Hounded!
Hate campaign forces Sharmila Seyyid to go into
hiding:
by Azharudeen Hamza
Sri Lankan woman rights activist, Sharmila Seyyid, and her family are
being harassed for years. Facing attacks in Sri Lanka, where she and her
sister used to run a school. She now lives in exile in Chennai.

Sharmila Seyyid |
It is noteworthy here that Muslims as a minority in Sri Lanka has
been facing violence for years - there was an upsurge in 2014 - under
Sinhalese Buddhist majority. Seyyid has been very vocal in her works
against several conservative practices, vis-a-vis women. She has already
published two anthologies of poems and a novel Ummath that critiques the
rising conservatism in Sri Lanka, besides highlighting the everyday
injustices that Tamil-speaking Muslims face there.
Seyyid is a single mother, journalist, activist and writer, from
eastern Sri Lanka and is the founder-president of the Organisation for
Social Development, established in 2009, a community-based organisation
in Eravur.
However, things changed drastically after her November 2012 interview
with the Tamil Radio Service of the BBC, recorded after the publication
of her first collection of poems, Siragu Mulaitha Penn (The women who
grew wings), was released in Sri Lanka.
In response to a question from the BBC reporter, Seyyid had voiced
the opinion that sex workers may be better protected if prostitution was
legalized. This drew a significant backlash from a section of the Muslim
community in the area and elsewhere, which was dubbed as her
'endorsement' to demand of legalising sex work, considered haram in
Islam - or any religion for that matter.
She, however, issued clarification emphasising that she was "...only
highlighting a social reality and did not intend to defy Islamic
tenets". She also expressed "regret if she had unwittingly hurt anyone's
sentiments." The harassment and intimidation that began in the aftermath
of the 2012 interview has resulted in her having to leave the country,
and continues to this day, impacting other family members as well,
including the English medium school she ran with her younger sister.
Not a religious issue
Living in fear for herself and her son, Sharmila Seyyid, is hesitant
to come in public and hence all attempts to reach out to her have so far
been in vain. On April 27, 2015 the Tamil Edition of The Hindu published
a brief interview with the author on her new novel Ummath, titled
'Problem is not with Islam.'
She, however, tried to explain the context of her comment to the BBC
based on 'ground realities'. She says, "While I was researching on the
ground I found a woman who was searching of her lost husband. She told
me that one man from her native village told her that he knows where her
husband is and took her to Colombo and sold her.
She was thus forced into prostitution. She travelled to every camp in
order to find her husband's whereabouts but finally got cheated
sexually."

Cover of Sharmila’s latest book
Ummath |
Seyyid added that I came across many women like her and got to know
about their lives and problems, which in gist was the reason for her
observation to the BBC in 2012. "For this (comment) they abused me a
lot, but I have heard lot worse than these in those ground works," she
concludes.
An Op-Ed article in The Hindu by Kannan Sundaram, Editor of
Kalachuvadu, a Tamil monthly in India, and the publisher of Perumal
Murugan's Mathorubhagan, published on April 17, 2015 detailed her
plight, starkly titled: "Chronicle of a death online". The article was
later reproduced on April 19, 2015 in Sri Lanka's The Sunday Times as
well as the Sunday Observer.
According to this article, the hate campaign has now gone viral on
internet. She got a message from some fundamentalist group asking her to
remove all her photos from social media sites, in which her face is not
covered. As she refused, morphed photographs of her are being circulated
online.
In March, an audio recording that was widely circulated and made news
in Tamil Nadu, was of a high-ranking Tamil Nadu police officer in a
lustful telephonic conversation with a woman subordinate, but the
accompanying photograph in online reports was that of Seyyid's.
According to Sundaram, "It is not clear if this was deliberate or
merely an act of negligence. Shocked, but never one to take anything
lying down, she condemned it on Facebook and, with several friends,
strongly protested against the websites and social media pages that
published her photograph. She succeeded in temporarily taking it off the
web."
