Saluting the Leader and Architect
of a New Tamil Nation
Prof. Dr. S. J. Emmanuel
26 November 2004
"...The liberation struggle
of the Tamils in Sri Lanka, as unfolded during the last
fifty five years through various phases and fronts, has
enriched the meaning of liberation as understood by a
people as well as help identify the evil forces
of oppression against which they have to struggle.
It has also made clear the price a people have to pay
for their liberation in terms of lives and property as
well as identify the destructive resources of the
oppressive states and governments. These truths have
been learnt once and for all and embedded in the memory
of the Tamil nation. Pirabaharan is not only the
present national leader standing up for his people
against oppressors and challengers, but also the
unforgettable architect of a leadership that
established the Tamils of Thamil Eelam as a nation with
self-respect and self-dignity. We all salute
him..."
[see also see also புதிய
தமிழ்
தேசத்தை
நிர்மாணித்து
வழிநடத்தும்
தலைவரை
தமிழினம்
பெருமையுடன்
வாழ்த்துகின்றது
-
பேராசிரியர்
கலாநிதி
பணி. எஸ்.
ஜே.
இம்மானுவேல்
and
and For Pirabhakaran, Future Begins at
Fifty; a birthday greeting from Sachi Sri
Kantha]]
1. Pirabaharan - A Hope For the Tamils and A
Challenge for the rest
Tamils of Sri Lanka, living in Thamil Eelam and across
the continents, are honouring a man at his 50th. Birthday
on 26.11.2004, because he has become the challenging
response to their agonies in the hands of the Sinhala
oppressive powers as well as their true liberator. While
rising up like a giant against all the forces of Sinhala
political and military oppressions, he is not only a
formidable challenge to the immediate oppressors but also
a stumbling block to the self-interest and hidden agenda
of the mighty who are aiding and abetting this
oppression. The type of military power he has built in
defence of his people and land, the type of
infra-structures he has already initiated to sustain his
people, the type of unity he has shaped between the armed
and the political leaderships, the global solidarity of
Tamils he has forged, - they all speak eloquently of the
force of leadership personified in this man. Hence the
liberation that he leads and the leadership that he
wields are unique in many ways and write new chapters in
the history of liberation and leadership in the world
2. Sinhala oppressions of the Pre-Pirabaharan
times
He was born in a Tamil society already internal slaveries
like caste system, regionalism and an undue craving for
dowries, for academic qualifications and for immovable
properties. Already on the eve of Independence, and many
years before his birth, had the Tamil leaders smelt the
hidden agenda of the Sinhala leaders to seize total power
from the British and make Ceylon an exclusively Sinhala
Buddhist State. But these Tamil leaders by their
background, education and culture had neither the
backbone nor the people's power to cry foul and oppose
independence. They fell victims to the mischievous plans
and pleadings of the Singhalese and entrusted the future
of the Tamils into the goodness of the Singhalese.
Quick on the heals of the British departure, the
Ceylonese Government went into operating its hidden
agenda of exclusive Sinhala domination - denying
citizenship rights to Tamils of Indian origin,
state-aided colonisation of traditional Tamil homelands
and making Sinhala as the official language of the
country discriminating the Tamils in all aspects of
education and employment and development. The Tamil
leaders, who visited their constituencies in the
Northeast mostly at election times were taken aback by
the speed of changes and their protests both within and
without the parliament failed and fizzled. Sinhala
Mob-terror and State-terror made the Tamils run for
safety and survival, not one could stand up to that
state-aided terror.
Educated and refined democratic leaders of the Tamils
panicked. The world did neither condemn nor protest the
actions of a "democratic" government and its forces.
Pirabaharan was yet unborn and there was no militant
opposition to the rowdyism of the Ceylonese State!
3. Born and bred amidst Sinhala brutalities
The post-independence Ceylon with its mob and
state-terror, with its cruelties of burning Tamils, their
properties and their treasured Public Library, with
raping of Tamil women and destruction of Tamil cultural
symbols, that was the context and cradle for the birth
and growth of young Pirabaharan. His eyes and ears and
heart were wide open to the agonizing cries of his
people. He grew with a passion for freedom and a
determined will to lead his people. Yet he waited for his
day, calculated his move and charted out his plan -
though painful and shocking to many, yet a beginning had
to be made to call off the Sinhala Buddhist brutality to
a halt. Tamils had sent the message: enough is enough.
