“…However, it was the historically and demographically dominant Bamars that took control of the state after independence, and the Karens became engulfed in a decades‐long civil war against the Bamar‐dominated state. In Ceylon, the Tamils were for a long time a privileged ethnic group both in terms of participation in the colonial administration and socioeconomic capital and, despite the rising power of the Sinhalese in the decades closer to independence, retained a high level of political and economic capital (de Silva et al, 2019; Gunasekara, 2016). The history of political, economic, and educational empowerment under colonial rule notwithstanding, Sri Lankan Tamils became politically marginalised shortly after independence amidst the rapid rise of Sinhalese majoritarian politics in early 1950s (Aruliah & Aruliah, 1993).…”