27 April, 2024

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Letter To A Liberal Sinhalese

By Sinthujan Varatharajah –

Dear Sinhalese ‘ally’,

Often have I stumbled upon articles written by you published in liberal Sri Lankan online outlets such as Groundviews, Sri Lanka Guardian or Colombo Telegraph, where you attempt to investigate the conflict in all its complexities, nuances and potential contradictions. You want to find immediate solutions to complex issues on the ‘ground’. You are a well-meaning liberal, I know. You are impatient and wish to heal what’s been left unhealed, I know. While eagerly analyzing the roots of conflict and catalysts of war in order to find fast-paced solutions, you have often come to a seemingly unanimous conclusion: ‘The’ Tamil diaspora had and continues to have a negative impact on the conflict and the well-being of the local Tamil community. ‘They spent millions to support the war from afar but can’t spend a dime to develop the war-ravaged regions post-war’ is what you say on a good day. ‘Their secessionist ambitions terrorize local Tamils’ is what you say on a bad day.

diasporaHere I am, writing to you as a member of ‘The’ Tamil diaspora that ‘destabilizes’ your country. I’m also writing to you here as someone who has lost touch with the ‘ground’ and therefore urgently needs you to be the bridge to the country my family fled from two decades ago. I’m writing to you as a long-distance ally.

While you’ve been more benevolent towards me than your average Sinhalese, which I’m of course grateful for (how can I not?), over the years you have somehow still made your ambivalence clear towards me. I stopped counting how many times I, as a member of ‘the’ Tamil diaspora, have been accused by you (and white academics and policy makers) of being reckless or counterproductive. And I thought we had an entente cordial? From being labelled war mongers, cowards, long-distance nationalists, a destabilizing force, terrorists, stateless to bogus refugees, I’ve almost had it all. There are virtually few surprises left – unless you become creative which I’m somehow doubtful you can be.

Trusting us is difficult, I know. We’re somehow like a divorced couple, aren’t we? Once split, it’s hard to return to normalcy (thank you, Northern Chief Minister Wigneswaran, for this gendered analogy). But this isn’t a particularly new or surprising phenomenon and scenario. Not seeing us on a daily basis naturally estranges us, I know. We’re abstracted and lose any positive human traits to you. All you hear and read about us, all you are told to remember, are negative stereotypes influenced by years of propaganda. We have a name but no face. You may tend to think that’s normal. After all we have left (actually fled) the country such a long time ago. But haven’t those millions of non-displaced and internally displaced Tamils long fallen under a similar veil of suspicion? Despite their being so ‘close’ to you? As if they were cheating on you while being physically so close to you? Would it perhaps be ‘extreme’ of me to say that they were locked up by you as a response? Probably. You may feel the need to classify me now. Please go ahead if you need to. Pick and choose freely between the labels I’ve laid out before.

By now you’ve probably assumed that there is something like ‘the’ Tamil diaspora, a homogenous political apparatus and well-oiled money laundering machine that you can misrepresent for the sake of your needs and wants. But let me tell you, my Sinhalese ally, things aren’t that simple. I read your interpretations of the past and present, I read your interpretations of us in outlets across the internet and I feel like I should respond for once. May I?

My Sinhalese ‘ally’, you’ve a strong sense of feeling entitled to brush over, paint, label as well as interpret Tamil issues, people and concerns. And you’re eloquent at that. You speak, write (get published) and think as if you ‘know’ everything about us – when in reality you most likely know close to nothing. You become experts to be consulted not just by Sinhalese-run media, but also by traditionally white institutions who recycle you as pundits. Your presence, after all, demands less public scrutiny than ours: the ‘terrorists’ and ‘separatists’. Not once, but many times have I watched you intrude Tamil spaces – beyond the territorial. The societal, cultural, political and economic spaces of Tamils have continuously experienced invasions, outsider interpretations and attempts at being appropriated. That, of course, comes as no surprise. The campaign to vilify and marginalize Tamils, diasporic and local, has born its many fruits. And you’ve eagerly harvested them.

Today, you write, narrate and produce our history as if we’ve already made it into a museum. As if we were unable to speak for ourselves. As if you are only able to find us in unmarked mass graves. But let me reassure you, we haven’t made it into a museum quite yet – leaving aside that a Sinhala-led museum would probably not be the best place to curate Tamil history. We are also able to speak well for ourselves. And in many languages. I myself can speak five. How many do you speak?

Over time I’ve watched you, liberal Sinhalese, interpret and narrate our past and present in manifold ways on a number of different platforms. Some may have been accurate; mostly, however, they have been quite uncomfortable, cringe worthy distortions made possible by way of social and geographic distance. Your narrations, however, always shared one common factor irrespective of where you fall on the political spectrum: the construction of diasporic Tamil communities as ‘the’ evil diaspora, or as some have come to call it – ‘the big bad diaspora’. Post-war, diasporic Tamils have come to be more threatening than local Tamils because of many reasons, amongst others, reversed power-relations and numeric size, particularly vis-à-vis ‘the’ Sinhalese diaspora.

Here I am writing to you as a member of the diaspora to tell you my interpretation of the status quo:

As a community we were (and continue to be) chased away by the Sri Lankan state (synonymous with the majority Sinhalese community/ies). Ever since independence, our presence in the country has been contested and undermined. Post-war, we’re also robbed of the right to interpret and narrate what little remains: our own history, memories, as well as presence and absence inside and outside of the country. Let me emphasise: Not yours, but our own. Not a Sri Lankan one, but a Tamil one. To make it clear: we struggle to narrate and place our past because of your presence.

