Tamils - a Trans State Nation..

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-
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Selected Writings by Nadesan Satyendra
- நடேசன் சத்தியேந்திரா

Sathyam Commentary

Some Reflections on 'Sri Lanka: Reign of Anomy'

29 July 2008

"As a refugee myself, I can sense the despair and anguish in the conclusion that Sarvan, as a refugee in Germany, reaches - '...I offer no solution but have merely sketched some of the problems, including what I term the Tamil dilemma and, in that way, tried to make a contribution to awareness...' Sarvan's Essay is an exploration (and, it is true that each one of us are engaged in an exploration of one kind or another)... At the end of all our exploring, we may need to arrive at the beginning and 'know the place for the first time'... the truth that so long as the Sinhala people believe that they can conquer and rule the people of Tamil Eelam (through their armed forces and with the help of mercenaries, quislings and collaborators) so long also will they refuse to see the need to talk to the people of Tamil Eelam on equal terms and structure a polity where two nations may associate with one and another in equality and in freedom... Today's Sri Lanka is a 'unitary state' which owes its continued existence to the encampment of a foreign Sinhala army in Tamil Eelam. Reason tells us that that the unity and strength of the Tamil people will never be secured by acquiescence in alien rule. It can be secured only by those who choose freedom. What matters is not what 'others' may be doing (or not doing) in relation to the struggle for freedom. What matters is what we ourselves feel impelled to do in relation to the struggle. What that lawful action is, is something which each one of us has to decide for himself or herself - and will depend heavily on one's own capacity, on one's own limitations and above all else, on what each one of us is prepared to put on line..."

Introduction
First Matter of Disagreement
Second Matter of Disagreement
Third Matter of Disagreement
An armed conflict is no afternoon tea party..
Those of us who by choice stand outside the armed conflict may want to ask ourselves truthfully: what is it that dictated our choice?
If they are concerned to secure freedom, what are they prepared to put on line - albeit, in a non violent struggle for freedom?
Or is it that those who abhor violence prefer to offer their services as go betweens?
Sarvan's Essay is an exploration (and, it is true that each one of us is engaged in an exploration of one kind or another)...
A change in the Sinhala mindset will not come by recourse to Freud...
Our success depends on our own efforts, on our own determination...
And to those who would speak loftily about the 'One World' but who continue to live with seeming contentment in a world divided by nation states, we may want to say..


Anomy

Introduction

Charles Ponnuthurai Sarvan's essay on 'Sri Lanka: Reign of Anomy' which is published in tamilnation.org at his request, affords an opportunity to reflect on some matters of general relevance to the Tamil Eelam struggle for freedom.

Anomy or anomie, 'in contemporary English, means a condition or malaise in individuals, characterized by an absence or diminution of standards or values. The word comes from the Greek - the prefix a: 'without', and nomos: 'law'.' 1

Charles Sarvan describes his Essay as a 'personal statement on the ethnic conflict' in Sri Lanka. Therein lies its strength - and perhaps, some of its weakness. Said that, though one may disagree with Sarvan, one will find it difficult to question the authenticity of that which he was moved by 'an inner compulsion' to write. He looks at himself and says -

".. there is an element of scepticism in me, if not of pessimism: virulent rhetoric, repeated and repeated, has shut ears to other sounds, closed eyes to other perspectives. Words, written or spoken, express attitudes and ideas which, particularly if reiterated, take on a life of their own and are no longer examined, are assumed to be axiomatic... I do not claim that what I write is the single truth: experience and perspective differ; truth is multiple and complex. "

The words of Sri Aurobindo come to mind -

"..What is Truth? said Pilate confronted with a mighty messenger of the truth, not jesting surely, not in a spirit of shallow lightness, but turning away from the Christ with the impatience of the disillusioned soul for those who still use high words that have lost their meaning and believe in great ideals which the test of the event has proved to be fallacious..." Sri Aurobindo on Sat & What is Truth?

Sarvan is right to point out -

".. it is foolish to claim objectivity for, as Heidegger also commented, even objectivity is judged by a subjective self. Nor do I pretend that I can be exhaustive: I merely present my personal understanding, in the hope that the ensuing discussion, even disagreement, will make a small, but positive, contribution.."

Objectivity and subjectivity are but two sides of the same coin and 'truth' always lies in the elusive interplay between the two. It may have to be grasped rather than analysed.

I agree with Sarvan when he says that though he writes in English he has -

"... long held that far more important than talking about, or even for, the people, is to talk with them - and to do that, one must speak in their language..."

And that is more so because language is more than an instrument of communication. மொழி என்பது வாழ்க்கை.

"Language is more than a symbol. In it is stored the accumulated experience of a people... to part with it would be to loose the key to our past, to cut away the roots from the tree..." On Language & Nation - Eamon de Valera

What then is it that I disagree with Sarvan ? I too do not pretend to be exhaustive, but there are three principal areas which stand out.


First Matter of Disagreement

The first matter relates to his view that which happened to the Tamils in July 1983 was not genocide. He says -

"Minoli Salgado, in Writing Sri Lanka, quotes Professor D C R A Goonetilleke as stating that what was done to the Tamils in 1983 was "no Holocaust" (see, Salgado, Note 105, p. 179.) There are no official statistics but the number of Tamils killed is placed between two and three thousand. It is therefore terminologically inaccurate to describe the pogrom as a holocaust, and Tamils who do so, moved by emotion, harm the case they attempt to make by over-stating it. A holocaust is determined by intention (extermination) and, following from that, also by number. Of course, one can quote Donne and say that any one's death diminishes us because we are (or ought to be) involved in humanity; one can claim that what makes for the heinous is not number but the nature of the action. Still "holocaust" and "genocide" remain inappropriate terms for what happened in Sri Lanka, and Goonetilleke, though lacking in sympathy, is quite correct."

