Category Archives: life stories

The Life and Death of Velupillai Pirapāharan

DBS COLUMNDavid B. S. Jeyaraj, courtesy of the Daily Mirror, 9 May 2015, where the title is “Defeat of LTTE and Demise of Tiger Leader Prabhakaran in May 2009″

The month of May is significant in the history of the Tamil secessionist armed struggle in Sri Lanka. It was on May 5,  1976, that a section of  militant Sri Lankan Tamil youths re-organized themselves into  an  organization  called the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) which had the establishment of a separate  Tamil State on the Island  through armed struggle as its fundamental objective. It was on May 14, 1976, that the chief political configuration of the Sri Lankan Tamils re-named itself as the Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF) and adopted a resolution demanding the creation of a Tamil State called “Tamil Eelam”comprising the Northern and Eastern Provinces of the Island. Decades later in May 2009, the  Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam underwent a total military defeat at the hands of the Sri Lankan armed forces in the Mullaitheevu district of Sri Lanka’s northern province. Four days in May from May 15 to May 18 were of crucial importance in this regard. On May 19, 2009,   South Asia’s longest war came to an end with the official announcement that the LTTE leader Thiruvengadam Veluppillai Prabhakaran was dead. His body was recovered on the banks of the Mullaitheevu lagoon known as “Nandhikkadal”.

18a-colombotelegraph  59- VP signs peace accord 2002-BBC 60a-VP asPresident

Continue reading

8 Comments

Filed under accountability, discrimination, ethnicity, fundamentalism, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, law of armed conflict, life stories, LTTE, martyrdom, military strategy, politIcal discourse, power politics, prabhakaran, Rajapaksa regime, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, Tamil Tiger fighters, war reportage, world affairs, zealotry

Asian MPs in the British Parliament

Courtesy of Jayantha Somasundaram of Canberra

Conservative Party candidate of Sri Lankan origin Ranil Jayawardena, who was running for election in North East Hampshire, has been elected to the UK Parliament. He had polled 35,573 votes (66%), according to UK elections results released yesterday. North East Hampshire is reportedly considered to be a safe Tory seat, which was comfortably won with a majority of over 18,000 votes in 2010. Ranil, whose parents are from Sri Lanka, has served as a local Councillor since 2008 and is Deputy Leader of Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council.

A = Ranil Jayawardana Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under democratic measures, economic processes, female empowerment, historical interpretation, immigration, life stories, modernity & modernization, performance, politIcal discourse, world events & processes

President Sirisena matches Rajapaksa in political chess game

Lucien Rajakarunanayake, in The Daily News, 9 May 2015, where the title is President holds trumps against Rajapaksa strategies”

So soon after the successful adoption of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution last week, which was a major political victory for President Maithripala Sirisena, despite many Opposition efforts to derail the process; it was interesting to see the SLFP leadership hold the cards at this week’s meeting between President Sirisena and former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

The big media and PR push by the pro-Mahinda Rajapaksa group within the SLFP to show this as a major confrontation between the two rival factions within the SLFP, with emphasis on what is sought to be shown as the continuing popularity of the defeated president, clearly did not work out in favour of the Rajapaksa line in current politics at this meeting. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under democratic measures, governance, legal issues, life stories, politIcal discourse, power politics, power sharing, sri lankan society

CONFRONTATIONS in SRI LANKA: SINHALESE, LTTE & OTHERS

Author Michael Roberts …………..2009 ….. ISBN 9789556650358 …. Publisher = Vijitha Yapa Publications, 450 pages…. Size 210x145x22mm Weight 800 g…...Our Price Rs. 1,800.00…….. Analytical essays on issues of collective identity, the cultural roots and ideology of nationalism, as well as a detailed study of the projects of Anagarika Dharmapala ….. Over 35 photographs

LTTE cadre with cyanide capsule Tigers in camp with their kuppi–Pic by Shyam Tekwani

                                     TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I: Landscapes of Debate, Encounter, Review

  1. Language and national identity: the Sinhalese and others over the centuries
  2. Saivite symbolism, sacrifice and Tamil Tiger rites
  3. Nomadic intellectuals: Asian stars in Atlanticland

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under cultural transmission, female empowerment, historical interpretation, law of armed conflict, life stories, LTTE, martyrdom, politIcal discourse, religiosity, Saivism, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, suicide bombing, Tamil Tiger fighters, unusual people, world events & processes, zealotry