You have, after all, claimed the few chairs available to reproduce narratives about us through forms of arts, culture and most importantly political punditry. Often you didn’t even need to make a claim to these: you were given them because of your privileged position as a Sinhalese and the constructed stigma and suspicion attached to being Tamil. In your interpretation of our ‘collective past’ (if something as a collective past exists in the first place), you are self-righteous enough to tell us our wrongs from our rights. You ceaselessly speak about us and tell us how ‘removed’, ‘distant’ and ‘different’ we are to local Tamils. And while doing so, you construct yourself as an counter image to us – the ‘evil’ us. You also never fail to inform us about how we have lost ‘touch’ and that our aims have no commonality with those of local Tamils.

Some of you do so while simultaneously working for the overall betterment of the local Tamil community. Some of you do so while travelling to the North and East to engage in humanitarian and development work. Some of you do so while going there for poverty tourism – others for military-occupation tourism. No matter what you do, why you go there, always will you, however, claim to be able to bridge the social and geographic distance that exists between the diaspora and locals better than us, diasporic Tamils. According to you, your physical presence in Sri Lanka is proof enough to ‘know’ better despite that there may well be worlds between you. It renders you an expert by default and your voice weight by geography.

Let me, however, get this straight for you:

Each time you speak for us, you take away the space for us to speak by ourselves. You translate words and interpret feelings, but will your translation ever be free from your own biases? You take photos of Tamil orphanages, schools and widows and share them on social media, but will you ever come to understand why they are the wretched and you are the spectator?  Will your power relations to Tamils, diasporic or local, ever be equal?  And will your privilege of being a Sri Lankan Sinhalese, Sinhalese Sri Lankan or Sri Lankan (synonymous with Sinhalese) ever cease to exist?

Considering our history, it appears problematic for you my Sinhalese ‘ally’ to continue to feel entitled to tell us what to do, what to aspire, what to believe in. Isn’t that what has led to conflict in the first place? We have our own memories, our own histories and our own voices to speak. We can articulate them in a number of languages, with a number of voices, opinions and on many different occasions. In other words, we don’t need your voice to mute ours.

For you to assume the role to speak for us and educate us on the effects of ‘our actions’ on our community back home is not just disturbing but also preposterous. The diaspora-local divide exists of course, but not along the lines that you try to constantly place it – and not to the extent that you want to frame it. For many of us, certainly for me, it’s our relatives who are directly affected by the actions of your government. Not strangers but family members, friends and neighbours. Though we are often thousands of miles away, many of us continue to hold profound and organic ties to Tamil and Muslim regions and people. Through your rhetoric, however, these ties are forcefully undermined and portrayed as non-existent, leaving us with a distorted picture that holds no resemblance to reality.

While I sit in my flat in Europe, my Sinhala ally, you may well be able to frequently visit the predominantly Tamil and Muslim areas from your house in Colombo. But how much will you really see, hear and understand? Will you ever cease to be the stranger, the philanthropist, the photographer, the development worker, humanitarian, tourist or soldier who intrudes? And will you ever consider your privilege to be able to go and see places that many of us once called home but are unable to ever visit again – let alone live there?

While you have to pack your bags and become a poverty tourist to see the extent of destruction and destitution that have ravaged the predominantly Tamil and Muslim regions to understand the impact of a very geographically and racially divided war, we grew up with memories, stories, images, people and a personal stake in these places. For many of us it’s our families who continue to (unfortunately) live there, whose stories we hear and whose plight we try to help to resolve. Yes, we ourselves may have fled or emigrated – which you have now somehow come to construe as an allegation against us – but who made us flee or emigrate in the first place? How does the act of persecution, chasing someone out and silencing violence remain uncontested and un-blamed?

I’m left perplexed by you. Maybe I shouldn’t.

My Sinhala ally, I also know you are working hard to erase ethnic/racial inequalities. I know you mean well. But your approach is flawed to begin with. Superimposing a constructed civic identity (‘Sri Lankan’) doesn’t help to balance out existing inequalities between Tamils and Sinhalese.

It rather obfuscates the issues at hand and invisibilizes privilege and non-privilege between the members of the so-called Sri Lankan “community”. Though you have come to frame us all as ‘Sri Lankans’, you retain the privilege of establishing dominant views towards us, diasporic and local Tamils. I don’t really blame you though, seeing how convenient this is: while your Sinhalaness becomes further invisible, our bodies remain marked, hypervisible and vulnerable in Sri Lanka and, thanks to the global discourse on terrorism, also abroad.

But you’re smarter than that. You’ve in fact found more than just one way to replace ethnic identities: you also replace them with geographic ones (Tamil = North/Northerners; Sinhalese = South/Southerners). Is that any better than superimposing a ‘Sri Lankan’ identity? No, my dear Sinhala ally. Yet you’ve somehow successfully taught white media institutions to implement this ‘trend’. Having national institutions and financial resources (covered by foreign credit cards) behind you plays in your favour, I know. Maybe you’ll soon come to advocate, as the Sinhala right already does, for the removal of all ethnic labels (of course that doesn’t concern dominant ones, i.e. the Sinhala one) to replace them instead with the ‘Sri Lankan’ one (constructed around Sinhalaness). Sounds a bit like post-1994 Rwanda, doesn’t it (Oh no…Rwanda)?

Why bother you further though, my Sinhala ally. I’ve already taken more of your precious time than you wanted. To cut it short, this is what you may want to consider for the future:

Please don’t ever assume to speak for Tamils and to have the right to name call us – specifically in regards to the diasporic communities. Just as you claim diversity for yourself there is plenty of diversity amongst us. Most Sinhalese in fact know nothing about ‘us’. How would you though? Even local Tamils rarely do because we are taught to cope, to function and survive without sharing our stories. Do you want to know why? I bet no, but let me still say it: because things are so much worse for people (well, mostly Tamils) at home thanks to the government elected by the majority community – not ours, but virtually yours. We were historically taught to be silent but I’m not going to sit there and be silent when people feel entitled to interpret us, our histories, our journeys and our aspirations.