And the Sinhala South had woken up to this alarm
signal!
4. He stands up as a unique leader for his
people
After three decades of his determined struggle, he has
gradually won the love and respect of his people the high
and the low, the poor and the educated. Even the cautious
critics are converging in praise for his leadership.
Though the local enemies shudder at his name and label
him with the worst of names, he had won the attention of
world leaders in a unique manner, as one who can change
the destiny of a country and its people. He never bent
backwards nor stoop to traditional ways nor connive with
the powers that be. He relentlessly stood for the
declared cause of his people against the power of the
mighty.
Initiating new and alternative ways to restructure a
liberating people he has become a challenge to the
hypocritical and fallacious ways in much of our
socio-political thinking.
Hence for a better understanding and appreciation of his
unique personality and leadership, one has to at least
scan through the political climate and context of his
times, the multi-facetted struggle the Tamils went
through, the Sinhala-failures which necessitated his
unique leadership and the relevant structures he has
built for his people.
5. Tamils pushed to seek an alternative
Leadership
Many decades of frustrating experiences within the
Sinhala majoritarian democracy that legalized anti-Tamil
discriminations and used its Armed forces with impunity
to suppress and terrorise all democratic opposition of
Tamils paved the way for the emergence of new leadership
that is both political and militant vis a vis an
oppressive State.
For the Sinhala masses and its leadership, which were
beset with paranoid fantasies of a Tamil domination
potentially backed by Tamil Nadu, even the very basic
demands of the Tamils to live as equal citizens with
dignity on that island were interpreted as counter to
their "national interests" namely, their Sinhala-Buddhist
nationalism. Any claim for Tamil birth-rights with regard
to religion, language, culture and land was interpreted
as anti-Buddhist, anti-Sinhala and anti-national and
leading to separation or independence or division of the
island. Consequently the Sinhala majority, motivated by
Sinhala Buddhist national interests, used their full
power and over-reacted with extreme measures of
bulldozing the parliament with anti-Tamil laws and used
the Sinhala Armed forces to put down all democratic
protests with brutal force.
When non-violent and democratic protests of Tamils were
met with more inhuman laws and escalating brutal force,
it was natural that the patience of the Tamil people was
pushed by humiliation to its limits and the anger of the
Tamil youth grew into seeking a militant response to the
state-terror. It was this situation of legalised
discrimination and oppression of the Tamils in general,
and of the Tamil youth in particular, without any hope of
a future with respect to their education and employment,
which pushed the youth to wrest the leadership from their
own "moderate fathers" and establish a politico-militant
leadership.
6. Misunderstandings about the new leadership
Now many doubts and questions are being raised about this
new leadership, which the Sinhala people and their
leadership indirectly helped to emerge.
An ignorance about the genesis and the causes for this
new Tamil leadership raises many questions and make it
difficult for the majority Singhalese and its Government
to relate to, talk and handle with this new leadership.
There are many, Singhalese and even some Tamils, who
think that this leadership has to be militarily defeated,
if not destroyed, and the Tamils 'liberated' from this
militant leadership. The Sinhala Governments have also
tried hard, even using under-hand methods, to get an
alternative to this Tamil leadership. The Government,
side-stepping this leadership, offered attractive
enticements to win over some Tamil Members of Parliament
who will slavishly support them and with whom they can
comfortably "do business" as in the past. Such Members
were often "labeled and exhibited" by the government as
the democratic and moderate forces from among the Tamils.
Irrespective of the negligible or no support they had
among the Tamils, they were provided with plenty of
money, ministerial posts and other privileges and used
"as mercenaries and show-cases of moderate Tamil opinion"
by the government. A non-Tamil-speaking man with only a
Tamil name was hired to be Foreign Minister to lead a
mischievous propaganda tarnishing the image of all Tamils
and their militant leadership. But the majority of Tamils
have rejected them as betrayers of the Tamil cause.
History will judge them.
Hence the majority Singhalese and their government, if
they want a realistic peaceful solution to the conflict
and war, must make an effort to understand the Tamil
leadership, as a new and alternative leadership, without
attempting to destroy it. In the process of searching and
reaching a true democratic solution, this Tamil
leadership will abide more and more by the genuine
categories of democracy and human rights. And in the same
time and by the same process, the Sinhala leadership will
hopefully be liberated from their corrupt democracy, mass
and blatant violation of the human rights of a people and
desist from rowdyism inside and outside parliament.