Unsung Heroes and Heroines: Bavinck, Rajasinghams and Hoole

Of Tamils and Tigers: a journey through Sri Lanka’s war years

TAMIKL AND TIGERS oNE   of tamil and tigers II BAVINCK = RAJASINGHAM Ben Bavinck & Rajasingham Pater

Author Ben Bavinck
ISBN 9789556651393
Publisher VIJITHA YAPA PUBLICATIONS
Pages 344
Size 140mm X 225mm
Weight 600
Our Price US$ 15.60

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, atrocities, authoritarian regimes, cultural transmission, discrimination, historical interpretation, indian armed forces, Indian Ocean politics, life stories, LTTE, politIcal discourse, power politics, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, terrorism, trauma, unusual people, war reportage, world events & processes

Palmyrah Fallen. Reflections on Rajani Thiranagama’s Legacy

N. Sivapalan, courtesy of The Island, 6 May 2015, where the title reads “What went wrong with the Tamil Struggle?” … in reviewing Palmyra Fallen Colombo, Globe Printing for UTHR & Rajan Hoole, ISBN-13: 978-9559447054

Friends and Rajan, this book is a monumental work with history, politics, law and several other things. I have restricted my discussion to two things. The first is about the outlook of the book. As a person who has lived in Jaffna during most of the period of conflict, the second thing I am concerned about is what went wrong in our struggle. I will start on the first.

Palmyrah FallenAt the outset I have two questions. The book has Rajani’s name in the title. Palmyra Fallen: From Rajani to War’s End. Her photograph is on the first page; then it reminds us that this is the 25th Anniversary of the Assassination of Rajani. It is not dedicated to Rajani but Rajani appears throughout the book in addition to some chapters that talk about her only. The first question I had was: Is Rajani important enough to be given this much space in our recent history? The second question about the outlook is what is the use of so much data and case histories that come again and again in the book? Continue reading

4 Comments

Filed under accountability, discrimination, governance, historical interpretation, Left politics, life stories, LTTE, politIcal discourse, power politics, prabhakaran, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, Tamil Tiger fighters, TNA, truth as casualty of war, unusual people, women in ethnic conflcits, world events & processes, zealotry

Lanka’s Sovereignty under Threat from Dalai Lāma Visit and the Port City? Gananath Speaks Out

Gananath Obeyesekere, in Sunday Island, 2 The Proposed visit of the Dalai Lama and the issue of Sovereignty”
article_image The author of this article (second from left) with the organizer of the conference, Professor Meenakshi Thapan, the Dalai Lama and the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Delhi, Professor Dinesh Singh.
Several weeks ago I had the privilege of attending a conference organized by colleagues in the University of Delhi and presided by His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama. The conference itself was on how children’s secular education could be transformed in order to bring in values of compassion and caring sorely lacking in contemporary models of education. In my introductory talk I dealt with the significance of Jataka tales in molding the conscience of ordinary Buddhists right through the ages while other colleagues actually dealt with successful models of education using the centrality of compassion in selected places in British Columbia, Bhutan, Mongolia and Vietnam; while yet others dealt with experimental studies of the brain and the positive effects of insight meditation.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Afghanistan, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, foreign policy, governance, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, island economy, life stories, modernity & modernization, news fabrication, politIcal discourse, power politics, Rajapaksa regime, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, the imaginary and the real, transport and communications, truth as casualty of war, world events & processes

The Redoubtable Charles Bean: War Reporter, Historian and Embodiment of the Anzac Spirit

Stephen Loosley,  reviewing Bearing Witness: The Remarkable Life of Charles Bean, Australia’s Greatest War Correspondent by Peter Rees,  Allen & Unwin, 584pp,  courtesy of The Australian, 25 April 2015

The Gallipoli campaign was a strategic fiasco, despite the courage and sacrifice of the Anzacs committed to the landing and subsequent ­battles. In the face of equally heroic and determined Turkish defenders, however, there was one element to the campaign from which every Australian school student is able to draw comfort and take pride: the skilful evacuation of the Allied forces without loss in December 1915.