For someone who claims to be progressive, more so than the average ‘Sri Lankan’, I would wish there to be more understanding for what it means to have become refugees, to have become exilées, strangers in two lands and one life. Maybe we have actually lost touch with local Tamils over time, maybe we have become estranged across oceans and maybe we do need bridges between the internally and externally displaced (as is our shared communality as Tamils), but you will certainly never be that bridge between us.

So please stop pretending to be such.

Thanks.

Sincerely,

Sinthujan

*Sinthujan Varatharajah (Twitter: @varathas) is a PhD Candidate in Political Geography at University College London, University of London, and the Founder of Roots of Diaspora, a narrative and visual project on flight and emigration of Tamils from Sri Lanka. For more visit Roots of Diaspora at www.facebook.com/rootsofdiaspora

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Latest comments

  • 22
    13

    Hey Mr Varatharajah, Thank you for your letter.

    But I find your writings knowingly blinded to the fact that even Sinhalese have felt the whip hand of the State against it. No doubt, you feel exclusive in your sense of discrimination but if you look at injustice as only your grievance, you are being racist yourself. The Sinhalese constitute 74% of this country. Do not shut them out. Instead, learn to bring them also into an understanding of your problems. So when you write of Sinhalese liberals, please keep that caution in mind.

    And write of the atrocities of the LTTE as well. Of would you prefer to forget about those?

    • 15
      8

      Chandra

      What most Tamils speak and write is about ”65yrs”

      What most Sinhalese speak and write is about ”30yrs”

      I need to read, re-read, re-re-read ….. this – it is the flimsy skin on top of the porridge pot of ”65yrs”

      • 13
        2

        Davidson Panabokke

        What we want you to learn is about genocide of my people over 2,500 years.

      • 19
        9

        This is an emotional indulgence by an immature person with a sense of entitlement. You were born in Germany in 1985. What is your connection to Sri Lanka and its people? What are you talking about? You are even rude. You make wild allegations that we in Sri Lanka are trying to appropriate your voice, narrate your story, mute you, etc. Are you self-delusional or a drama queen?

        Let me get this straight for you (to use your own words):
        You come off as a racist by repeating the LTTE mantra that the Sri Lankan State is synonymous with the Sinhalese community. This is way over the top my young friend (a hyperbole?) This shows how out of touch you are with the reality in Sri Lanka due to the propaganda coming out of the rump.

        Though you were born outside – being born in 1985 – you were in a sense born into the Sri Lankan war because your family and other Tamils over there must have brought you up in a little Jaffna with a steady diet of violent stories about the war and anti-Sinhala hatred during your entire life up to now. That means you never experienced prewar Sri Lanka when the country was not polarized and there was much friendly interaction between Tamils and Sinhalese. No doubt your view of Sri Lanka is limited and warped. As a result you seem to be hypersensitive and somewhat paranoid in your approach to Sri Lanka and its people. In short you have an attitude problem. Have you ever visited Sri Lanka? If not, you should come and see for yourself.

        No wonder you are rejecting the hand of friendship extended by those whom you yourself call the Sinhalese ‘liberals’ or ‘ally.’ This is again a defining attribute of extreme nationalists. To extremists and fanatics their counterparts on the opposite side are not the enemies. In fact they need each other to validate themselves and have a raison d’être for their mutual existence. In short they are in a symbiotic relationship. It is the moderates, the progressives, the liberals, the allies capable of creating a consensus based on reasonableness and fair-mindedness on both sides who are the mortal enemies of racism and extreme nationalism. The LTTE never killed any of the Sinhala racist leaders, it only killed those it feared could bring about a rapport between the two communities. It was even more ferocious towards Tamil moderates who had the potential to work out an alternative solution based on democracy and pluralism. Durayappah, Neelan Thiruchelvam, Amirthalingam, Kadirgamar, Kethees Loganathan and Padmanaba were all assassinated by the Tigers precisely for being moderates capable of building bridges. Your beef too seems particularly about moderates, allies and bridges.

        You say you know five languages. Do you know Tamil? Did you make any effort to learn a little Sinhala? If you can learn that many foreign languages, what is wrong with learning some Sinhala before demonizing an entire people? Are you aware the Sinhalese people – both adults and school children – are eagerly learning Tamil at present.

        You make the weird accusation that what you call the Sinhalese ally is taking your space by speaking on your behalf. Nobody is speaking on your behalf. It’s the Tamil diaspora that is misrepresenting Sri Lanka to the west by its disinformation campaign. The diaspora is also appropriating the voice of the Tamils living in Sri Lanka. You even try to appropriate the voice of the Muslims. Yes, the LTTE did try to define the ethnicity of Muslims for them in order to subjugate and co-opt them into the armed struggle to establish an ethno-fascist Tamil exclusivist state. Naturally the Muslims didn’t fall for it and Prabakaran took his revenge by kicking them out of the peninsula after giving them only a few hours notice and grabbing all their possessions. This is the only act of ethnic cleansing in the recent history of the country.