7. Corrupt democracies demand alternative
leadership
Many of the difficulties the so called democrats have in
understanding the new Tamil leadership are also due to
their limited understanding of democracy and leadership.
By their education and upbringing they are enslaved in
their own pro-western and colonial ways of thinking. They
tend to make absolute their own forms of
parliamentary-democracy as the one and only form of
democracy. They have no considerations for the corruption
and the injustices happening within those democracies.
Democracy all agree is the best form of government we
have at the present time. But the different ways in which
this democracy is practiced leave much room for
corruptions and injustices. Some of them have produced
the worst of dictators. Those who were brought up in the
western schools of thought often overlook the
post-colonial developments and the new problems in the
third world. They read everything through their
traditional categories of thought and arrogantly pass
judgments from their home ground about distant events and
realities. Hence a genuine effort is needed by all those
who wish to understand, accept and handle with
leaderships emerging as a result of corruption within
democracies and failed-states.
The Sinhala majoritarian democracy, left behind by the
British, has been changing the constitution often to suit
only the majority at the expense of the minorities. It
has failed to solve the ethnic problem within its
parliament for the last fifty years. It has tried to
solve a political problem by resorting to state-terrorism
and reckless war against its own people. Thus it
qualifies itself for a failed-state. And it is in this
climate of a lack of true democracy and sincere
leadership that an alternative leadership of the Tamils
emerged.
8. Humiliation and Rejection of Tamil MPs
The art of governing has not been an exclusive privilege
of the elite and the college-educated. In fact such men
have made some of the worst blunders in history. In our
own history and in our long experience of the struggle,
we Tamils have painfully learnt of some educated elites
who have betrayed the Tamil cause for their own personal
profits.
Besides even the good Tamil leaders have undergone
humiliation and frustration within the Sinhala democracy.
The post-colonial leadership fostered by the British
period of education and parliamentary system brought out
highly qualified and internationally recognized Tamils,
mostly based in Colombo and representing the Tamils of
the Northeast. The least qualified of those could only be
a lawyer. With clarity and eloquence they expressed and
argued for the rights of the Tamils, but they were either
ignored or heckled down to their seats by Sinhala
extremists. Thus there was no purpose served in sending
enlightened Tamil Members to the Parliament in Colombo.
Even today one can see the bad behaviour of elected
Sinhala MPs within Parliament.
The present generation of Tamil youth who have taken up
the leadership are promising because they have had bitter
experiences of the earlier leadership. Let us not rush to
make biased judgments about their style and competence at
governance. We welcome the so called educated arm-chair
critics from the South to look beyond their newspapers
and see how well the LTTE, even in the absence of basic
facilities, is running a de facto government in
Wanni.
9. Leadership emerging against State
Rejections
Those in the South who refer to the LTTE as a rebel-child
of the Northeast, forget their own contribution to the
emergence of such a leadership. Who fathered such a
leadership? Much more than the politics of the Tamil
Congress or the Federal Party, or the combined TULF, it
was the adamant and arrogant attitudes of the successive
Sinhala governments and the oppressive and violent
actions of its Forces. These demanded a new leadership
from the Tamils to face the Sinhala army of occupation as
well as to articulate forcefully Tamil aspirations.
The Tamils were well known for their hard work,
intelligence, obedience and non-violence. Even in the
face of repeated Sinhala mob and state violence, they did
not give up their non-violent satyagrahas as taught by
Mahatma Gandhi. But such non-violent and parliamentary
protests were treated by the Singhalese as weakness and
more violence was heaped on the Tamils for many decades.
When Sinhala discriminations degenerated into violence,
death and destruction and even taking away their
education and culture of which they were very proud of (
standardization and burning of the Public Library) the
Tamil youth could not accept any more the Sinhala
violence. They were driven against the wall without a
future education, employment and culture to live by. They
retaliated to protect the land, the people and their
heritage from State-terror.
An oppressed people have the right to strike back at the
oppressor with all their might and with whatever means in
their disposal. The oppressor has no right to dictate or
lay down rules as to how the fallen victim must react.
Hence the actions of the emergent leadership in its
beginnings resorting to all possible means - bank
robberies and stealing of weapons - should be understood
as helpless victims resorting to counter-terrorism
against a state-terrorism.The people of the Northeast
were never a chaotic mass without direction, purpose and
determination. They are not devoid of a consensus in
ideology and suffering. Their long suffering against
injustices has bound them together as a people with
strong determination and stamina to stand up and face the
forces of oppression. The personification of this
determination born out of long suffering to face the
enemy is the new leadership of the Tamils in the
Northeast.