What happened in 1983 may not have been a 'holocaust' in the sense that millions of Tamils did not die. But Sarvan is wrong to suggest that 'genocide' is an inappropriate term to describe Black July 1983. I believe that Frances Wheen was right when he declared in July 1983 -

"Genocide is a word that must be used with care; but how else is one to describe the impulse which guided the Sinhalese lynch-mobs this week.." Francis Wheen, London Times,30 July 1983

I also believe that the International Commission of Jurists was right when it said in December 1983 -

"A (Sri Lanka) government spokesman has denied that the destruction and killing of Tamils amounted to genocide. Under the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, acts of murder committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group as such are considered as acts of genocide. The evidence points clearly to the conclusion that the violence of the Sinhala rioters on the Tamils amounted to acts of genocide." International Commission of Jurists Review in December 1983


Second Matter of Disagreement

The second matter on which I disagree with Sarvan relates to his view that -

"Immediately after "July '83 " there was much sympathy for the Tamils, with international condemnation of what happened - remarkably absent within the Island - and the opening of immigration doors. However, the Tigers by their action have lost the moral high-ground, dissipated goodwill, forfeited much support. They are now proscribed in several countries and, generally, are associated not with freedom but with terrorism."

I believe that even in 1983, international 'sympathy for the Tamils' and 'condemnation' of Sri Lanka was very much influenced by real politick. International media headlines on the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom were of little avail to prevent the continued onslaught on the Tamil people in the succeeding years. The fact is that the United Nations did not take a firm stand against Sri Lanka in 1983. Leo Kuper, Professor Emeritius, University of California, who participated at the meeting of the UN Sub-Commission in August 1983, under the auspices of the International Commission of Jurists, wrote in his book "The Prevention of Genocide" published in 1985 -

"...The Sri Lanka government is held in high esteem by many members of the sub-commission, and it argued against U.N.involvement on the ground that it might disturb present delicate negotiations; it also circulated its own version of events. Then, too, the Indian government had interceded, and discussions were proceeding. But there were also political currents observable in the alignment of members, though I could not altogether fathom the geo political considerations involved. In the end a very mild resolution was passed calling for information from the Sri Lanka government and recommending that the commission examine the situation at the next meeting in the light of the information available. There was, however, only a bare majority for the resolution (10 for, 8 against and 4 abstaining). It is unfortunate that the United Nations did not take a firm stand at this stage. The Sinhalese army is now engaging in large scale massacres of Tamils and the conflict has escalated, seemingly beyond control...."

Again, the reasons for India's own support for the Tamils in the 1980s are well documented and need not be repeated here. Suffice it to say that it had little do with support for the 'moral high ground' or the expression of 'goodwill' for the people of Tamil Eelam. In Indian Foreign Secretary's Dixit's memorable words in February 1998 -

"..Inter-state relations are not governed by the logic of morality. They were and they remain an amoral phenomenon.."

As for the United States, the State Department's Annual Human Rights Report to Congress released in February 1985 stated shamelessly -

"Sri Lanka is an open, working, multiparty democracy. Citizens elect their president, members of parliament, and local government officials by universal adult suffrage. All laws including acts extending the state of emergency, must be approved by the Parliament... The Constitution guarantees the independence of the judiciary, and lawyers and judges are held in high esteem."

And to Christopher Dobson and Ronald Payne, of the Daily Telegraph in April 1985 "...for whatever its shortcomings, Sri Lanka, a loyal Commonwealth member, is a decent republic where democracy prevails despite the troubles..." (Daily Telegraph: April 9, 1985) Again, in the view of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, 'it is a democracy in Sri Lanka' and 'problems must be solved through democracy'. (Guardian: 13th April 1985).

The international community pretended that it did not know the true nature of Sri Lanka's 'democracy' in 1985 -

"... The reluctance to hold general elections, the banning of the opposition press, the continued reliance on extraordinary powers unknown to a free democracy, arbitrary detention without access to lawyers or relations, torture of detainees on a systematic basis, the intimidation of the judiciary by the executive, disenfranchisement of the opposition, an executive President who holds undated letters of resignation from members of the legislature, an elected President who publicly declares his lack of care for the lives or opinion of a section of his electorate, and the continued subjugation of the Tamil people by a permanent Sinhala majority, within the confines of an unitary constitutional frame, constitute the reality of 'democracy', Sri Lankan style." Democracy, Sri Lankan Style, May 1985

Today, a quarter of century later, the same amorality that dictated the responses of the international community to Black July 1983, dictates the steps taken by the international community against the LTTE.

The proscription of the LTTE has little to do with 'terrorism' and the international community's concern for the 'moral high ground'. After all, we know only too well the support extended to 'friendly dictators' by the international community and to the Contras in Nicaragua and the Taliban in Afghanistan (against the Soviet Union) - and indeed to Saddam Hussein in his war against Iran. US President Franklin D. Roosevelt's words about the Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza remain a constant reminder of the ways of real politick - "Somoza may be a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch."

The proscription of the LTTE has everything to do with the new cold war in an asymmetric multilateral world which is struggling towards a greater symmetry. Shift happens. In the Indian Ocean region the new cold war is reflected in the uneasy balance of power between US, India and China. Again, despite the efforts of India, the present may be simply a staging post for the emergence of a bipolar world dominated by the US (EU, Japan) and China. On 29 July 2008, Dr Henry Kissinger said in a speech at the launch of the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States -

"...China and America no longer have a common enemy, but a common opportunity. An adversarial relationship between the United States and China is unfortunate for the whole world; positive relations are beneficial to everybody. China and the United States have an opportunity to help lead the world on common policies..."'

The reality is that Sri Lanka has sought to use the political space created by the geo strategic triangle of US-India-China in the Indian Ocean region, to buy the support of all three for the continued rule of the people of Tamil Eelam by a permanent Sinhala majority within the confines of one state.

"..We have India in the Trincomalee oil farm, at the same time we have a Chinese coal powered energy plant in Trincomalee; we have a Chinese project for the Hambantota port, at the same time we have the attempted naval exercises with the US from Hambantota (to contain Chinese presence in the Indian Ocean); we have the grant of preferred licenses to India for exploration of oil in the Mannar seas, at the same time we have a similar grant to China and a 'road show' for tenders from US and UK based multinational corporations; meanwhile we have the continued presence of the Voice of America installations in the island and the ten year Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) was signed by the United States and Sri Lanka on 5 March 2007..." International Dimensions of the Conflict in Sri Lanka - Nadesan Satyendra, 2 October 2006

I believe that Velupillai Pirabakaran was right when he said in 1993 -

"Every country in this world advances its own interests. It is economic and trade interests that determine the order of the present world, not the moral law of justice nor the rights of people. International relations and diplomacy between countries are determined by such interests. Therefore we cannot expect an immediate recognition of the moral legitimacy of our cause by the international community...In reality, the success of our struggle depends on us, not on the world. Our success depends on our own efforts, on our own strength, on our own determination."