However, fundamentalist groups and ignorant people from Sri Lanka to
India to the Tamil diaspora in Gulf countries are now reportedly
circulating the same report online and through WhatsApp etc;
When TwoCircles.net tried to verify these allegations, we were
shocked to see the level of vilification and the hate-campaign against
her.
Personal photographs from her Facebook and other sources have been
illegally taken and put on malicious audio with disgraceful captions in
Tamil, using inappropriate language. Another falsely says: a Muslim
woman was murdered...Tension at Yeraavoor (in Sri Lanka).
Based largely on the Op-Ed of Sundaram, senior Journalist Hassan
Suroor, recently wrote on FirstPost on the issue although he titled it
mischievously Hounded by mullahs: A Muslim woman writer forced to leave
home, why is the community silent? According to him, "In Seyyid's case,
though, some liberal Muslims have joined an online protest but that's
not enough. Contrast this with the strong liberal Hindu response in the
Perumal Murugan case. They rushed to support the Tamil writer when he
was attacked by Hindutva groups objecting to certain portions in one of
his best-known books."
He is worried that "unchallenged, this "lunatic fringe'' can also
turn against us one day."
Silver lining
The silver-lining in this case, however, is that there has been
strong counter protest too, expressing solidarity with Seyyid, both
online and offline. Sundaram writes in her piece: "Liberal Muslims are
protesting loudly online. Women writers and liberal Muslim writers
joined to organise a protest meeting. Under the umbrella 'Pen Veli', a
discussion forum was launched in Chennai on March 5, to protest the
continuing attacks on women by Islamic fundamentalists," adding, "The
speakers categorically condemned the attempts to defame women and Islam
by fundamentalist groups. The acts of such groups were condemned as
anti-Islam."
On April 5, 2015 too a group of activists, writers organised a
solidarity protest and programme in Chennai. "Our Prophet has never
imposed his teachings even to his family members. Quran says, whoever
likes can follow, whoever dislikes can reject," Aloor Shanavas, Chennai
based writer and Activist who was instrumental in organising solidarity
march told TwoCircles.net. Without defending view with a view, abusing a
woman nastily is brutal. It's not only that a woman is getting affected,
but the entire humanity, he added.
In Sri Lanka, meanwhile, a joint-statement has been issued by the
Muslim civil society, comprising of over 55 writers, activists, lawyers,
journalists, professors, etc, saying, "While we acknowledge that
prostitution is prohibited in Islam (as in many other religions), we
nevertheless uphold that Seyyid is within her rights and freedoms to
express her personal views; and condemn all forms of harassment,
intimidation and hatred by vigilante groups and individuals that are
justified based on claims to the above."
The statement further adds, "While we acknowledge and respect that
feelings may have been hurt and sensibilities offended, we also
categorically state that defaming, harassing and inciting violence
against a person for holding a different opinion, in this case a woman,
is unacceptable and not within the spirit of the faith, and can also be
deemed a contravention of the law." These Muslim civil society activists
also urged the Sri Lankan authorities to bring to book those who have
been harassing and intimidating journalist and social worker
SharmilaSeyyid for her opinion on rights of the sex workers. These
activists noted that if people feel themselves to have been wronged, due
process should be followed to seek redress, adding, "This event
highlights the critical need within the Muslim community, and also in
the country at large, for developing processes to respond to critical
issues, not through vilification, harassment or violence but through a
process of dialogue that is in keeping with the law and norms of a
democratic society and respectful of different faiths and ethics."
While urging the community leaders and civil society actors of the
Muslim community to "continue to play an active role in upholding the
rights of every citizen," these noted members of the Muslim civil
society also urged the clerics and religious leaders to take steps to
halt the targeting of fellow Muslims based on spurious religious
justifications.
(Chennai based
Journalist Azharudeen Hamza did additional reporting and helped in
translating Tamil texts, locating Photos and Videos online.)
(Twocircles.net)
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