10. A Leadership consistent in their
Aspirations
Whether one likes it or not the de facto situation is
that the LTTE has emerged to leadership, admittedly not
through the parliamentary elections the South is familiar
with, but through an armed struggle against betrayers
among its own people and oppressive forces of the state.
It has established itself,
(i) As the only group which has consistently articulated
and still articulates
the genuine aspirations of the Tamils in the
Northeast,
(ii) As the only organization protecting the People
against the artillery shelling and the aerial bombings
carried out by the State.
(iii) As the only group that has sacrificed so many
thousands of its cadres
for the noble Cause of Tamil freedom
(iv) As the only group that has set up the
infra-structures (police, courts,
education, transport etc.) of governance for human life
to continue
against all odds
And
(v) As the only group that has been acknowledged even by
the elected Tamil Parliamentarians as "the sole
representatives of the Tamil people"
After a long history of Tamil attempts, marked by
suffering and deaths at the hands of Sinhala thugs and
soldiers, and after so many agreements and pacts were
unilaterally torn up by the Sinhala Governments, after a
series of deceptions and broken promises, the Tamils have
at last helped emerge a form of leadership that the
Sinhala Majority and its Government are finding difficult
to deal with, if not buy or win over. Until recently the
Sinhala Governments either bought over the Tamil
leadership with some ministerial privileges, or pacts and
promises unfulfilled or kept them watering in their mouth
and clinging to their feet with a promise of sharing
power in the future. But that is no more possible with
the present leadership.
Neither heavy loss of lives, nor military defeats, nor
mounting criticism about its moral conduct, nor
international threats from major powers, nor the
temptations of power from the Sinhala government could
wean away this Tamil leadership from its aspirations and
commitments. Sinhala Governments have changed and their
leaders have adopted varying tactics and offers, but the
LTTE leadership has stood firm on its ground for its
ideals and commitments.
The convictions, consistency and firmness in aspiring for
those goals do not
mean that they are closed for negotiation, dialogue and
arriving at a just and reasonable peaceful solution to
the conflict. No. Not at all.
11. A principled Tamil Leadership
It is the long and frustrating experience of the Tamils
that many things promised, agreed upon and even gazetted
by the Government were not implemented by the army or the
bureaucrats in Colombo. The Sinhala leadership when
subjected to the slightest opposition from extremists,
has abrogated pacts or gone back on agreements. A Sinhala
leadership whose promises are again subject to the
protest marches and shouts of a few extremist elements,
is not a leadership that can handle agreements on behalf
of people. And on the Tamil side too we have had leaders
who lightly gave into the temptations of power and
privileges and finally got nowhere. Hence this new Tamil
leadership, conscious of the failures of the Sinhala and
Tamil leaderships, is determined to have a principled way
of action and do business with the Sinhala regime, not
only for their own people but also for the good of the
whole country.
The Singhalese governments tend to accuse the LTTE of
having betrayed their trust and gone back to its warpath.
They say that the LTTE must be exterminated or weakened
before any meaningful action is taken for the good of the
Tamil people. This argument of the Sinhala leadership
only shows that they are forgetting their long history of
failures by going back on their word. Such arguments only
exhibits their helplessness to do business with a
principled and determined Tamil leadership.
12. A politico-military Leadership with a
parliamentary wing
The Governments, during the first three decades of the
ethnic conflict used their Armed forces to put down
democratic Tamil opposition in the Northeast. Later the
same Army was empowered by the notorious Prevention of
Terrorism Act to act against Tamil militancy with
impunity, thus increasing the role of the Army in the
ethnic conflict. At present no real political solution
can be found without the government heavily depending on
the Armed forces. Tamils know by their own experience how
the Army personnel have their own agenda and disagree
with their own government. They react even against
gazetted government decisions e.g. lifting the economic
embargoes against the Tamils in 1995. This power conflict
between the government and its armed forces will remain a
hindrance in arriving at any true and stable solution.
Against this situation, the politics and the military
force of the Tamils are harmonized as one
politico-military leadership of the LTTE, with a
parliamentary wing in the Tamil National alliance
(TNA).
13. A Leadership undeterred by false propaganda of the
Government
The Government of Chandrika was bending backwards to
justify its "war for peace" against the Tamils.