I also believe that to conflate the two words 'terrorism' and 'violence' (as the international community has persistently and, in my view, deliberately done) is to obscure the moral legitimacy of a struggle for freedom. It is to assert in effect that a people ruled by an alien people may not, as a last resort, lawfully resort to arms to resist that alien rule and secure freedom -

"...Do we not deliberately obfuscate when we conflate the two words 'terrorism' and 'violence'? ... The Cuban revolution was violent but it was not terrorism. The war against Hitler was violent but it was not terrorism...What are the circumstances in which a people ruled by an alien people may lawfully resort to arms to resist that alien rule and secure freedom? Or is it that there are no circumstances in which a people ruled by an alien people may lawfully resort to arms to to liberate themselves? And if all resort to violence to secure political ends is not terrorism, then what is terrorism? ..to categorise a combatant in an armed conflict as a 'terrorist' organisation and seek to punish it on that basis, is to.. assert in effect that a people ruled by an alien people may not, as a last resort, lawfully resort to arms to resist that alien rule and secure freedom... " On Terrorism & Liberation - Nadesan Satyendra 23 September 2006

A principle centered approach which liberates political language will also help liberate peoples who have taken up arms as a last resort in their struggle for freedom from oppressive alien rule.

And here let us be clear. The struggle of the people of Tamil Eelam to be free from alien Sinhala rule is not about what the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam may have done or may not have done. The record shows that the armed resistance of the people of Tamil Eelam (warts and all) arose as the inevitable response to decades of efforts by successive Sinhala governments to conquer, subjugate, pacify and assimilate the Tamil people and the enactment of the 6th Amendment to the Sri Lanka constitution set the seal by criminalising all non violent means of struggle for an independent Tamil Eelam state - an amendment which also violated Sri Lanka's obligations under international law.

The short point that I would make is that in sum, the moral legitimacy of the Tamil Eelam Struggle for Freedom remains today as it did in 1983 and the attitude of the so called international community has little to with the means adopted by the LTTE but everything to do with the goal that the people of Tamil Eelam seek to achieve - freedom from alien Sinhala rule.


Third Matter of Disagreement

I now turn to the third matter on which I disagree with Sarvan. He writes (about the LTTE, and cites a Sinhala writer in support) -

"...Dissent is not tolerated, and competing groups have been eliminated without hesitation or mercy. Ruthlessness was directed as much against fellow Tamils, as against the "enemy" Sinhalese: among several works, see, Nira Wickramasinghe, already cited. The Tamils find themselves caught between Sinhalese chauvinism, and Tiger tyranny - or, as someone here in Berlin said to me, they are trapped on a branch on fire at both ends. Those who can, jump off - into exile and life in a foreign country. Some may argue that the Tigers, fighting against huge odds, must maintain "discipline" and an iron control at all cost but, again, an explanation does not necessarily lead to exculpation: "at all cost" is humanely and morally unacceptable."

Sarvan is right to say that explanation is not exculpation and that maintaining discipline and iron control "at all cost" is humanely and morally unacceptable. But were the actions of the LTTE simply a question of maintaining "discipline and an iron control at all cost "? What are the facts?

It is true that the LTTE has, from time to time, taken action against those who have been proved to be informers and collaborators. Whether that was done 'without hesitation' or after several warnings is a matter that cannot be determined on the say so of writers who have little or no real contact with the ground - and I count myself as one of them.

Said that, I do agree that the principles of natural justice do demand that no one shall be punished without being heard, that those who judge shall be impartial and not moved by personal considerations. Again, justice must not only be done but must also be (publicly) seen to done. These are not matters simply of procedural law or social contract. They are deep rooted and seem to touch our innate (natural) sense of justice - and, indeed, our humanity.

In the absence of a sufficiently stable judicial system (where traitors may be charged with sedition and their guilt determined according to law) a guerrilla movement will need to take care to ensure that any action that it takes against a 'traitor' does in fact accord with the principles of natural justice - however difficult that such an approach may sometimes appear to be for those on the ground, engaged as they are in a daily battle for survival against an enemy with a great reservoir of material resources. Any action that the LTTE may take against a Tamil (even though he be a traitor) sets one Tamil (family) against other Tamils, and will divide and erode the solidarity of the Tamil people, unless the justice of the action and the reasons for the action are publicly known and accepted.

The responses of the LTTE to the activities of some Tamil elements who co-operate with the Sinhala government (or for that matter with RAW and other foreign agencies), suggest that it is mindful, on the one hand, of the dangers posed by informers and quislings, and on the other hand, of the difficulties of responding to such dangers, within the framework of a guerrilla movement without a stable judicial system. But, that is not to say that the LTTE has always succeeded in its efforts to address these issues.

At the same time we need to recognise that securing intelligence is, perhaps, the most important part of any campaign against a guerrilla movement. That is because the strength of a guerrilla movement lies in its capacity to strike without warning against a relatively static, though better equipped enemy. Mobility and surprise are the key elements of the success of a guerrilla movement. Hence the crucial need of the enemy for intelligence.

But obtaining intelligence may become increasingly difficult for an alien ruler who does not speak the language of the people on whom he seeks to impose his rule - this is more so as a liberation movement begins to enjoy increasing support among its own people. To secure intelligence, the Sinhala government needs to recruit informers who are (or were) in touch with the activities of the guerrilla movement. The Sinhala government may make careful efforts to infiltrate a guerrilla movement, by using individual grievances that a person may have, family connections and so on. And where the situation demands it, this will be backed up by cash inducements. That which Mark Lloyd, said in his book 'Special Forces - The Changing Face of Warfare' remains relevant -

"(This infiltration of a guerrilla movement) is best achieved by targeting a participant whose heart is not in it or who is suffering from obvious family pressures. Initial meetings with the target may only be conducted by highly trained operators, and for obvious reasons must take place in the utmost secrecy. The 'need to know' principle, whereby only those within the intelligence network who actively require details of the agent are given them, must be imposed rigidly.."

