
I have known him for exactly half a century. In
1951 I entered the Science Faculty in Colombo to
do a degree in Zoology. Eliezer had just returned
after a distinguished career in Cambridge,
England, to take up the Chair of Mathematics. He
was in his 30's, the youngest person to be ever
appointed to a Chair in that University. It says
something of his prestige and ability. Eliezer
was probably the biggest "catch" of the University
of Ceylon, as it then was. I came into contact
with him in the activities of the Student
Christian Movement of which he was a strong
supporter.
Some three years later I entered Cambridge
University to do Medicine. As a young 'Fresher' I
was invited to meet the Vice-Chancellor for a
'Welcome tea'. "And where do you come from, young
man?" I said "Ceylon". "Ah", he exclaimed,
"that's where Eliezer came from". I told him that
the comparison must end right there to avoid
disappointment! I said that Eliezer was in a
different league and that it was like comparing
Frank Worrel with the local village cricket
captain because they both came from the same
country. Many years later when I wrote a booklet
on the 1983 Massacre of Tamils, he offered to
write the Foreword. I was delighted and honoured,
not that what he said about me was true!
We met again, in New York in the mid 1980's. It
was, I think, the 4th Eelam Conference which I was
invited to address. Eliezer was in the chair at
that massive gathering of Tamils, non-Sri Lankans
and the saner members of my community, the
Sinhalese.
After the meeting we decided to do a world tour to
explain to the uninformed what the current
struggle was all about. He was delighted to have
a Sinhalese with him, I was elated to have someone
of Eliezer's calibre supporting me. Since then we
have been in close contact despite the distance
that separated us in this vast country.
A couple of months ago I was invited to address a
meeting in Melbourne to deal with some
irresponsible journalistic crap on the Tamil
Tigers that had been aired on Australian TV. I
knew Eliezer was unwell and never expected to see
him at that lengthy meeting. I had just sat down
when Eliezer appeared and sat in the next seat.
He invited me home the next day and we spent some
two hours chatting. He said, "One question that
has always puzzled me is why you did not enter
politics". I said that too many of my family had
done so and been responsible for creating the
present mess. His response, "That is just the
reason why you should have helped to sort out the
mess!"
The Tamils, the saner Sinhalese and all lovers of
Sri Lanka have lost a great figure. Although in
the past few years he has been too frail to play
an active role, his sheer presence and support
were enough to sustain those of us who have been
in the struggle to enable Tamils in Sri Lanka to
live with dignity, equality and safety in the
country of their birth. Eliezer will be missed.
It is said that no one is irreplaceable.
I don't believe this. Bishop Lakshman
Wickremasinghe, Bishop Leo Nanayakkaraya, Vijaya
Kumaratunge and now, Professor Eliezer, are
irreplaceable. There can be no fitting memorial
to him than to carry forward the struggle to free
the Tamil people from domination by a Sinhalese
Government and Sinhalese extremists, both in Sri
Lanka and abroad, hell-bent on crushing, not the
LTTE, but the Tamil people in the North and East
of Sri Lanka.
Brian Senewiratne Brisbane,
Australia
(Saturday, March 10, 2001)
Courtesy : TamilCanadian.com