Bean on donkey Bean on donkeyPic courtesy of Australian War Memorial

The story is true but the Turkish view of the evacuation sometimes may be taken into account, for Turkish commentators argue that Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, seeing the ships offshore, concluded early that an evacuation would take place. His resolve was simply to permit Turkey’s enemies to leave without impediment. The evacuation forms an important part of the Anzac legend of bravery and stoicism, passed down through generations of Australian men and women in battle and into the fabric of our national identity. Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Australian culture, australian media, cultural transmission, historical interpretation, life stories, military strategy, patriotism, politIcal discourse, power politics, unusual people, world events & processes

Sacrifice, Gift and the Social Logic of Muslim ‘Human Bombers’

Ivan Strenski

To understand Muslim ‘human bombers’, we obviously must see them within the discourse of jihad, but also within that of ‘sacrifices’ and ‘gifts’. From this perspective, ‘human bombers’ act because of their social relationships—whether these are with other human beings or with divine persons, conditions, or states of affairs. ‘Human bombings’ are not, therefore, simply matters of utilitarian military tactics, but are also religious and social—as gifts, martyrdoms and sacrifices.This article assesses conceptual issues thrown up by the phenomena that Raphael Israeli calls ‘human bombs’. It proposes that we need to pay greater attention to the ‘sacrificial’ designations of these ‘human bombings’.

Regarding sacrifice and suicide, it is, arguable that ‘jihad’ holds the key. I shall refer at length to Raphael Israeli’s persuasive arguments that jihad overshadows and invalidates the view that ‘human bombers’ should be called ‘suicides’. I am also less sure that jihad is a mightier concept in these examples of self-inflicted death than ‘sacrifice’. In fact, I am arguing that ‘sacrifice’ is set on a course of its own, woven into the discourse of jihad.

Despite the clear jihadist conception behind ‘human bombings’, they persist in being conceived as sacrifices by their perpetrators. Beyond their action in service of jihad, the ‘human bombings’ are also seen as supreme gifts given in the interests of enhancing the conditions of others. One way that this gap between the utility of military attack and the symbolism of the sacrificial deed is bridged will be by recourse to the alternative description of these ‘human bombings’ as ‘martyrdom operations’. They are deaths suffered in active struggle on behalf of Islam or Palestine. Thus, sacrifice bombers can also, and at the same time, be martyrdom bombers.

Jihad is only a part of the ‘human bombers’ story. Even from a strictly military point of view, it seems strategically of dubious efficiency to undertake operations that in effect guarantee the loss of one’s fighters in every assault. Ideally, for a movement aimed at actual military victory, it would seem to make more sense if, instead of killing themselves in the process of making their attacks, the ‘human bombers’ could have gone on killing many more Israelis in subsequent non-suicidal attacks.

I believe that we need to adopt an even more Islamic frame of reference for definition and diagnosis if we are to comprehend the underlying motives of this unparalleled mode of self-sacrifice. A great part of that ‘Islamic frame of reference’ for the ‘human bombings’ is sacrifice. If in Israel/Palestine one goal of these deaths is to attack others outright in jihad, then another, simultaneous one, is to create a Palestinian political entity by making a sacrificial offering to Allah and the umma.

Once attention is drawn to talk of violence, we see that words like sacrifice, suicide or homicide are not neutral designations, but ‘loaded’ words—evaluations of certain actions. Language becomes an integral part of the physical struggles involved, not things set aside and independent of them. Calling a death a suicide or homicide is rhetorically a means of loading it with a certain dubious value, while calling it a sacrifice or act of martyrdom is to raise it to transcendent heights—thereby to religious levels of discourse and behavior.

In calling a death sacrifice, it is typically ennobled, raised to a level above the profane calculation of individual cost-benefit analysis—to the level of a so-called ‘higher’ good, whether that be of a nation or some transnational or transcendent reference, like a religion.

For this reason, the neutral term coined by Raphael Israeli, ‘human bombers’, serves a useful purpose. Human bombing—whether to do jihad, sacrifice or even to commit suicide—happens not only because of personal, self-contained motivational structures, but also because of their relationships with others (whether these be relationships with other human beings or with divine superhuman persons, conditions, or states of affairs).

Maurice Halbwachs came up with a formula that seemed to ease the conceptual tangle over sacrifice and suicide left behind by Durkheim. Whether something was a ‘sacrifice’ rather than a ‘suicide’ depended upon the viewpoint of the respective societies of reference. Halbwachs tells us that ‘society claims sacrifice as its own proper work’, accomplished ‘within the bosom of the community, where all the spiritual forces converge.’

Society thus ‘presides’ over sacrifice, says Halbwachs; it ‘organizes’ it and ‘takes responsibility for it’. By contrast, society ‘repudiates’ suicide. Thus to Durkheim’s attempt to define suicide—‘We call suicide all those cases of death resulting from an action taken by the victim themselves, and with the intention or the prospect of killing oneself’—Halbwachs added the phrase ‘and which is not at the same time a sacrifice’.