International propaganda was intensified by her Foreign
Minister to get the Tamil expatriate organizations banned
as "front organizations of the LTTE". Slogans like "Let's
have a war as a way to Peace", "Let's liberate the Tamils
of Jaffna from the terrorist activities of the LTTE", "We
wanted Peace, but the LTTE asked for war'', "Our War is
against the LTTE and not against the Tamils'' - such
false statements were used lavishly even by the Sri
Lankan embassies to demonize and tarnish the good name of
the Tamils and their struggle. But such malicious
propaganda never weakened the Tamil Leadership nor
lessened their commitment to the struggle. On the
contrary, the Tamil leadership survived all these false
propaganda and the Tamils of Tamil Eelam have grown in
their togetherness, sympathy and solidarity. And LTTE
have reached the status of being accepted, even by other
elected representatives of the people, "as the sole
representatives of the Tamil people"
14. A Leadership not gloating in mere military
victory
An adamant and prolonged refusal on the part of the
Sinhala majority and its successive Governments to accept
the true situation about the Tamils in the Northeast and
their contemptuous disregard for the LTTE leadership have
resulted in Government's desperate option for escalating
war. Though leaders like President Premadasa have told
the Singhalese people repeatedly that there is no victor
in this war, yet the people without counting the loss of
life and property, cry out for a war-victory that will
quench their thirst for power. The majority are so
excited, angered and affected by certain setbacks in the
war that they think only of war-victories to wipe out the
LTTE and keep up their pride.
The shameful defeat of the government forces, as it
happened in LTTE's Operation codenamed "Leap of the
Tiger'' wakes up the Government only temporarily to its
senses. Even the dead bodies of Sinhala soldiers, from
very poor families, returning home in plastic bags did
not make an impact for good on the power hungry leaders
in the Capital. The LTTE in spite of its resounding
military victories offered unilateral cease fires to the
Government. But the latter arrogantly refused to
reciprocate them. Dead bodies of Sinhala soldiers
unaccepted by the Government on flimsy grounds of
deterioration were burnt with military honours by the
LTTE. This shows clearly the deep commitment of the Tamil
leadership to fallen soldiers as against the Sinhala
military which bulldozed to the ground the Cemetery of
the fallen heroes in Kopay. Shame!
15. Tamils aim at a cleaner Parliamentary
Democracy
In recent times the Tamils have seen a new brand of
democracy and democratic elections emerging in the
"democratic south" as well as in Army-controlled areas of
the Northeast. The Sinhala political parties have in
recent times, after the Wyamba elections, appeared to
have woken up a little to the shameful corruptions
inhibiting their elections and governments, but hardly
anything has been done to remedy it
Tamils value and respect democracy as practiced in some
countries of the western world. But from the cruel
experiences they have had with the Sri Lankan brand of
democracy, they are not enamoured of it. The present
Tamil leadership is a de facto leadership of the Tamil
struggle and is not in a hurry to embrace a pseudo
democracy imposed by the Sinhala South. Looking at the
level of corruption infecting the Sri Lankan majoritarian
democracy in its elections, its bureaucracy, even
Judiciary, the Armed Forces and the Police, the Tamils
who suffered for many decades under these corruptions,
are not in a hurry to fall prey to such forms of
governance. Sri Lanka must not try to impose their forms
of governance on the Tamils as if their (Sinhala) forms
are idealistically suited for the Tamils. Let the South
free itself from the weaknesses it has fallen into. And
we Tamils, conscious that we were temporarily forced to
go into an alternative style of leadership for our
liberation, will endeavour to come up with a cleaner and
better and effective form of governance, may be, to the
envy of others.
16. Creating the right conditions for Democracy and
Human Rights
Once conditions are normalized for Tamil life and Tamils
can live in their own land with dignity, a higher quality
of democracy and human rights will definitely set in.
Without rectifying the violation of the basic rights of a
people for life, security, food, clothing and shelter the
Government wants to discuss highly complicated permanent
solutions. The Tamils are not prepared for endless
political discussion with the threat of war hanging over
them, with insufficient food, clothing and shelter. Hence
they demand normalization of life as the first need.
Till then this de facto leadership has to be understood,
acknowledged and encouraged to incorporate gradually the
ingredients of true parliamentary democracy, namely human
rights, justice and freedom. But until civilian life
returns to normalcy, the government has to deal with the
LTTE without getting behind flimsy excuses. The
government cannot with an air of superiority talk-down to
the LTTE or preach to them democracy and human rights
without practicing them.