        So it is ironical you accuse the Sinhalese liberals of not acknowledging the diversity in the Tamil diaspora. I don’t think anyone would deny the diversity in the diaspora, or in any community for that matter. Rather what is implied is the homogeneity of Tamil diaspora politics. This is a reflection of the authoritarianism that prevailed in the Tamil struggle. The struggle was launched and led by the Jaffna-centric Saiva Vellala middle class which has always dominated Tamil politics in Sri Lanka imposing its hegemony over marginal groups. Jaffna Tamils consider themselves superior to those living in the Wanni and Eastern Province. There is patriarchy and caste oppression. Indian Tamils in the plantations are considered as low caste and are socially distanced. Jaffna-centric middle class brought all Tamils under its hegemony by denying the diversity among them based on religion, region, caste, class, gender, sexual orientation, etc. and by defining them solely under the monolithic ethnic marker “Tamil.”

        The Tamil people’s struggle for political and democratic rights thus turned into fascist quest for an authoritarian state chiefly in the interests of the Jaffna middle class. There was no acknowledgement of diversity or an urge for pluralism in LTTE’s political vision. But the people of Wanni and East, and Tamils of Indian origin who had settled in the Wanni had to bear the brunt of the war. The Jaffna middle classes after launching the war had fled to the west or at least were able to buy their children’s freedom from the Tigers with money from their relatives in the diaspora. As a result in the final war it was mostly the Wanni and Tamils of Indian origin who had to fight and die for an Eelam they never asked for in the first place.

        Any community that doesn’t take into account its diversity and doesn’t address the inequality and oppression prevailing in its own social institutions and culture in tandem with its struggle for political rights is likely to end up in a colossal tragedy like Mullivaikkal. In my view, the first priority for Tamil people is introspection – rather than finger-pointing.

    • 12
      6

      Chandra, you are quite right. We Sinhalese feel second class citizens in our own country, with the terror regime, racists monks and racist constitution that says one has to be a Buddhist to be the country’s leader. The Sinhalese have suffered more under its own Sinhalese governments than the Tamils. The Sinhalese were the land owners (landed proprietors)and owned the transport business exclusively, what happened under the successive SLFP regimes? Estates were taken over and transport business was nationalised.
      The 1983 attack on the Tamils was I believe condemned by most if not all people and should never have happened. The Tamils in Wellawatte and other prominent Tamil areas around Colombo was foced to leave the country. Today they are back, and are not only occupying their old neighbourhoods but buying into property in Col-15, Dehiwela,Kalubowila and other valuable suburbs pushing the Sinhalese out. Why? The Sinhalese have been fooled, used and easily exploited by the govt (especially SLFP and UPFA)over the years. Sinhalese businessman is a dying breed today, thanks to the Sinhalese governments and the Buddhist clergy who play the Sinhala Buddhist card to hoodwink its own people.
      So Mr. Varatharaja, do not blame us Sinhalese blame the Sinhalese politicians who have used the racist card to achieve their ends, we (Sinhalese people)have not benefited in anyway by you lot being forced to leave the land of your birth. We welcome you as brothers and treat you with no malice in our heart.

  • 24
    15

    Sinthujan Varatharajah,

    Well said young man, keep up your good work as a voice of Tamils.

    the Sinhala elite and their intellectuals and writers talk about the North and South as their fashionable terminology now, as if it were comparable to North and South Korea! They don’t even talk about Tamils or Muslims of the North-East!

    Beware of the newly minted distorted terminology of the Sinhalese writers and, aped by the international media.

    Even the well intentioned Sinhalese writers use this terminology now

    Power of propaganda at work: Joseph Goebbels will be put to shame by this subtle propaganda.

    • 15
      10

      Yes, beware of terminology like ‘the Singala Buddhist with their Mahavamsa mindset’. A term used to lump together all Sinhalese who oppose Eelam.

      • 2
        8

        ” ‘the Singala Buddhist with their Mahavamsa mindset’

        “shy turd”

        Tatte Motte- Turtle’s Head – in severe constipation where the anus is dilated and a faecal mass is visible – the problem is, it starts to come out and then, like a turtle’s head, it goes back in again!

        Colomba Choppe (^‿◕)

  • 6
    4

    Sinthujan

    You’ve given us a lot of food for thought (in an academic style).

    We need to start with a systemic change:

    ”Sri Lanka needs A UNESCO supervised revision of school text books by a panel of internationally renowned Sri Lankan scholars so as to minimize prejudice against communities and ‘build the defences of peace in the minds of men’” – The Lalith Weeratunga Presentation, Dayan Jayatilleka, 28 January 2014, http://groundviews.org/2014/01/28/the-lalith-weeratunga-presentation/

  • 6
    7

    Sinthujan Varatharajah,

    Both the Sinhala and Tamil are Para-deshis, called Para-Sinhala and Para-Tamil according to Native Veddha terminology.

    Both Paras should get back to their native land, South India. The DNA in them proves that.

    You Paras have overstayed your welcome.

    Please go back, Para-Sinhalayo, Para -Tamils and other Paras.

    Thank you, in advance.

    Ayubhovan, Vannakam. Have long life in your native land South India.

    • 4
      4

      Chimpanzees and Humans share 98% of DNA. So leave Sri Lanka and live in the Congo with the chimpanzees.

      • 2
        0

        Liberal One,

        “Chimpanzees and Humans share 98% of DNA. So leave Sri Lanka and live in the Congo with the chimpanzee”

        Remember, humans separated from Chimps and Gorillas around 4 million years ago, and they have 48 Chromosomes and humans 46. That include the Sinhala, the Tamil and the Native Veddah.

        The problem is with the Sinhala and Tamils, and they should get back to their recent native land South India,and leave Lanka to the Native Veddah. The DNA analysis of Sinhala, Tamil, and South Indians prov the kinship.

        I do not think the Chimps will be interested win the Sinhala and Tamils. They have been at each others throat for too long. Even the Indians are sick of them.