Mark Lloyd pointed out that this approach will lead to further information being made available to the enemy and further retaliatory 'action' by the guerrilla movement against the 'new' informers - a vicious cycle that is often deliberately encouraged and directed by the enemy to lead ultimately to the disintegration of support for the guerrilla movement.

Said all this, the words of US General Donald Blackburn, who commanded US guerrillas against the Japanese in the Philippines during World War II in proceedings before the American Society of International Lawyers, thirty years later (70th Meeting, Washington, 1976 p.155) are a salutary reminder of the harsh reality faced by a guerrilla movement on the ground -

"...American forces that tried to comply with the spirit of the standards of the law of land warfare found that they could not physically survive. For example, one officer who could not feed captured Japanese prisoners returned them to the Japanese through a priest. The Japanese promptly returned and executed him. To avoid extinction and to survive, the American-led guerrilla forces decided to take stringent measures. Through official orders it was announced that spies and informers, considered to be the main problem, would be controlled or eliminated.... "

The British Admiralty note on 'Naval Bombardment of Coast Towns' printed for the Committee of Imperial Defence more than a hundred years ago, in mid 1906, during the preparations for the following year's Hague Conference [continuation of CID paper 75B, in PRO, FO 88I/9328* II] was no less forthright -

"...It must not be forgotten that the object of war is to obtain peace as speedily as possible on one's own terms, and not the least efficacious means of producing this result is the infliction of loss and injury upon 'enemy' non-combatants...... The object of the bombardment of [commercial] towns might be the destruction of life and property, the enforcing of ransom, the creation of panic, and the hope of embarrassing the government of the enemy's country and exciting the population to bring pressure to bear upon their rulers to bring the war to a close.... Lastly, we have the case of bombardments intended to cover, or divert attention from, a landing. It is easy to conceive that a bombardment of this nature might involve undefended towns and villages, and it presents perhaps the most difficult case of all from a humanitarian point of view. At the same time, no Power could be expected to abstain from such an act of war, if it fell within their strategic plan.... It must come under the category of inevitable acts of war necessitated by overwhelming military considerations. We could not give up the right so to act, and we could not expect other nations to do so.. "

The fact is that the humanitarian laws of armed conflict are more often than not observed in the breach. The German blitz on London and the night time Allied bombings of Bremen during the Second World War exposed some of the hypocrisy behind the stated concerns about the protection afforded to 'civilians'. Hiroshima and Nagasaki as well Shock and Awe in Iraq stand as continuing examples of 'acts of war necessitated by overwhelming military considerations'.

"War is the exercise of force for the attainment of a political object, unrestrained by any law save that of expediency.." Carl von Clausewitz


An armed conflict is no afternoon tea party

An armed conflict is no afternoon tea party - and it is in that armed conflict that the LTTE is engaged. Those of us who by choice stand outside the armed conflict (and who have not accepted the risk involved in being a part of it) may want to begin by recognising that guerrilla warfare cannot be directed from the outside. It can be directed only from within, by those who have accepted their full share of the risks involved.

"...guerrilla warfare is essentially political, and that for this reason the political cannot be counter posed to the military... the political and the military are not separate, but form one organic whole, consisting of the people's army, whose nucleus is the guerrilla army... the guerrilla force is the party in embryo." (Revolution in the Revolution?- Regis Debray -Pelican Latin American Library, Penguin Books, 1967)

Here, it may also not be remiss to repeat something that I said in Thyagam & the Tamil Expatriate in 1993 -

"...Sometime ago, the Harvard University Graduate School of Business Administration, sent out a letter seeking new subscribers for one of its publications. The letter read:

"The professional practise of management is as challenging and complex as the practices of medicine and law. Yet we never hear of a 1-minute trial lawyer. One minute is about how long the physician or attorney who tries it will last. The quick fix. The too simple solution. The latest fad. They have no more place in your office than in the operating room or the court room."

That which is true in relation to the corporate office, the operating room and the court is perhaps even more true in relation to an armed struggle for freedom. Answers to the deeper issues which confront the Tamil national liberation struggle are unlikely to come from those who devote a few moments of their undoubtedly busy lives to suggest the 'quick fix', which they believe has somehow escaped the attention of those who have taken the struggle forward on the ground during the past several years.

A busy expatriate Tamil professional in Australia once remarked to a Tamil activist: ''You know, the trouble is that the 'boys' have brawn but no brains''. The reply from the Tamil activist was perhaps, overly sharp but it was telling:

''My dear friend, the trouble with you is that you have neither the brawn nor the brains - neither the brawn to go to Tamil Eelam and join the struggle nor the brains to look deeper into the issues that confront the struggle and make a useful contribution from outside. If you had done the latter, you would have hopefully, begun to learn that to a leadership which has gone through the university of the liberation struggle on the ground, much of what you say will seem to come from the kindergarten''.

The 1-minute 'political adviser' is not very different from the 1-minute brain surgeon or the 1- minute trial lawyer. One minute is about how long he will last in the struggle before succumbing to the forces ranged against it."


Those of us who by choice stand outside the armed conflict may want to ask ourselves truthfully: what is it that dictated our choice?

Those of us who by choice stand outside the armed conflict may want to ask ourselves truthfully: what is it that dictated our choice? Were we, for instance, dictated by our repugnance of violence? If so, were our feelings similar to the feelings of the 'kind hearted lady' in the story related by the fictional Prince Andrew Bolkhonsky in *Tolstoy's War & Peace - the kind hearted lady 'who faints when she sees a calf being killed but enjoys eating the calf served up with sauce' -

".. we play at magnanimity and all that stuff. Such magnanimity and sensibility are like the magnanimity and sensibilities of a lady who faints when she sees a calf being killed; she is so kind-hearted that she can't look at blood, but enjoys eating the calf served up with sauce. They talk to us of the rules of war, of chivalry, of flags of truce, of mercy to the unfortunate and so on. It's all rubbish... war is not courtesy but the most horrible thing in life; and we ought to understand that, and not play at war.... The air of war is murder; the methods of war are spying, treachery, and their encouragement..."

