The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto
May 17, 2009
I wrote this with Noaman.
—
Since the initial publication of this piece, LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran has allegedly been killed by the Sri Lankan forces and the Tigers have surrendered. According to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaska this victory in his military campaign against the LTTE has ushered in an era of peace on the island.
Thus, the demands we made below for a ceasefire may now appear moot. However, because of the Sri Lankan government’s continued refusal to address the structural problems that led to Tamil discontent in the first place and its refusal to acknowledge the horrific manner by which it killed thousands of Tamil civilians in the Vanni in just this latest round of war, there is enough reason to believe that violence will flare up again in the country, perhaps sooner rather than later. Any peace that does not recognise its own limitations will be shortlived. For this reason, despite the ending of Eelam War IV, it is still necessary that we work toward more humane alternatives, involving strategies to push the Sri Lankan state into a political resettlement.
– May 19.
The recent burst of mass mobilizations by sections of the Canadian-Tamil community in Toronto has brought to the fore several contradictions concerning the conflict in Sri Lanka and its presence in and connection to Canada. Mainstream media’s responses to the protests have been overwhelmingly racialist, exposing many of the limits of Canadian multiculturalism. In order for Canadian multiculturalism to accept any given group of people as a cultural community, it must define that group by differentiating it from a supposedly mainstream Canadian identity. This focalising Canadian identity—in effect a non-identity—is white and middle-class. Thus, when the Toronto Star publishes an editorial entitled “Protesters vs. the public” [1] it effectively notes that the protesters are not part of the public by pitting (Tamil) protesters against the (Canadian) public. Rather than focusing on the war, media outlets have focused on the inconvenience posed to commuters, thereby shifting attention away from deaths in Sri Lanka to traffic regulations in Canada. Consequently, responses to the protests have largely demonstrated pernicious xenophobia. For instance, in the Toronto Sun, Peter Worthington argues that not using excessive force (e.g., water cannons) against Tamil protesters who block streets is tantamount to “reverse racism” against white Canadians. [2]
But if the coverage of the protests has made certain contradictions about the performance of cultural politics in public spaces in Canada apparent, other contradictions about the negotiation of those politics within cultural communities have also been rendered largely invisible. The impetus comes, once again, from a multiculturalism that defines ethnic, immigrant identities against a supposedly mainstream, local one. The act of defining a cultural community necessarily ignores the cultural, economic, and political differences that exist within that community. When these differences are ignored, political representation to mainstream political actors (i.e. those in the government, political parties, and state apparatuses) is mediated by non-elected, self-appointed community “leaders” who may not, and often do not, capture all cultural and political differences. In fact, the very articulation of those differences is precluded: a-cultural white English-speaking Canadians may lean left or right as individuals, or as voting blocs based on class and region, but the articulation of such political differences is absent in the representations of the politics of minority communities. The responses of politicians, activists, journalists, police and vocal sections of the public to the rallies protesting the war provide key examples of this.
The responses of politicians and police officials who addressed themselves to “the Tamil community” falsely suggest that all the protesters were Tamil and that all of Toronto’s Tamils supported the protests. The paternalism of Mayor David Miller’s deciding to tell “the Tamil community” what it “needs to hear from us” [3] (whoever “us” is) feeds into the blatant racism expressed by other elements of the public. Thus, for instance, in The Globe & Mail Christie Blatchford uses the demonstrations to question not just protest tactics, but also the immigration policies that, according to her, have led to the presence of a worryingly large number of Tamils in Toronto. [4]
Parallel to Miller’s homogenization, though coming from the opposite direction, veteran dissident leftist Judy Rebick notes on her blog that, “in a brilliant action, the Tamil community [...] climbed the on ramp on to the Gardiner Expressway [...] and sat down blockading traffic for several hours.” [5] While the action, as an object lesson in activist tactics, was brilliant, one can say with certainty that “the Tamil community” neither climbed onto nor sat down on the Gardiner. Rather, a more correct terminology would be what Rebick subsequently calls “a group of Tamil activists.” The tenor of her blog post, however, confirms that she views the Tamil community in homogenous terms. She goes so far as to end her post with the note that “we are all Tamils,” a statement that is problematic on two grounds. First, working in solidarity with others requires acknowledging the lived differences that separate us so that we might use those differences for the purposes of justice, rather than discounting them out of an unhelpfully over-forced empathy. Second, that kind of statement presupposes that there is only one kind of Tamil identity, which everyone else can access. Yet if Tamilness is an identity constructed solely on the basis of one’s presence at or support for the protests, not even all Tamils can be called such.