17. Tamils reject Pseudo Leaderships
In their inability to deal with the leadership put out by
the Tamils of the Northeast, many Singhalese still
entertain the wish for meaningful negotiation with some
pseudo Tamil representatives, by side-tracking the LTTE.
Many Singhalese, even at this late stage, hope for a
weakening or division of the LTTE, if not its complete
disappearance so that they can promote the emergence of
some pseudo Tamil leaders with whom they can do
business.
There are those Tamil groups who initially were militant,
but in recent years have become armed-politicians
supportive of the Government, even to the extent of
betraying the struggle. They have managed to enter the
Parliament through the backdoor by buying a handful of
votes with money given by the government- and that too
with the help of the army. Though they cannot speak for
the Tamils, the government exposes them as "Tamil
democrats".
The Sinhala majority and their political parties have
tended to devalue the Tamil Struggle as mere terrorism
and tried to contain the militant reaction of the Tamils
with international help. Time has come when the new Tamil
leadership after showing its military capabilities is
showing its political acumen and readiness for a
political solution. The racism and feudalism inherent in
the party leaderships of the Singhalese are tested before
the world whether they will rise up to statesmanship in
finding a democratic and just solution for the ethnic
problem.
18. A Leadership founded on convictions of the
people
It was left to the LTTE to fight state-terrorism with
their guns as well as strengthening the political
aspiration for liberation among the people. Even at the
height of military victories, the LTTE proclaimed the big
difference between the state-forces which fight for their
salary and the Tamil youth who fight for their
convictions. The leader of the LTTE has repeatedly
claimed that their strength lies not in the weapons they
possess and the military victories they gain, but in the
deep conviction that their cause is just and right. This
conviction kept growing as the people went through their
long suffering under the iron heels of the state
forces.
It has taken so many decades for the Sri Lankan
Government to realize that they cannot by their numerical
majority or military strength subjugate a people. This
temptation is still present among many Singhalese either
to encourage an internecine war of self-destruction
within the ranks of the LTTE, as occasioned by the
break-away of Karuna recently from the Eastern command,
or to invite some foreign powers like India or the USA to
rush the LTTE. But convictions cannot be erased off by
military strength.
19. A politico-militant leadership with a voice in
parliament
The LTTE is not convinced of the democratic nature of the
Parliament of Sri Lanka, because it is a majoritarian
democracy capable of bulldozing over the rights of the
non-Singhalese. Nor does it believe in the constitution
passed by such Sinhala majoritarian democracies without
the consent of the Tamils. Nevertheless it wants to send
a clear message to Sri Lanka and to the world in a
language spoken and understood by the so called
democratic world. For this purpose it fielded
proxy-Candidates for the Parliamentary elections of 2004,
gave a manifesto and campaigned for the election. The
resounding victory of the Tamil National Alliance and the
routing of the others have proved to the world clearly
the strength of the LTTE leadership among the people.
It is the Tamil people who have freely and overwhelmingly
voted for the Tamil National Alliance and their manifesto
acknowledging LTTE as the sole representatives of the
Tamils fighting for the inalienable right of
self-determination of the Tamil people and for their
traditional homeland.
Hence the LTTE leadership, is one that has emerged from
below, from among the people, soaked in the conviction of
their ideals and strengthened to fight with their lives
for those ideals. Thus the parting of ways in 1976 to
follow a parliamentary path and a politico-military path
has again closed ranks to stand up for one ideal under
one leadership. And this leadership has a voice in the
Sri Lankan Parliament too.
20. We salute the Architect of the new Tamil
Nation
The liberation struggle of the Tamils in Sri Lanka, as
unfolded during the last fifty five years through various
phases and fronts, has enriched the meaning of liberation
as understood by a people as well as help identify the
evil forces of oppression against which they have to
struggle. It has also made clear the price a people have
to pay for their liberation in terms of lives and
property as well as identify the destructive resources of
the oppressive states and governments. These truths have
been learnt once and for all and embedded in the memory
of the Tamil nation.
Pirabaharan is not only the present national leader
standing up for his people against oppressors and
challengers, but also the unforgettable architect of a
leadership that established the Tamils of Thamil Eelam as
a nation with self-respect and self-dignity. We all
salute him.
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