Ofcourse, the real moral question may not be the methods of war but war itself. The words of Harry L. Stimson, US Secretary of State 1929-1933 quoted, appropriately enough by Hitler's Arms Minister, Albert Speer in Inside the Third Reich merit our careful attention -

"...We must never forget, that under modern conditions of life, science and technology, all war has become greatly brutalized and that no one who joins in it, even in self-defence, can escape becoming also in a measure brutalized. Modern war cannot be limited in its destructive method and the inevitable debasement of all participants... we as well as our enemies have contributed to the proof that the central moral problem is war and not its methods..."

And Aurobindo's remarks 'On the Passing of War' addressed some of the fundamental issues that are involved -

"...Man's illusions are of all sorts and kinds... The greatest of them all are those which cluster round the hope of a perfected society, a perfected race, a terrestrial millennium... One of the illusions incidental to this great hope is the expectation of the passing of war. This grand event in human progress is always being confidently expected, and since we are now all scientific minds and rational beings, we no longer expect it by a divine intervention, but assign sound physical and economical reasons for the faith that is in us... (however) ...only when man has developed not merely a fellow feeling with all men... when he is aware of them not merely as brothers ­ that is a fragile bond ­ but as parts of himself, only when he has learned to live, not in his separate personal and communal ego-sense, but in a large universal consciousness, can the phenomenon of war, with whatever weapons, pass out of his life without the possibility of return.. Meanwhile that he should struggle even by illusions towards that end, is an excellent sign; for it shows that the truth behind the illusion is pressing towards the hour when it may become manifest as reality... "


If they are concerned to secure freedom, what are they prepared to put on line - albeit, in a non violent struggle for freedom?

Again, admittedly, there are those who, unlike the kind hearted lady in the Tolstoy story, may be true vegetarians and they may take the view that there are no circumstances which justify a people to resort to violence to secure freedom. It may be that they do not agree even with Mahatma Gandhi when he said in 'The Doctrine of the Sword' in 1920:

"I do believe that when there is only a choice between cowardice and violence.... I would rather have India resort to arms in order to defend her honour than that she should in a cowardly manner become or remain a helpless victim to her own dishonour..."

But then the question arises: are those who take the view that there are no circumstances which justify a people to resort to violence to secure freedom, willing to accept the permanent rule of one people by another admittedly alien people - a people who speak a different language and who trace their heritage to different origins? Would they agree that if democracy means the rule of a people by the people and for the people, then no one people may rule another? And, if they are concerned to secure freedom, what are they prepared to put on line - albeit, in a non violent struggle for freedom?

Subramaniam Sivanayagam's words on the Role of Tamil Expatriates in 1999 spring to mind -

"..A child of the new millennium asks: "Grandpa, where were you when the Tamil people were fighting for freedom in Sri Lanka?". "Well, I was minding my own business, darling, and making pots of money, here in England". "What was grandma doing then grandpa? "Why, she was doing the same thing, minding her own business, honey, and helping me to spend that money". That was an imagined futuristic dialogue. How about the present?.."

Are those who are committed to non violence simply concerned to mind their own 'business'? Or perhaps they are content to become petition writers and pleaders for justice? But then would they agree that -

"..It is a vain dream to suppose that what other nations have won by struggle and battle, by suffering and tears of blood, we shall be allowed to accomplish easily, without terrible sacrifices, merely by spending the ink of the journalist and petition framer and the breath of the orator..." Sri Aurobindo in Bande Mataram

Again the words of the retired British civil servant, A.O.Hume who founded the Indian National Congress in 1885 (after 'appropriate' consultation with the British Viceroy) may not be without relevance -

"Every adherent of the Congress, however noisy in declamations, however bitter in speech, is safe from burning bungalows and murdering Europeans and the like. His hopes are based upon the British nation and he will do nothing to invalidate these hopes and anger that nation."

Are the hopes of petition writers and pleaders for justice (where ever they may reside - whether in cyberspace or on land) based on the goodwill of their host governments and is it that they will do nothing to invalidate those hopes and anger their rulers? Do petition writers and pleaders act the way they do because they recognise the validity of something that Michael Rivero said many years ago -

"To take action in the face of a corrupt government entails risks of harm to life and loved ones. To choose to do nothing is to surrender one's self-image of standing for principles. Most people do not have the courage to face that choice. Hence, most propaganda is not designed to fool the critical thinker but only to give moral cowards an excuse not to think at all." in What Really Happened

Do they act the way they do because "to choose to do nothing is to surrender one's self-image of standing for principles" and because to take meaningful "action in the face of a corrupt government entails risks of harm to life and loved ones "?

And if they are not content to be simply petition writers and pleaders for justice, would they be prepared to put their own lives and their own freedom on line in a non violent struggle in the way that Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi did? And if they are not prepared to put their lives and their freedom on line, are they prepared to put their 'life style' and of those near and dear to them at risk in a non violent lawful struggle for freedom?


Or is it that those who abhor violence prefer to offers their services as go betweens?

Or is it that those who abhor violence prefer to play the role that Frantz Fannon spoke about in the Wretched of the Earth

"..the leader of the ('moderate') nationalist party... loudly proclaims that he has nothing to do with these Mau-Mau, these terrorists, these throat slitters. At best, he shuts himself off in a no-man's-land between the 'terrorists' and the settlers (alien rulers) and willingly offers his services as go-between; that is to say, that as the settlers cannot discuss terms with these Mau-Mau, he himself will be quite willing to begin negotiations. Thus it is that the rear-guard of the national struggle, that very party of people who have never ceased to be on the other side in the fight, find themselves somersaulted into the vanguard of negotiations and compromise - precisely because that party has taken very good care never to break contact with colonialism..."

