Official Language Act | |
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Parliament of Ceylon | |
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Citation | No. 33 of 1956 |
Territorial extent | Ceylon |
Enacted by | Parliament of Ceylon |
Commenced | 7 July 1956 |
Amended by | |
Tamil Language (Special Provisions) Act (No. 28 of 1958) | |
Related legislation | |
Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka |
Part of a series on |
Sri Lankan Tamils |
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The Official Language Act (No. 33 of 1956), commonly referred to as the Sinhala Only Act, was an act passed in the Parliament of Ceylon in 1956.[1] The act replaced English with Sinhala as the sole official language of Ceylon, with the exclusion of Tamil from the act.
At the time, Sinhala (also known as Sinhalese) was the language of Ceylon's majority Sinhalese people, who accounted for around 70% of the country's population.[2] Tamil was the first language of Ceylon's three largest minority ethnic groups, the Indian Tamils, Sri Lankan Tamils and Moors, who together accounted for around 29% of the country's population.[2]
The act was controversial as supporters of the act saw it as an attempt by a community that had just gained independence to distance themselves from their colonial masters, while its opponents viewed it as an attempt by the linguistic majority to oppress and assert dominance on minorities. The Act symbolizes the post independent Sinhalese majority's determination to assert Ceylon's identity as a Sinhala Buddhist nation state, and for Tamils, it became a symbol of minority oppression and a justification for them to demand a separate nation-state, Tamil Eelam, which was a factor in the emergence of the decades-long Sri Lankan Civil War.[3]