Father Emmanuel - Sri Lanka

interview with
Father Emmanuel
Human rights activist - Sri Lanka
by Vanessa Baird
New Internationalist magazine,
September 1997
He's a birdlike figure, slightly built
with sparkling eyes, quick gestures and an easy smile. But don't
be fooled by the apparent physical frailty of this 62-year old
cleric. His spirit is anything but frail. Father Emmanuel spells
trouble both for the Sri Lankan authorities who are committing
atrocities in the name of 'ridding the country of Tamil Tiger
terrorism' and for complacent Catholic bishops who are keeping
quiet about it.
This priest's version of Christianity
is pretty straightforward: 'I think that in the Church, if you
have too much security you are not a Christian.' He wants the
bishops to go to his native Jaffna and see
for themselves. 'I believe the truth liberates,'
he says simply. 'But the bishops prefer not to go. And so the
sins of destruction must be laid at the doors of these bishops'
houses.' Clearly he is not a man to mince his words or meekly
accept limp excuses. What he finds most frustrating is that he
believes that the Catholic Church in Sri Lanka could act as a
powerful mediating force to help end a war waged by the mainly
Buddhist Sinhalese against the mainly Hindu Tamils.
In a world where the words 'Tamil' and
'Tiger' have become almost synonymous, Father Emmanuel makes an
important distinction. 'I am a Tamil but I am not a Tiger,' he
says. 'I am a churchman. A new brand of churchman.' He refutes
as Government propaganda the message that the Tamil Tigers are
'not true representatives' of the Tamil people.
'They do have widespread support,' he
says. 'They are defacto the representatives of the people, and
actually give protection to Tamils.' But, he adds: 'As a Christian
I can't support violence. The war must stop. The Tamils want peace.'
But he is also committed to the cause
of Tamil independence from Sri Lanka. For him the seeds were sown
back in 1956 when, as a student in Colombo, he witnessed the first
anti-Tamil riots. 'I saw Tamil students being thrown into the
lake. Thousands were killed.
'Then in 1958 the Government passed legislation
making it harder for Tamil students to get into higher education.
They had to get higher marks than Sinhalese students. And they
were discriminated against in employment.'
In 1977 there was another round of anti-Tamil
violence. More died. Seventy per cent of Tamils voted to separate
from the rest of Sri Lanka and create their own Tamil Eelam in
the Northern part of the country, with Jaffna as its capital.
'It was a cry for survival,' says the
priest. 'The youth took up arms in response to almost 20 years
of state terrorism.' It was then the Tamil Tigers were born. any
who know him think that if Father Emmanuel had followed a more
conventional career he would be a bishop or an archbishop by now.
Instead he is the vicar general for the diocese of Jaffna. He
wanted to be in Jaffna with his people. It was a time when many
would have given a lot not to be there. The city was under heavy
aerial bombardment, courtesy of the Sri Lankan military. It was
cut off from the rest of the country the victim of a savage economic
blockade. 'There was no telephone, no electricity, no fuel, little
food, no water pumps.'
While fellow academics and theologians
were publishing books this priest was struggling with scraps of
paper and candles. The only thing that came in ample supply were
bombs. 'The Government said it was targeting Tamil Tiger strongholds.
But 99 per cent of the bombs were falling on ordinary citizens.
Two of our churches were hit.'
Then in Autumn of 1995 the people of Jaffna
heard that the army was about to wage a major assault. They were
going to 'liberate' Jaffna from the Tigers, the authorities said.
But when the soldiers arrived, the city's inhabitants, 500,000
of them, fled south in a traumatic exodus. 'The army captured
an empty city,' says Father Emmanuel. 'They hoisted a flag and
claimed victory. For two months the city was without people.'
It's almost impossible for outsiders,
including foreign journalists, to find out what is happening in
Jaffna. Aid workers from the International Red Cross and Medecins
Sans Frontieres have had to leave after their vehicles were commandeered
and the rules and curfews imposed on personnel made it impossible
for them to carry out their work. Yet the stories that are, in
one way or another, filtering out are hair-raising: young girls
being gang raped by soldiers; bodies of children in Jaffna school
uniforms being washed up along the Mullaitivu coast in gunny bags.
'This is a war going on behind closed
doors,' says Father Emmanuel. 'The only information getting out
is from the military sources in Colombo. I come out of the area
as one from the grave... and I know what is going on in this so
called "war for peace".
'The Tamil today,' says Father Emmanuel
with graphic passion, 'is a person in a closed, darkened room,
being shelled from above, being denied food and medicine. Give
him or her the basic things and he or she can talk, can negotiate
peace - but not under these current conditions.'
As he is preparing to leave Father Emmanuel
reveals a glimpse of trepidation. To get home he will have to
go through Colombo. Sri Lanka has only one airport. 'I fear going
to Colombo,' he says. 'I fear they will take me for a terrorist
even at my age.' It's another touching facet of his courage: to
feel fear, look it in the face, and still do what he knows he
has to.
Heroes
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