Shut off between the 'terrorists' and the alien ruler he offers his services as a 'go between' and engages in 'lobbying' without pausing to reflect on the question: who is lobbying whom? Sarvan relates his advice to Sri Lanka President Ranasinghe -

"Ranasinghe Premadasa was a Sinhalese chauvinist. I met him on several occasions. "I argued that his objective must be to deprive the terrorists of popular support by offering the Tamils autonomy", but he was convinced he could destroy the Tigers. Under his successor, Chandrika Kumaratunga, the war continues."

Shut off as he was between the 'terrorists' and an alien 'chauvinist' ruler, Sarvan found that his 'objective' advice was spurned.

Here, may I say that I myself lay no special claim to wisdom. It is often all too easy to offer the rationalisation of one's own existence as a panacea to the people to whom one may belong.

I remember a conversation that I had with Sathasivam Krishnakumar (Kittu) in Geneva in the early 1990s. After a couple of days of talks, and after he had cooked a meal for me, he looked at me directly and said: "Annai, may I ask you something straight?".

I laughed because I recognised that when any one puts it in that way, the question may often go to the core - and the answer is not always easy. I replied: "Yes, go ahead" partly because I had considerable regard for Kittu's own integrity. Kittu replied:

"Annai, during the past two days, we have discussed many matters and there is much that I have gained from the interaction. But can you tell me why it is that during the 1960s, you did not involve yourself in the Tamil struggle, at least in the ahimsa way?"

I could have answered that question in many different ways. However, I felt that I owed Kittu a direct and honest answer. I replied:

"The fact is that having been born in a middle class family, and aspiring to make a 'success' of my life in the context of the Sri Lanka state, and also achieving a measure of what was generally regarded as 'success', I felt that all Eelam Tamils could do the same - and that there was no dividing line which could not be crossed with effort and diligence."

For myself, the events surrounding the burning of the Jaffna Public Library in 1981 and later the Thangathurai & Kuttimuni trial in 1982 were the turning points, which compelled me to take stock - and see the dividing line more clearly. They were my Konstradt.

To others, it may have been something earlier - the Sinhala Only Act of 1956, the riots of 1958, or the Satyagraha of 1961 or the Standardisation of 1972 or the pogrom of 1977. To yet others, it may have been something later - Genocide'83 or today's continuing genocide - the extra judicial killings, the systematic torture of Tamil civilians and, above all, the open (and oftentimes virulent) belligerence of Sinhala Buddhist fundamentalism.


Sarvan's Essay is an exploration (and, it is true that each one of us are engaged in an exploration of one kind or another)...

As a refugee myself, I can sense the despair and anguish in the conclusion that Sarvan, as a refugee in Germany, reaches -

"...I offer no solution but have merely sketched some of the problems, including what I term the Tamil dilemma and, in that way, tried to make a contribution to awareness...Mired in the past, we take myth for fact; distort Buddhism; believe in essentialism and "race", exclusivity and superiority; in Aryanism and divine election. There is little desire to recognise what is common and shared, while celebrating - even encouraging - variety and equality. Posthumous restitution is not practical, and perhaps it is too late for the present, but for the sake of the children of the present and future, the long reign of anomy must be ended."

Sarvan's Essay is an exploration (and, it is true that each one of us are engaged in an exploration of one kind or another).

"... There are in every part of the world men who search. I am not a prisoner of history. I should not seek there for the meaning of my destiny. I should constantly remind myself that the real leap consists in the introduction of invention into existence. In the world through which I travel, I am endlessly creating myself..." Frantz Fanon in Black Skin, White Masks, 1952

T.S.Eliot's oft quoted words also come to mind -

"We shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time."

At the end of all our exploring, we may need to arrive at the beginning and 'know the place for the first time'. Ranasinghe Premadasa's response to Sarvan underlined a fundamental truth - the truth that so long as the Sinhala people believe that they can conquer and rule the people of Tamil Eelam (through their armed forces and with the help of mercenaries, quislings and collaborators) so long also will they refuse to see the need to talk to the people of Tamil Eelam on equal terms and structure a polity where two nations may associate with one and another in equality and in freedom.

At the end of all our exploring, we may need to arrive at the beginning and recognise the truth of something which Sathasivam Krishnakumar (Kittu) understood very well in 1991 -

" Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism has been institutionalised in Sri Lanka and today it has become more powerful than the politicians themselves. Indeed even if the Sinhala politicians seek to settle the conflict, Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism may try to prevent such a settlement. This is the political reality that those who are aware of the Sri Lankan situation are well aware of... This Sinhala chauvinism which was nurtured by Sinhala politicians for their electoral advantage, has grown into a Frankenstein monster which now has the power to destroy and make politicians. This we understand very well..." Sathasivam Krishnakumar, June, 1991


A change in the Sinhala mindset will not come by recourse to Freud

A change in the Sinhala mindset will not come by recourse to Freud and bringing out in the open the repressed fears of a Sinhala ethno nation which continues to deny its own existence, which dare not speak its own name and which seeks to masquerade as a Sri Lankan 'civic' nation in its effort to assimilate and digest the people of Tamil Eelam. That it is suffering from indigestion should not be a matter for surprise. Be that as it may, as Freud himself found, (psycho) analysis is not always a sufficient cure for repressed fears. There may be need to have recourse to the methods of the behaviourist school of psychology. And the answer may be blowing in the wind.

"Yes, 'n' how many times must the cannon balls fly
Before they're forever banned?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The answer is blowin' in the wind.
How many times must a man look up
Before he can see the sky?
Yes, 'n' how many ears must one man have
Before he can hear people cry?
Yes, 'n' how many deaths will it take till he knows
That too many people have died?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The answer is blowin' in the wind." Bob Dylan

It was Kittu who once said: ''Orators do not become leaders but leaders may become orators.'' The same is perhaps true of writers as well. Here, Kittu's own example may serve us well. Kittu belonged to the true intelligentsia of Tamil Eelam. He abstracted and conceptualised his own life experience, read widely, sought to integrate that which he read with his life and then set about influencing a people to action. To him, theory was a very practical thing - and therein lay the strength of that which he said.

