The true story of two former LTTE militants :
From sheer hatred to stark reality
by Camelia Nathaniel
Many young Tamil girls and boys, having grown up with the terrorism
that plagued the country for over three decades, have been idolising the
terrorist outfit - the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Young
Jayawardhani was no different, and her mind was poisoned with hatred
propagated by the terrorists, since it was so easy for the LTTE because
she was an orphan at the Sencholai home for orphans.
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Innocent youth were turned into killers |
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The soldiers
were their saviours |
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Real freedom
was their goal |
Jayawardhani never felt the warmth of a loving mother's hugs and
tenderness. Countless times she dreamed of that perfect life with a
family, and could only wonder what life would have been like, had she
not lost her parents. All she wanted was to live a life with people who
cared about her. All she ever wanted was to be free and happy.
But life, it seems, never treated her fairly. The only family that
Jayawardhani had ever known was the other orphans at the Sencholai
Orphanage, and the LTTE. She received her education at the orphanage,
which she is very grateful for.
Poisoned mind
She felt grateful to the LTTE for giving her a place to stay and for
educating her. Jayawardhani grew up to believe that the Sri Lankan Army
and the Sinhala people were cruel and unreliable. Her mind was poisoned
with the notion that they were out to destroy the Tamils. The hatred
persuaded her to later join the terrorist outfit and start a misguided
journey to 'save the Tamil people'. “The only family I knew was the
other orphans at the home and the LTTE were the heroes fighting to
liberate my people. The only mother I knew was the lady who took care of
us at the orphanage,” she reminisced.
Having joined the LTTE, she had fiercely fought against the
Government Forces and did so with great pride and dedication. “I felt
that I was fighting for a cause. I had never known anyone else in my
life other than the children at the orphanage and later my fellow cadre.
We were made to believe that the Government Forces, specially the Army,
were brutal killers, simply out to kill us.”
For many other cadre, fighting for the LTTE was similar to
Jayawardhani's case, as they too were brainwashed and misguided by the
LTTE. They too have a story to tell of how the former ‘killing machines’
of the LTTE turned innocent youth into killers.
She had later met a young man, Sidambaranathan Naganathan, senior to
her in the terrorist organisation, and the two of them fell in love.
However, their love affair was not looked upon favourably by the LTTE.
“The terrorist leaders were of the opinion that if these cadre were to
marry and raise families, the organisation would not have the required
manpower to battle.” For Jayawardhani and Naganathan, it was a long
struggle that they finally were able to overcome.
“However, it was not a piece of cake and we had to each conduct our
assigned missions successfully to have permission to enter wedlock.
However, we did what we had to do and finally got married and settled
down in Murusumudai.” They had their share of trials and tribulations,
but somehow kept their marriage together.
LTTE atrocities
As time went by, they had two children and Jayawardhani conceived
their third son. Just like many others who had initially believed in the
terrorists, her husband and she gradually saw the LTTE atrocities.
“I have seen the way they punished our fellow fighters if they dared
to question the motives or actions of the terrorist leaders. I have
also, on several occasions, seen them killing the very cadre who fought
for their cause, but were unfortunate to have been left disabled, having
sustained injuries in battle. Even during the last stages, LTTE leaders
destroyed many of their own cadre who were considered a burden to them,”
Naganathan recalled.
These innocent people were caught up in a struggle that they
eventually realised was not for the liberation of the Tamil people, but
for power. Many innocent civilians had been caught up amid an escalating
battle between the Security Forces and the LTTE. They had lost
everything and their lives had been shattered. They finally started to
realise that the LTTE had no good intentions and that the Tamil people
were just pawns in the scheme that was to gain power for LTTE leaders.
Army-controlled areas
During the latter stages of the war against terrorism, Government
troops had ordered the people in the LTTE-controlled areas to go towards
them, said Jayawardhani. “Yet, the LTTE cadre did not allow them to
cross and they kept shooting at those who tried to cross over to the
Army-controlled areas. The ones crossing the earth bund, which held
thousands, and separated them from the real world, had the courage to do
so, sensing that real freedom was not with the terrorists as they had
been made to believe, but beyond the earth bund. Those who crossed over
were urging the others to follow via loudspeakers, and many of the
people were crossing over, and denying the LTTE the opportunity of
holding them as a human shield, to prevent being attacked by the
Government troops,” she said.
The Government did whatever it took to rescue those being held as a
human shield by the LTTE.
The LTTE, on the other hand, were enticing the Government Forces to
commit mayhem on the civilians in the No Fire Zone to gain them
international attention and sympathy.
