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Liberation does not come as a gift from anybody; it is seized by the masses with their own hands. - Frantz Fanon

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Disabled female fighters from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) speak about their plight and struggle at a camp for the disabled in Vavuniya. The Eelam Tamil community, both in the homeland and in the diaspora, proudly remembers the tens of thousands of Eelam Tamil martyrs who sacrificed themselves for liberation. However, despite this remembrance, former LTTE fighters are severely neglected in the homeland. Not only are former cadres constantly surveilled and intimidated by the Sri Lankan government, but their dignity has also been stripped away. Many are mocked by fellow Tamils, forced to beg on the streets, and pushed into prostitution or alcoholism. They are accused of stealing, subjected to gossip, and publicly humiliated. Tamil politicians exploit former cadres for political gain and votes, only to abandon them once the elections are over. The question remains: how did the Eelam Tamil community fall to such a low point, abandoning its own heroes and allowing them to die and suffer in silence, when those heroes who are suffering today did not hesitate to sacrifice their lives and abandon their own families for Tamils they did not even know. Neither Prabhakaran nor the tens of thousands of Tamil martyrs would be proud of the current state of the Eelam Tamil community for abandoning their comrades. Only history will tell whether Eelam Tamils finally get their act together. There is no point in celebrating Maaveerar Naal while leaving our heroes who are still alive to die.

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Today, Shobana Dharmaraja, better known as Isaipriya, would have turned 44 years old. Hearing the name Isaipriya aches the hearts of millions of Tamils all over the world, remembering the fate and the immense pain she suffered in Mullivaikkal. The horrific pain and dehuminization she suffered was not an isolated event: it reflects what thousands upon thousands of Tamil women endured at the hands of the Sri Lankan government, not only in the small strip of Mullivaikkal, but also throughout the three-decade-long genocidal war that Sri Lanka fought against the Tamil people. I think it is important that Shobana should be remembered for who she was, and not only as a victim among the thousands of Tamils who suffered. She should be remembered for what she loved to do and what she pursued with passion. She was a young, beautiful Tamil actress with great acting range, a dancer, a woman with a beautiful and soothing voice, a journalist, and a great mother. The footage that you are seeing is from the short film Veli, which was shot in the late 2000s, probably around 2007 or 2008. The Tamil Eelam short films and movies that were made during the Eelam war may not have been great in terms of technical quality due to the lack of resources, but the films and the directors behind them wrote meaningful stories that were progressive and deeply moving. As in this short film, it depicts the struggles of young single mothers and the stigma they faced in society. May Isaipriya rest in peace, and may the Sri Lankan government and its perpetrators suffer for their crimes against Eelam Tamils.

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Balasegaram Kandiah, alias Col. Brigadier Balraj (1965–2009) speaks about the historic Second Battle of Elephant Pass in 2000. Approximately 1,200 Tamil guerrillas fought against the Sri Lankan Army, which had over 17,000 soldiers defending the military garrison and approximately 40,000 soldiers stationed throughout the entire Jaffna peninsula. A U.S. military analyst described Elephant Pass as impregnable. At the time, the Elephant Pass garrison was the most fortified military garrison. The LTTE achieved the impossible by liberating the area and taking control of the Elephant Pass in Operation Unceasing Waves III (Oyatha Alaigal 3). Balraj, regarded as second in command to LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran in the military sphere, was arguably the finest military commander the LTTE ever had. He excelled in both offensive and defensive positional warfare. On one occasion, the LTTE intercepted an army message from the frontline to headquarters, saying that Balraj was in the field. The response was, “Be careful. Balraj is more dangerous than Prabhakaran.” Later, when Prabhakaran heard about this intercept, the LTTE chief was amused. He reportedly teased the shy Balraj about it, saying, “The Army regards you as the No. 1 enemy now, so I am safe.” Though short-lived, Prabhakaran gave his people a taste of freedom—freedom from being treated as slaves in their own land, freedom from the nightmare every ordinary Tamil person experienced when crossing Elephant Pass. As Taraki Sivaram once said: The rights we enjoy today were not given to us; we earned them through our fight (armed struggle).

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