Let us caress ‘Kattankudy’
I
was not planning to write this morning (Friday, August 05, 2011). Didn’t
write yesterday either. This is not the place for laying out reasons but
let me say ‘sorry’ nevertheless. I write today because I must. I know
that’s cliched but I am not cringing as I might have an another
occasion. A couple of days ago I got a text message from a man I’ve
never seen but I know through email exchanges and rare messages.
Ramzeen Azeez is one of the most well-read people I know. He knows a
lot about a lot of things and is generous with his time and wisdom. He
points out error or misconception gently, as is the way of those who
have opened their minds to perceive the eternal verities. He’s not alone
of course and one day I will write about all the giants who with
affection, giving and wisdom make me less of a dwarf than I am. Ramzeen
is a devout Mohammedan and I feel a discerning and humble student of the
Holy Quran. He teaches English to Sinhala children in Habarana. I am
sure he’s teaching them more than English songs and pronunciation, but
it warmed me when he informed me recently, with unmistakable pride, that
they can now sing ‘My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean’.
Civilians looking at the devastation caused by the LTTE. File
photo |
LTTE atrocities
‘Today is the 21st anniversary of the massacre of 147 people who were
praying in mosques in Kattankudy’, the text message read. We forget and
I am not sure if that’s good or bad, honestly. On the other hand, if we
do remember or are reminded, we must in the very least caress for
gripping tight only hurts gripper and gripped. These are therefore
caressing thoughts of a time that could hardly be identified with things
soft and tender. Or so I would like to think.
Relief items
I am a regular recipient of hate mail. I respond to each and every
person, named, bogus-named and otherwise anonymous. I am asked to feel
ashamed about July 1983 and the suffering that Tamil people were
subjected to.
My remorse, as I have mentioned many times, is that the citizens of
this country, especially the Sinhalese could not save all the Tamils
attacked by marauding mobs, instigated by ruling party thugs and given a
free hand upon the directives of those in power. I do not ask, by the
same token, that Tamil people apologize to me for the horrendous crimes
committed by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) against people
like me in the name of Tamil nationalism.
If ever any Sinhalese speaks of LTTE atrocities, there are people who
shoot back saying ‘you produced the LTTE’. And that’s a half-truth at
best, but in fact a downright lie. Tamil people down the lane we lived
in never caused us any harm. Their political loyalties were not known
then and are irrelevant as far as I am concerned in the matter of being
good neighbours. Like in our Sinhala villages, all doubts, jealousies,
suspicions, ill-will and other negative things were and are put aside on
joyous and sorrowful occasions.
Just like in the aftermath of the tsunami where the first lorry loads
of relief items collected by ordinary people in the Southern parts of
the country were sent to the then LTTE-held areas.
I don’t agree with those who support the LTTE or those who advocate
separatism, even the Chelvanayakam variety of ‘a little now, more later’
that is touted by the self-reinvented devolutionists, but I do
understand ‘aspiration’ and sense of ‘grievance’.
When I receive hate mail, I am not angered. I have often wondered
what the Muslims had done to the Tamils, or were perceived to have done,
to warrant the silence about the Kattankudy massacre on August 3, 1990.
I’ve wondered why the fact that one in ten Muslims was an IDP did not
factor into the conflict equation at any serious discussion on the
subject.
Traditional homelands
On June 11 that year, the LTTE murdered in cold blood 600 policemen
who had been instructed by the then President, Ranasinghe Premadasa to
surrender to the LTTE to keep a tenuous ceasefire alive. The LTTE
thereafter ordered Muslims to vacate Kattankudy or else! The
geo-politics related to ethnic cleansing and manufacturing traditional
homelands deserves a lot of comment. Today, 21 years later, just as on
that day 21 years ago, all that is relevant is the capacity of human
beings to treat their fellow creatures without barbarity. All that is
relevant is that those who lost their loved ones remain without them.
All that is relevant is that the LTTE is no longer around to do a
repeat of all this. All that is relevant is that it could happen all
over again if the relevant lessons are not learned.
I don’t know anyone who died that day. I don’t know their relatives.
I know just internet caricatures, for example Mohammed Ibrahim, then 40,
who told the New York Times, ‘I was kneeling down and praying when the
rebels (not sure if that’s the word he used or the word that the
particular reporter used; probably the latter in this age of
horror-cleansing media spin) started shooting; the firing went on for 15
minutes; I escaped without being hit and found myself among bodies all
over the place. Or Mohammed Arif, a 17-year-old student at the time, who
said, ‘Before I escaped from a side door and scaled a wall, I saw a
Tiger rebel put a gun into the mouth of a small Muslim boy and pull the
trigger’.
Humility and tenderness
Ibrahim would be 61 now and Arif 38. I don’t know what lives they’ve
lived or if they are still alive. I don’t know who the assassins were
and what happened to them thereafter. All I know is that 147 people were
murdered. It was so unnecessary. Like the close to 100,000 who died in
the 30-year conflict, the 60,000 killed between 1988 and 1989, and the
20,000 killed in 1971. Unnecessary.
That we are still coherent as a nation and a people is certainly
consolation. Whether we will remain as such is never guaranteed. It
requires courage, compassion, humility and tenderness.
It is good to remember. It is good to touch without touching, in the
manner of exercising equanimity in the face of life’s vicissitudes. I
forgot, but was reminded. I am just extending my friend Ramzeen’s arm,
using words. I hope they touch, that they caress.
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