Almost 300,000 civilians were held under LTTE custody, which offered
them protection from heavy Army gunfire or air raids, but allowed them
the use of heavy weapons against Government Forces under the cover of
the ‘human shield'.
By this time, Jayawardhani had given birth to her third son, and she
and her husband had decided to take their two older children and the
seven-day-old son and cross over to the Government troops and surrender.
Jayawardhani was not the only one who experienced the LTTE's
brutality. She had been a freedom fighter for them for many years;
someone who had believed so passionately in their cause. However, once
she felt the fragrance of real freedom beyond the earth bund, she wanted
to go for it; but the LTTE, who were supposed to be fighting for the
freedom of Tamils, were obstructing their freedom.
“My husband escorted me and my seven-day-old infant first and took us
toward the earth bund to help me get across while he went back to get
our other children. However, the LTTE fired at us and the last thing I
knew was I felt something striking my face,” she said.
Stark reminder
Naganathan says the instant he saw his wife fall, he ran towards her,
but saw her motionless body in a pool of blood. “I thought that my wife
was dead along with our baby. Yet, when I turned to leave, I heard the
infant make a sound and I picked it up and ran towards the Army. The
soldiers took the injured baby from my arms and put it into a helicopter
and I did not know where they took the infant at the time,” he recalled.
Somehow, for Jayawardhani's luck, the Army had found her. Having
realised that she was still alive, the Army had transported her onboard
a helicopter to Colombo. “I regained consciousness only after six months
when the doctors had performed several surgeries on my face, as the
blast had shattered part of it. I had lost one eye and my nose including
several bones was shattered. I have no nose, but the doctors have
transplanted a piece of flesh from my thigh to construct my face. When I
look at my face today in the mirror, I am terrified at what I see, yet
it is a stark reminder of what those I trusted and believed in had done
to me. I now realise that I was just a number, a part of the fighting
machine, nothing more to the LTTE.”
However, Jayawardhani now views the Army and the Sinhalese as her
rescuers and her family. “Neither the Army nor the Government has valid
reasons to save my life. Yet they struggled for six months to give me
life and resurrect me from the dead. Contrary to the many allegations
directed at the Army, accusing them of theft and massacre, I am a good
example of their kindness and love. I had lost my ring finger during the
battle and the Army soldiers who had found me had preserved my wedding
ring which was on my lost finger and returned it to me after I regained
consciousness,” she said with immense gratitude towards her rescuers.
Jayawardhani's infant was taken to the Lady Ridgeway Hospital where
he was cared for during the time she was unconscious. “After I regained
consciousness, I told the hospital authorities that I had a
seven-day-old infant born at the time of the attack. I had no idea if my
son was alive or dead. Their records however indicated that the Army had
airlifted an infant to Colombo and that a motherless infant was
receiving treatment at the children's hospital. After a DNA test, it was
confirmed that the infant was mine and my little son was handed back to
me.
“I was moved beyond words at the sheer effort taken by the Sinhala
people to save me and my son, even today I cannot understand their
generosity and kindness towards someone like me who had been out to
destroy them. The magnitude of their kindness is far beyond my
comprehension, as it had been a Sinhala doctor attached to the
children's hospital, who also had a child at the time, who had
breast-fed my son too to keep him alive. How do I ever repay her, or the
Army for what has been done for me? No amount of words will ever be
enough to express my gratitude to them,” she said.
LTTE - the hypocrites
Jayawardhani says that she has nothing but hatred for most of the
ex-LTTE leaders enjoying freedom today. “These are hypocrites who
abandoned us and left us to die for carving their own way out,” she
said. Today, Jayawardhani and Naganathan live with their two children in
Vadukkodai in Koddaikadu Jaffna, enjoying the freedom. Many other
ex-LTTE cadre just like Jayawardhani and Naganathan are not forced today
to do anything, but live a life of peace. They are all now slowly
rebuilding their shattered lives.
Certain elements of the Tamil Diaspora, whose children have, all this
time been enjoying the comforts in foreign countries, are now voicing
their concerns for the Tamil people. Is it that they are doing so for
their people or, in fact, for protecting their own interests to hold
onto the privileges offered to them by these countries and prevent them
from being sent back? They claim to be fighting for a separate land for
the Tamil people, yet would any of them, now domiciled in foreign
countries, ever give up their comforts and return to this country and
live in this so called separate state that they say they want? No.
It is the people who have been caught up in terrorism that suffered
the most. None of them want to go through that ever again. Never!
Courtesy: defence.lk
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