"...The error of the intellectual consists in believing that it is possible to know without understanding and especially without feeling and passion... that the intellectual can be an intellectual if he is distinct and detached from the people-nation, without feeling the elemental passions of the people, understanding them and thus explaining them in a particular historical situation, connecting them dialectically to the laws of history, to a superior conception of the world... History and politics cannot be made without passion, without this emotional bond between intellectuals and the people-nation. In the absence of such a bond the relations between intellectuals and the people-nation are reduced to contacts of a purely bureaucratic, formal kind; the intellectuals become a caste or a priesthood...'" Gramsci quoted in James Joll's Gramsci, Fontana, 1977

And to those who despair (and it is human to despair), we may want to say with Mahatma Gandhi -

'..If someone asks me when and how the struggle may end, I may say that, if the entire community manfully stands the test, the end will be near. If many of us fall back under storm and stress, the struggle will be prolonged. But I can boldly declare, and with certainty, that so long as there is even a handful of men true to their pledge, there can only be one end to the struggle, and that is victory...' Mahatma Gandhi's Pledge of Resistance in Transvaal, Africa, 1906

Velupillai Pirabakaran did not put it very differently when he said - "Our success depends on our own efforts, on our own strength, on our own determination."


Our success depends on our own efforts, on our own determination

It is around the actions of each one of us that the unity and strength of the Tamil Eelam struggle for freedom will grow. And here, the first question that we may want to ask ourselves is whether that unity and strength can be accomplished by acquiescence in alien Sinhala rule?

"...It is a common cry in this country that we should effect the unity of its people before we try to be free. There is no cry which is more plausible, none which is more hollow... The first question we have to answer is - can this practical unity be accomplished by acquiescence in foreign rule? ... a state created by the encampment of a foreign race among a conquered population and supported in the last resort not by any section of the people but by external force, is an inorganic state... the tendency of the intruding body is to break down all the existing organs of national life and to engross all power in itself. ... if the middle class could be either tamed, bribed or limited in its expansion, the disorganisation would be complete...The organs of middle class political life can only be dangerous so long as they are independent. By taking away their independence they become fresh sources of strength for the Government...The dissolution of the subject organisation into a disorganised crowd is the inevitable working of an alien despotism..." Sri Aurobindo - Shall India be Free?: Unity and British Rule

Today's Sri Lanka is a 'unitary state' which owes its continued existence to the encampment of a foreign Sinhala army in Tamil Eelam. The tendency of the intruding body is to break down all the existing organs of Tamil national life and engross all power to itself. We may want to recognise that 'the dissolution of the subject organisation into a disorganised crowd is the inevitable working of an alien despotism'.

Reason tells us that therefore that the unity and strength of the Tamil people will never be secured by acquiescence in alien rule. It can be secured only by those who choose freedom. What matters is not what 'others' may be doing (or not doing) in relation to the struggle for freedom. What matters is what we ourselves feel impelled to do in relation to the struggle. What that lawful action is, is something which each one of us has to decide for himself or herself - and will depend heavily on one's own capacity, on one's own limitations and above all else, on what each one of us is prepared to put on line. Here, many will find the reflections of a Tamil mother, wife, daughter and a refugee in "What can I do? - Sharing my thoughts with the Tamil Diaspora" (written in January 2008) do touch a chord. She said -

"..I firmly believe now, that if we all do our little part and started working towards a common vision, that vision will and must materialize. .. (I want to share) my simple suggestions at the end of this article, with other ordinary people who, like I used to be, are a bit lost when it comes to how they can help... Let our fighters carry on with what they are doing but meanwhile, I decided that I need to do my part - in whatever small ways I can.

When we look at the Tamil Diaspora, some of us still lay our hopes on the International Community - I am not saying it's a bad thing but it should not be the only thing. Some of us wait for some sort of miracle to happen. Some of us feel absolutely hopeless and pessimistic. Some of us feel tortured to live this way - reading the news of our homeland, feeling angry and depressed - then only to get distracted by trivial things in daily life.... I have friends who simply sigh and change the topic or don't talk about it anymore. Even worse, I have friends who don't even give it a second thought. They like to believe that they have lots of rights in Canada. They thrive in the small things of daily lives and happily chat in English with their kids...

... Small things can make a big difference. Hence, I share my thoughts with and for the people who might have adopted a "hands-off" approach (like I did before) or "looking the other way" approach.

Act 1 - Get in touch with the North East. Help relatives and friends in North East.

Almost all of my close relatives are living abroad. But I took some trouble to get contact details of distant relatives in Sri Lanka. I contacted my mother's second cousin's family in the North, whom I met only once in my life when I visited them as a child. They were just so happy that I remembered them and called. Now we are in touch at least via mail. I called a long lost relative in Batticaloa. For two decades, the people of the East have experienced the worst of Sinhalese brutality in terms of large scale massacres. This is due to geographical proximity as well other factors which has made them more vulnerable. My relative in Batticaloa was ecstatic that I called. As far as I am concerned, a two way communication was helpful to both parties. I feel connected. Also, sending a small amount of money goes a long way. In these horrific times, they need all the help that they can get. Initially, I felt ashamed that I didn't contact these people before. But better late than never.

Act 2 - Help the charities that do work in the North East

About 5 years ago, I realised if I can afford to spend $20 a month on McDonalds, I can sponsor a child. So I sponsored this little girl through Foster Parents Plan. The country they chose was Bangladesh. 5 years on, I still felt so happy of my decision whenever I got a letter or picture from her. So later, I started to donate to the orphanages in Vanni directly through a friend who is personally involved with the orphanages. I allocated a small percentage of my salary for this purpose. I also started contributing in Tamil events and through Tamil organizations using common sense and a bit of trust. In doing so, I brushed aside a long felt concern - "I really need to know how and where my money is going". A quote from one of my favourite writers comes to mind.

"You often say, 'I would give, but only to the deserving'.
The trees in your orchard say not so, nor the flocks in your pasture. They give that they may live, for to withhold is to perish" - Kalil Gibran

I felt that if we don't give now (our time, money and energy) to our people back at home, our culture and our nationhood might perish eventually. Once I started giving my time, money and energy in small ways, I felt more confident in terms of futures results.

Act 3 - Boycott Sri Lankan goods

Self explanatory - just check the label of whatever you buy. For example, I stopped buying MD brand that I used to use a lot.

Act 4 - Write to local MPs, NGOs and to the media.