Halbwachs was, in effect, saying that the only feature making suicidal and sacrificial deaths different was society’s attitude. Suicide and sacrifice differ because of their relation to society. A death, such as that of a sati—in traditional India—might be considered a sacrifice under the conditions typically prevailing there, but it most certainly ‘becomes a suicide if it loses its ritual form’.

Human bombings are exemplary signs intended for certain audiences to read and receive, and are therefore profoundly social acts. Their success seems to rely upon the communal recognition and subsequent ritual celebration of the operations by the community from which the bomber comes. Avishai Margalit observes how much social prestige accrues to the bombers. Everyone knows their names. Even ‘small children’ know the names of human bombers.

Raphael Israeli brings home the point of the ‘jihadist’ nature of the ‘human bomber’ attacks, as we have already discussed. But, he notes beyond this that such an individual death is a profoundly social act: it is done so that the ‘entire Islamic umma is rescued’. Bin Laden likewise made clear that in his mind, the 9/11 hijackers belong intimately to the community and are duly celebrated: ‘The 19 brothers who sacrificed their lives in the sake of Allah were rewarded by this victory that we rejoice today’. If we are to take radical Islamist Palestinians seriously in describing the self-immolating deaths in Israel and the territories as ‘martyrdoms’, then we need to think about these acts of religious violence—as ‘sacrifices’.

This is precisely what Halbwachs had in mind in speaking of society ‘claiming sacrifice as its own proper work’; of sacrifice accomplished ‘within the bosom of the community, where all the spiritual forces converge’: or of a society that ‘presides’ over sacrifice, ‘organizes’ it and ‘takes responsibility for it’. Sacrifice is a profoundly social action, involving a network of relationships, typically actualized in terms of systems of social exchange.

What is more, sacrifice is not just a social deed. It also has potent religious resonance. Durkheim and another two of his co-workers, Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss, argued that sacrifice is more than just a socially sanctioned kind of self-inflicted death. It is also a ‘making holy’, as the Latin origins of the term indicate— ‘sacri-ficium’. Sacrifice for the Durkheimians is indeed a giving up or giving of that makes something holy.

Thus, for Durkheimians, these ‘human bombings’ would not tend to be conceived as simply utilitarian acts. The ‘human bombers’ are regarded as ‘sacred’ by their communities of reference. They have been ‘made holy’ in the eyes of the community that ‘accepts’ them and their deed. They are elevated to lofty moral, and indeed, religious, levels, as sacrificial victims themselves or as kinds of holy saints.

Taking together both that social recognition and high religious or moral qualities color these bombing operations, I conclude that these are neither easily described as straightforward utilitarian attacks nor pitiful suicides. They are not mere attacks because they are systematically careless of preserving the life of the attacker—and in doing so seem to take their meaning and rationales from the prestige accorded them by their social group of reference and their transcendent religious location.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Al Qaeda, arab regimes, cultural transmission, historical interpretation, Indian religions, Islamic fundamentalism, jihad, life stories, LTTE, martyrdom, military strategy, patriotism, politIcal discourse, power politics, Saivism, suicide bombing, Tamil Tiger fighters, terrorism, vengeance, war reportage, world events & processes, zealotry

Rajan and Jehan on the Present Government: Issues and Strengths

Rajan Philips in Sunday Island, 25 April 2015, two days before the vote on the 19th Amendment and where his  title is “The 100-Day Question: Will President Sirisena dissolve parliament and call the Rajapaksa bluff?”

 M SIRISENA WAVES If there is ever a time for political leadership to act in disregard of consensus, it is now. There was a time in Sri Lankan politics when that master rhetorician Colvin R. de Silva presaged the governing style of the SLFP-LSSP-CP United Front as one that would be “characterized not by consensus but by leadership.” Dr. Colvin’s foretelling was in anticipation of the massive United Front election victory in 1970. It turned out to be ill-advised at that time. But it is thoroughly appropriate at the present time. In politics, consensus is the preferred means to a desired end, but it is not an end itself. President Sirisena has the power to act and dissolve parliament and let the people elect a new parliament to end the current political uncertainty in parliament and in the country. Will he do it? That is the 100-Day question. And there will not be much else to talk about the 100 Days if parliament does not pass the 19th Amendment on Tuesday, the day after tomorrow. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, authoritarian regimes, constitutional amendments, governance, historical interpretation, legal issues, life stories, politIcal discourse, power politics, power sharing, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society