        No wonder, the Native Veddah want them out, monk Mahanama or not.

    • 12
      4

      Amarasiri

      I thought being an agnostic means having no answers, no convictions. But you seem to have an answer to all questions – even when nobody is asking you. And the worst part is, it is the same goddamn answer no matter what the question is. Ironically you seem to have more strong convictions than believers and non-believers. (Try to answer differently this time.)

      • 1
        4

        “I thought being an agnostic means having no answers, no convictions.”

        Kutti babooo,

        Agnosticism means doubting questioning cynical.Agnosticism has many subsets.

        The Rig Veda takes an agnostic view on the fundamental question of how the universe and the gods were created. Nasadiya Sukta (Creation Hymn) in the tenth chapter of the Rig Veda says:

        Who really knows?
        Who will here proclaim it?
        Whence was it produced? Whence is this creation?
        The gods came afterwards, with the creation of this universe.
        Who then knows whence it has arisen?

        Bertrand Russell’s pamphlet, Why I Am Not a Christian, :”stand on their own two feet and look fair and square at the world with a fearless attitude and a free intelligence”.

        Happily Agnostic (@_@)

        • 1
          0

          Javi,

          “The Rig Veda takes an agnostic view on the fundamental question of how the universe and the gods were created. Nasadiya Sukta (Creation Hymn) in the tenth chapter of the Rig Veda says:”

          Thanks.

          So there were Agnostics even before the Ionians and the Greeks.

          They were all looking for data and confirmation. Still looking.

  • 12
    2

    The Tamil Diaspora is there to stay and emboldened by their activities
    in ever increasing strength. SL politics created it willy-nily. The
    Sinhalese must accept the fact that the diaspora will always support their own community back home, much to the dislike of the sinhalese.
    This attitude must first change for mutual benefit.

    TGTE will move forward in the many ways they can: Their latest
    publication can be read here:
    http://fr.calameo.com/read/001215636e3a415b9a90a

  • 8
    0

    Fair points. From my reading, key takeaways were:

    – Let Tamils speak. For example, if someone asks about Tamils, best to frankly tell them: ‘don’t know the full story’

    – For writers, be honest about the sources you use/leave it to people of Tamil descent to tell their experiences/don’t write about Tamils, period. (- not sure if this is realistic in academia…)

    – Say Tamils, not Sri Lankans. Don’t act like all Tamils are the same and even want to be under the ‘Sri Lankan’ umbrella – stop using trendy North-South distinctions to make it look like we are ‘one’. (side question, is the term ‘Tamil-Sri Lankan’ kosher?)

    – Admit it, Sinhalese are privileged. Such privilege benefits the Sinhalese in ways that Tamils could never enjoy in Sri Lanka (housing, safety, connections etc.)

    Correct me if I misinterpreted you. My follow-up ‘going forward’ questions:

    – Noted, Sinhalese know nothing about Tamils or the refugee experience. Do you want them to start learning, if so, how should they start? Are there events to attend, people to chat with or even a book you recommend?

    – Agreed, Tamil diaspora communities have gotten a bad wrap. Do you think Tamil and Sinhalese diaspora could ever really be ‘allies’? If so, how would that conversation start?

    Sincerely, I do appreciate your post and of course, as I’m sure you know, that not all ‘Sinhalese’ are the same (and I’m not speaking about your spectrum or ally to non-ally here). We all are a product of our experiences, and guess what, some of us seek to define ourselves as more than simply ‘Sinhalese’ or Sri Lankan (how boring would that be if that’s all we ever wanted out of life?).

  • 17
    7

    I am in agreement with you. You are right Sinhalese and Tamils alike divorced partners. There is lot of mistrust between us. The Sinhalese MUST understand that Tamils will NEVER feel they are “SRILANKANS” unless this mistrust is solved. Only the majority community must take the initial step to reverse this mitrust.
    But unfortunately the ordinary Sinhalese man cannot understand this.The southern people think that most Tamils are government employees,successful professionals and businessmen. This is because they is the only Tamils they have seen in the south. They do not know the poor helpless Tamil in the north and east. So obviously they are wondering why the Tamils are disgruntled.
    The real Tamil man is a peasant from north and east,who has not met the real Sinhalese except the military men. The Tamil peasant is unhappy because of the Sinhalese actions such as Disenfrachisement,Sinhalese Only Act,Unnecessary army occupation of the north since 1958,”Standardization” of University admission,multiple Ant-Tamil riots,violent responses against the Tamil demand for Federalism,multiple abrogations of political pacts and so on. This is what gave birth to Tiger movement.
    Then the Sinhalese man cries foul and blames everything on “Terrorism”,
    The Sinhalese must understand that now the only chance for peace and the only way the Tamils will feel “SriLankans” is by offering AUTONOMY for the Tamils.Hundreds of countries have this system which promotes coexisting of diverse ethnic and religious groups. Until then the communities will remain as divorced couple and continue to drag each other into an economical abyss.

    • 3
      2

      Raghavan,thanks for your comments. I am sick and tired of those so called intellectuals harping their own trumpet over an over again as if it is only their own community is the one affected. Do they think the life is bed of roses for the other party. If you look from a Tamil point of view you may feel he has highlighted all the grievances Tamils have faced so far and it is brilliant. However,even a moderate Sinhalese might shrug of with this kind of articles thinking ” Are we having a jolly good time while they were suffering all throughout and have we only contributed to their misery and nothing else.”. Well we are not going anywhere with this kind of attitude I must say. Tamils have faced lots of unjust and it is no secret. They need devolution of power to have their own say in their areas and it is a shame that southern mindset do not accommodate this. However Sinhalese too have suffered due to this conflict and one cannot restore trust ignoring their plight. It is shame that even a PHD fellow in political sciences is blind to this brutal and painful truth. We are blinded by shadows of racist mindset and unless the educated fair minded lot come forward to acknowledge the blunders committed by both parties and push for a reasonable acceptable solution with power sharing,it is unlikely to see peaceful co-existence in this land.