Get details of your local MP and engage them. Write to them regularly or schedule a fact to face meeting so that after a while, they get to know you and a relationship can be formed. I started writing to NGOs and the media, and was amazed at some of the responses that I got. They really like to hear from ordinary people. I feel that I doing my part educating people. This takes maybe 1 or 2 hours of my time per week. And I do believe, if many people start doing this, it could be a powerful factor.

Act 5 - Teach our children Tamil language. Teach them the ancient and recent history of Tamil homeland.

This is a very important point for two reasons. The next generation of children needs to be aware. They will have to carry on the struggle of rebuilding our nation once we are no longer here. Also, teaching our children our language and history is not only beneficial for our people back home, but also good for our children's self concept, self image and identity (regardless of age).

Act 6 - Don't imagine the worse or NOT try something out because of an assumption.

I have a friend who says with gloom "even if Tamil Eelam materialises it'll be a bad state. We will destroy ourselves". Would you give a 10 months old child a can of coke just because "he's going to be doing that anyway when he is 18" (I actually heard a father say that and I feel sorry for both him and the kid!). This kind of logic is flawed. We can't give up on things by imagining a bad future. You nurture and nourish a plant so that it'll be bear good fruits. We'll just have to heal with love and hope.

Act 7 - Think collectively and truly identify with North East as Tamil Eelam.

We need to think collectively and truly identify with North East as Tamil Eelam. Our thoughts and actions stemming from this identity will have far reaching consequences. Freedom is ours to take - not something that we need to ask from somebody else. Once we start believing in Tamil Eelam, it will materialize. Meanwhile, I feel better when I introduce myself as a "Tamil from the North East of Sri Lanka now referred to as Tamil Eelam by us" - a rather long winded answer to the simple question "where are you originally from?" But I still feel good saying it. I used to say "Sri Lankan".

We might have a few dilemmas. For example, we might not have a flag and song that is recognised by others. Recently, the Principal of my daughter's school had a bright new idea. In order to reflect the cultural diversity at the local school, he wanted to display the different flags of the different nations the children's families were coming from. It was an extremely nice thought! But I did not feel like giving the Sri Lankan flag nor could I give our flag with the Tiger emblem on it since it may not be perceived as a national flag. I felt really troubled and at the end had to tell the Principal that we didn't want any representation by flags. So we do have road blocks in this area and we need to work on that but I still rather identify with our unborn nation than to be identified with Sri Lanka - even for formalities. This was an important psychic change.

Act 8 - Positive visualisation

Positive visualisation is not just day dreaming or just hoping, but actually visualising the final goal in mind so that we can work towards it. I have practiced this in my personal life with good results. Once I drew a picture of a goal that I wanted (a seemingly impossible goal at that time), put it in my study room, and every day reflected on it for couple of minutes. This clarified things in my mind. This helped and kept me in focus on what I wanted to achieve and what needs to be done on a daily basis - all the small steps that I had to do in order to achieve this big goal.

Nowadays, I also visualise visiting my hometown (now the home of a big army camp) and see what has to be done from my part in order to achieve this. This last point (positive visualisation) kind of encompasses all of the above points:

Visualise -> Get Proactive -> Act

I visualise my family visiting my mother's cousin's family in Jaffna and having lunch with them. I visualise my kids playing together with theirs! This may seem a bit far fetched but I truly believe that the Universe will respond to my thoughts as well as my actions. I believe we can create our own future if we really want to. We just have to start off this process by being proactive first. The rest will follow.

Some skeptics might call me a dreamer. But I rather dream than despair. I rather believe than be cynical.... I rather act and consequently feel good about myself for the small yet powerful deeds that I am doing in helping out my people. It's all worth it in the end."

Yes, there is much that each one of us can lawfully and meaningfully do.

"We are building a road," Kittu would often say. "I do not know whether I myself will be alive to see the road being completed. But that does not matter. Others will arise to take the road further."

It seems to me that it is only when we are truly prepared to give of ourselves for that which we believe, that we contribute. Otherwise we make noise. We need to look no further than Velupillai Pirabakaran for proof of that. In a conversation with an Australian expatriate in the Vanni in 2004, Pirabakaran said -

"உயிரைக் கொடுக்கத் தயாராய் இருக்கிறவர்களைத் தான் அவர்கள் வேட்டையாடுகரார்கள்"

"It is those who are prepared to give their lives that they are engaged in hunting."

It is this thyagam, it is this willingness to suffer to bring about change, which has made Velupillai Pirabakaran the undying symbol of the resistance of the people of Tamil Eelam to alien Sinhala rule - an alien Sinhala rule to which Sri Lanka Army Commander Lt. General Sarath Fonseka recently gave belligerent expression -

".. In any country the majority community is running the administration. We cannot prevent that situation... In any democratic country the majority should rule the country. This country will be ruled by the Sinhalese community which is the majority representing 74 percent of the population." Sri Lanka Army Commander Lt. General Sarath Fonseka in the Sri Lanka State Controlled Daily News, 19 July 2008


And to those who would speak loftily about the 'One World' but who continue to live with seeming contentment in a world divided by nation states, we may want to say..

And to those who would speak loftily about the 'One World' (and decry 'national' divisions) but who continue to live with seeming contentment in a world divided by nation states ('one world' for the Tamils but 'our nation' for the American, the Canadian, the French, the British, the German and so on), we may want to say with Frantz Fannon -

"... the building of a nation is of necessity accompanied by the discovery and encouragement of universalising values... It is at the heart of national consciousness that international consciousness lives and grows..." Frantz Fanon at the Congress of Black African Writers, 1959

"A true transnationalism will not come by the suppression of one nation by another. A true transnationalism will come from nationalisms that have flowered and matured; from peoples who have grown from dependence to independence to inter-dependence. It is only the independent who may be inter-dependent. And to work for the flowering of the Tamil nation is to bring forward the emergence of a true trans nationalism. ...In the meantime, Tamils have no cause, to be apologetic about their togetherness as a people. As a people, we too have much to contribute to the rich fabric of the many nations of the world - and to world civilisation..." Nadesan Satyendra in One World & the Tamil Nation, 1998

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