Sinhalisation is a term that has number of meanings in Sri Lanka. Etymologically it is derived from Sinhala.
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From a sociological point of view it could mean the assimilation of ethno cultural minorities in Sri Lanka such as the Sri Lankan Tamils, Colombo Chetties and indigenous Veddas into the majority Sinhalese identity. [1]
It is specially noted with respect to Sinhalese speaking Catholics of the coastal areas of the island nation.[2]
Many noted elite elite[›] families were supposedly Sinhalised during the pre colonial period from foreign origins. [3] (see abstract here)
From a political point of view it could mean the Sinhala language favouring policies PS[›]of the post colonial governments of Sri Lanka that is considered to be a major cause [4] of the current Sri Lankan civil war. It is termed as culturo-ideological exclusivism by some which is a sense in which one's cultural values and norms are absolutised in such a manner that a particular way of life is enshrined as superior to all others and must therefore be adopted by others (e.g. the Tamil reaction to the perceived "Sinhalisation" processes of the Sri Lankan state)[5]
It was said to be triggering cause of the abortive coup by disgruntled Catholic army officers in 1962. [6]
Currently some observers note that Sri Lankan political parties such as JHU and JVP adhere to a policy of political Sinhalisation process. [7]
^ elite: The late President J. R. Jayawardene's first paternal ancestor was a Colombo Chetty and there is an excerpt from the biography of J.R. authored by Prof. K.M. De Silva & Howard Wriggins, in support of this. Don Adrian Jayawardene, J.R.'s paternal great-grandfather, descended from a Chetty family, but two or three generations earlier, a male of this family had married a Sinhalese by the name of Jayawardene from the village of Walgama near Hanwella and had taken on the name of Jayewardene and by the time Don Adrian arrived on the scene at the tail-end of the 18th century, the process of 'Sinhalisation' of his family had been completed.[1]
^ PS: Sri Lanka’s nation-building programme became intimately linked with a Sinhalisation of the state directive. It was expected that the minorities would be assimilated into this new Sinhalese Buddhist nation-state. Moreover, the 1956 election marked the beginning of an era of ethnically-based party politics. [2]