    • 6
      0

      For more than six months the elected NPC is not yet given the power which still remains in the hands of the Governor(appointed by the President). If it were not for CHOGM the elections for NPC wouldn’t have taken place.
      LLRC website is hacked. Huge sums are paid to PR companies in the US(more than 10 yrs ago it was PR firm in the UK to work in the EU) to lie for the Sri Lankan government.
      Namal distributing school textbooks in Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu wwith his pictures pasted on the frontcovers.
      Army and Navy engaged in fishing, farming, tourism, restaurants, ….. depriving the locals of economic urvival. …………..
      …………………………. ????????????????

    • 6
      4

      There you have the so called ethnic issue of this country. You won’t move forward unless you get autonomy. You don’t have any autonomy in USA, UK, Canada or Australia yet you live quite loyally there.

      Do you even realize that Sri Lanka can’t give autonomy of northern province to Tamils without giving the autonomy of Eastern province to Muslims? What are we really trying to achieve by partitioning the country along ethnic lines? Another Yugoslavia?

    • 1
      0

      Ragavan:-
      “The southern people think that most Tamils are government employees,successful professionals and businessmen. This is because they are the only Tamils they have seen in the south.”

      I remember a time in the 1940s and 50s when the Colombo Tamils, (who thought themselves superior to everyone else), used to call the Jaffna Tamils ‘JT’s in a derogatory sense, and looked down upon them and the Up-Country Tamils.

      The younger generation do not understand that this is what brought about the LTTE in the first place!

  • 4
    4

    Brilliant. Thank you very much for articulating how every one of us feels when we are constantly questioned about our objectivity, when we advocate for what is ours, when we are forced to be on the periphery and when we continue to be stripped of our agency.

    I always wonder what is easier to deal with – the military, that is interfering in my everyday life in the north and east – or the likes of these liberal Sinhalese who study us, get their PhDs and claim to work on our issues for 10-25 years. But a lot of these people only seem to know the Tamil words “Vanakam” and “Nandri” – which are never used except in formal settings. These same people tell me things like “I have many Tamil friends and understand how you feel!” I refuse to occupy the position that they have granted me –out of their “generosity” to be the other.

    • 5
      4

      and herein, from Rathika’s comment, we can see the Tamil racist – fully exposed and as much worthy of contempt as the racist Singala.

      Who is denying your agency? Liberal Sinhalese? I have never heard such tosh. But its good to see these mindsets getting exposed in this forum. Many liberal Sinhalese understand now that what matters is not regime change but a change in the State and the systems. For that to happen, we need enlightened Sinhalese and Tamils not these foreign living types like Vara and Rathika who moan about PhDs and try to castigate ‘liberal Sinhalese.’ Stupidity.

  • 3
    1

    My dear Sinthujan,

    Please permit me to address you simply by your first name, – I could not help feeling that I know you enough.

    You are very eloquent. I feel the pain in your heart. I feel the emotion in your language.

    I am not going to advise you to keep your emotion to yourself, – You have a need to let it flow, to let it out.

    I wish to share with you a simple philosophy I adhere to: When an issue escalates into a debate, it is time to stop reasoning; it is time to stop arguing.

    On matters related to politics, on matters related to the Sinhalese people, be a little wise. Just accept the reality that a vast majority among them have lost their sensitivity. Those who haven’t, have lost their courage. It is time to preserve our sensibility.

    … … You can always talk to me.

  • 5
    8

    Dear Mr. Sinthurajan Varatharajan:

    Remembr the those days when you guys were blowing up sinhala soldiers and civilians alike and when you guys were destroying Sri Lanka ?

    Those days you did not think about Sinhala people. Only thing you wanted was Tamil-peelam.

    Now, you address those liberal sinhalese.

    Remember those were the ones that you guys blew up and killed.

    • 9
      4

      Jim Sooty:

      The young man doesn’t know the Sinhalese Mentality. Remind the young Man about those days when you were slaughtering thousands of innocent Tamils starting from 1958 which has continued unabated.
      The shelling of innocent Civilians who were herded in to Designated safe heavens.
      Also remind him there are no Liberal Sinhalese but 20 million Born Racist headed by the Criminal and Thug MR.

  • 5
    7

    Sithurajan Varatharajan:

    Addendum to what I wrote:

    those who are writing in support of you.

    They are not really sinhalese.

    They are those who grew up worshipping foreign cultures and ideologies.

  • 1
    0

    Mr Varatharajah:
    If one follows the logic of your argument I cannot question or challenge the fanatsies that a monk spun out and put together as The Mahavamsa for the “serene joy and emotiion of the pious”,because I am a Tamil!!

  • 5
    3

    Too bad there are no liberal Tamilians.

    All Tamils are racists.

  • 4
    3

    Excellent Sinthujan. Keep up the good work.

  • 4
    1

    Presence of tamil diaspora in UK ready to come to London and demonstrate at a moment’s notice,has again prevented Mahinda Rajapakse,the Chaiman of the Commonwealth to attend the annual Commonwealth Tamasha graced by the Queen.
    Was S.Varatharajah ready?

  • 1
    1

    Brilliant. Thank you very much for articulating how many of us feels when we are constantly questioned about our objectivity, when we advocate for what is ours; when we are forced to be on the periphery and when we continue to be stripped of our agency.

    I stand on the sidelines and watch them preach to me about the dimensions of the conflict – as the colonial masters did to their subjects, making sure that we (the subordinates) know who holds the power. I always wonder what is easier to deal with – the military, that is interfering in my everyday life in the north and east – or the likes of these liberals who study us, get their PhDs and claim to work on our issues for 10-25 years but don’t attempt to learn more two words in Tamil like “Vanakam” and “Nandri” – which are never used by us anyway other than in very formal settings. These same people tell me things like “I have many Tamil friends and understand how you feel!”

    My resistance is criminalized, and they use our struggle for justice for their quest for regime change. I refuse to occupy the position that they have granted me –out of their “generosity” – of being the other.

  • 0
    0

    discard my previous comment of last nite and take the second one.

    Many thanks,
    R

  • 4
    4

    Mr V,
    Sadly, you come across as another self-centred, selfish and attention seeker suffering from the “victim syndrome”. In your lengthy diatribe, never have you mentioned that Tamils should try to meet half way the Sinhalese and Muslims and build bridges to foster better understandind amongst communities. Do not shed tears for Muslims for their most anguish moments were due to actions of your Tamil bretheren and sisters, who evicted them at gunpoint from their homes. Ask your Tamil brothers and sisters to be a community that is open to welcoming and hospitable to others. Ask them to take the initiative to talk to their Sinhala and Muslim neighbours in Colombo and get to know them. It has to be in Colombo, as your brethen have forcibly driven them out of Jaffna which is an integral part of their homeland. Now , go get a life!

  • 4
    0

    A welcome letter presenting a case for the Tamil diaspora. Reminds of a similar letter addressed to the Sinhalese by Dr. R. Narendran a few years back, which was also translated into Sinhala and published in the Lankadipa. I found the reference to this in a comment by Dr.Narendran in his poem ‘If you can dear sir’ published in CT recently. I remember the Sinhala translation in Lankadipa touched the hearts of many Sinhalese.

  • 9
    5

    Isn’t Vellala CM a retired Supreme Court Judge of the Republic of Srilanka?.

    Isn’t Abraham Sumanathiran the gun MP a practising lawyer who even appears free of charge for the anti Govt elements who get summoned to the CM’s ex territory.

    Not bad for a marginalized, discriminated, raped and genocide inflicted ethnic community.

    Wonder whether there are any top shelf lawyers like these in the Diaspora besides PM Rudra.

    • 0
      0

      You seem very unhappy that there are handful of educated Tamils who have come up in life and escaped dying on the streets of Colombo, in churches or temples at the hands of the thugs hired by the government!!!The people who mentioned by you were born before the “Sinhala Budhist” control of the island!!

  • 6
    5

    If you ever want the support of real liberal minded people that takes national responsibilities seriously stop the disastrous quest for the tamil eelam. I for one acknowledge that fact that Tamils with their unique language, culture deserve a separate nation for them. But Sri Lanka is not the justified location for that nor this is an issue which we can really help you out with.

    and stop the insult of continues claims of Sinhalese privileges that nobody has been able to point out until now. Tamil is a national language in Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka has all 4 major religions been practiced here, we have devolved power into Tamil majority areas. Do you enjoy any of this in say Canada or UK?

    A separate Tamil nation or a self governing authority in this small island that is part of the western agenda is a threat to the existence of the state. Our right to existence, our right to be left alone, our right to pursue our economic interests is not something we can negotiate.

  • 1
    2

    I think this started off as a sort of damage control article (control for all the damaged caused to the sympathy even the “liberal” Sinhala people had, by the diaspora) and then got into a sort of half arsed defiance mode !

    You guys (DIE _ARSE_PORA) have pushed your luck too far. You may as well remain where you are and let the poor Tamils who couldn’t run away carve a life for themselves here.

    In fact they seem to be doing very well thank you !

  • 6
    5

    Sinthujan:

    Dear Sinhalese “Ally: was enough for me to skip the rest of your article.

    You want to find immediate solutions to complex issues on the ‘ground’. You are a well-meaning liberal, I know. You are impatient and wish to heal what’s been left unhealed, I know. While eagerly analyzing the roots of conflict and catalysts of war in order to find fast-paced solutions, you have often come to a seemingly unanimous conclusion: ‘The’ Tamil diaspora had and continues to have a negative impact on the conflict and the well-being of the local Tamil community. ‘They spent millions to support the war from afar but can’t spend a dime to develop the war-ravaged regions post-war’ is what you say on a good day. ‘Their secessionist ambitions terrorize local Tamils’ is what you say on a bad day.

    *** There are 20 million Racists and 250,000 Liberals whose voice will not change the ills of Sinhala Lanka and the only way you are going to change the Sinhalese attitude is my Gene Mutation.

  • 3
    3

    kalibanistani

    “There are 20 million Racists and 250,000 Liberals whose voice will not change the ills of Sinhala Lanka”

    How many liberals do you recon there are among Tamils?

    Minus (-) 250,000.

    “the only way you are going to change the Sinhalese attitude is my Gene Mutation.”

    How do you think your gene mutation would change Sinhalese attitude that is if both of you are equally stupid and racist?

    May I point out both stupid people share the same stupid gene.

    • 3
      1

      Foreign:

      I am sorry even a Gene Mutation wont help you. How sad.

  • 11
    0

    Sinthujan

    Grow up man! Don’t be a cry baby. We Sri Lankans don’t owe anything to you. You are the one who owe us. Because you got everything that you have by selling the name of our country. Your parents were economic migrants under the pretext of seeking asylum. It was the dream of anyone in the third world then, and even now, to go to the west in search of greener pastures. This is the main reason the Tamils deliberately escalated the ethnic issue so that they can claim persecution in their country and qualify for refugee status under the Geneva convention.

    Tamils have claimed persecution by the government, IPKF, LTTE and other Tamil militant groups. Do you know more than half of the Tamil asylum seekers claimed persecution by the LTTE. And yet as soon as they were granted refugee status they were donating money to the Tigers and participating in their demonstrations. Do you know many of them have invested heavily in Colombo and are now looking for economic opportunities in the massive development that is taking place in the north.

    Many of the tourists to the north you complain about are such diaspora Tigers. They marvel at how quickly things have returned to normal and the numerous development projects going on. They are struck by how the people in Jaffna are enjoying life with the peace dividends. In fact recently the NPC chief minister Wigneswaran himself complained the people in the north are enjoying too much with the money coming from the diaspora that they don’t want to work, and the youth don’t want to go to school.

    Tigers visiting from the diaspora see all this but when they go back they reveal what they saw only in private. But in public they continue to paint a distorted picture of Sri Lanka in order to continue receiving special treatment as some sort of victims! The politics of victimhood which keeps recycling old tales of persecution and invents new ones is what renews primordial animosities and hampers reconciliation.

    What an irony, despite all the wonderful opportunities and advantages you enjoy in the west, you still feel empty inside because you belong to the self-entitled narcissistic millennial generation. You are a spoiled brat of the ME ME ME Generation. That is your problem. But as someone with a third-world background you have an advantage over your white cohorts. You have sob stories to narrate about events supposedly happening in a faraway land you are not even remotely connected to and can pose as some kind of wronged hero. You are a shameless attention whore.

    You poor baby, stop sulking and be a man. You are making a fool of yourself. While you are being such an EMO POSER, the youth in Jaffna are chilling out in bars, ice cream cafes and coffee shops when they are not watching porn or chatting on social media. They have the luxury of decadence while you work your ass off over there to save them from structural genocide. The whole thing is a joke, man.

    And how dare you tell us not to go to the north or speak about our fellow Sri Lankans. We have so much in common and we shared the horrendous violence and pain of the tragic 30 year war inflicted on all of us by the bloodthirsty Tigers. Do you know there are more Tamils living in the south among the Sinhalese than in the north? What ‘space’ are you talking about. You must be spaced out. We all Sri Lankans are now working in solidarity to put the narrow-minded ethnic cleavages behind us and build a pluralistic Sri Lanka. Whereas, there is a huge gap between your world and that of the Tamils in the north whose voice you are trying to appropriate. Who gave you the right to speak on their behalf?

    Your hypocrisy shows when you demand the Sinhalese shed their ethnicity while you advocate segregation for Tamils. Are you saying racism is nationalism if you are a minority and the other way around if you are the majority? Just cool it, man.

  • 11
    0

    Sinthujan

    If you hate the Sinhalese people so much and don’t want to have anything to do with Sri Lanka, and think your entire BEING is synonymous with being a ‘TAMIL’ – then the logical thing for you to do would be to switch your efforts to find your cultural roots and identity in Sri Lanka to Tamil Nadu. For there you, the 100% Tamil, will be in a 100% Tamil land. Undoubtedly your logical homeland to end your exile is Tamil Nadu.

    Also tell me, if you feel outsiders shouldn’t speak about a community as it would amount to an appropriation of voice, then why do the Tamil Nadu people keep appropriating the voice of Sri Lankan Tamils and their diaspora.

  • 1
    4

    “Each time you speak for us, you take away the space for us to speak by ourselves.”

    I fully agree with you Sinthujan. Let me take your argument bit further.

    There have been no Sinhala “liberals’ any time in the history and will never be for the simple reason that Sinhalese cannot inherently be ‘liberals'(whatever that term means). Only ‘Tamil liberals’ do and can exist.

    In the past, there have been attempts by various Sinhala and Tamil (traitors too)imposters(faking liberalism)to take away the “space” that you mention. The LTTE,as the sole spokesperson of the Tamils, steadfastly made sure that Tamil imposters did not continue that process much further and stood for the ideals of liberalism. That’s why we called them Liberation Tigers of Thamil Eelam.

    On the other side, the JVP/DJV/Premadasa UNP government made sure the Sinhala imposters disappear and full stop the rest faking liberalism in the south.

    Both Sinhala and Tamil imposters deserved what they got.

    My point is that Tamil liberals must not waste time on Sinhala ‘liberals’ because they don’t and cannot exist.

    • 8
      0

      Really hilarious political satire I’ve read in a while:

      “There have been no Sinhala “liberals’ any time in the history and will never be for the simple reason that Sinhalese cannot inherently be ‘liberals’(whatever that term means). Only ‘Tamil liberals’ do and can exist.

      The LTTE, as the sole spokesperson of the Tamils, steadfastly made sure that Tamil imposters did not continue that process much further and stood for the ideals of liberalism. That’s why we called them Liberation Tigers of Thamil Eelam.”

  • 8
    0

    I’m an Eelam Tamil but even I have to admit that this is one smug article. I cringed reading it.

  • 4
    0

    Mr V::
    You seem to be suffering from an overdose of the postmodernist style of analysis. Let me tell you a secret: That style of analysis is dead, suffocated by its own inner contradictions.
    I can’t understand why this news has not reached the hallowed halls of the University of London…

  • 2
    1

    :)

    PhD student should have better standards.

    Between CT do you always publish the PhDs of all the contributors here? If Sinthu wanted to show off his phd he could have stated it simply..

    between sinthu good luck for ur phd!

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