If Toronto’s Tamil population is being flattened into one homogenized entity by politicians and many leftist activists, that process is certainly not being opposed by some sections of Toronto’s Tamil community. The Canadian Tamil Congress, one of Toronto’s more prominent Tamil political groups, notes that it is “the unified voice of Canada’s 300,000 Tamils.” [6] Its FAQ page shows that it ascribes to all Sri Lankan Tamils the desire for a separate homeland (Tamil Eelam). [7] The history and current reality of a diversity of non-communal and Tamil organizations and individuals within and without Sri Lanka, with varying goals and political objectives—and varying definitions of self-determination for Tamil people—is elided by this construction of Tamil identity. It is impossible for the CTC to be the unified voice of Tamils when Tamils don’t have a unified voice. In other words, to return to Rebick’s rallying cry, we are not all Tamil, if only because there is no one Tamil identity we can be.
At many of the protests, the LTTE-designed national flag of Tamil Eelam (which shares the Tiger emblem) has been a prominent fixture, LTTE soldiers have been venerated as freedom fighters, the prospect of Eelam has been seen as a necessary solution to the war, and LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran has been venerated as a national leader. While this set of views may be influential and even hegemonic within Toronto’s Tamil diaspora, it is not universal. Just as the actions of many of the Tamil demonstrators are not and cannot be the actions of “the Tamil community,” so too are the opinions expressed at these demonstrations not those of “the Tamil community.” In fact, those are not even necessarily the views of all of the protesters present at the rallies, but dissenting, non-LTTE views are not being heard.
To signal toward complexity and difference within Tamil communities is not to deny the Sinhala ethnic chauvinism of the government of Sri Lanka; its use of undemocratic and authoritarian practices to crush dissent; or its use of mass murder, ethnic cleansing and internal colonization against Sri Lankan Tamils. Nor is it to deny that militant Tamil nationalism in Sri Lanka has largely been a response to the systematized and legislated discrimination of the Sri Lankan state. The LTTE is, in fact, a legitimate national resistance movement and was—until recently— the de facto governing entity in several parts of Sri Lanka. However, in its progress towards and current operation of that position, it too has often represented an ideology of ethno-religious chauvinism; has used undemocratic and authoritarian practices to crush resistant views and movements–including against dissident Tamils; and has used mass murder, ethnic cleansing and internal colonization against Muslims. The point here is not that the LTTE is just as bad as the government of Sri Lanka—which many Sri Lankans, Tamils and otherwise, think it is—but that a critical left view cannot support the LTTE, except tactically in opposition to the oppression of the Sri Lankan state. Nor can it support the LTTE’s ideology or practice. Thus, the assumption should not be made that support for Tamils in opposition to Sri Lankan state oppression is consonant with support for the LTTE.
It is important that critical leftists in Canada take concrete steps, working with members of the Tamil population and the Sri Lankan population more broadly, to bring to an end the oppression being perpetrated by the Sri Lankan state, but without steamrolling the complexities of the conflict and those affected by it. We must stand for an end to Sri Lankan state aggression, but also for an end to the LTTE’s aggression toward dissident and minority groups. Toward these ends, some concrete steps we should seek to take include:
1. Demand an immediate and permanent ceasefire.
Critical leftists must stand up for the thousands being massacred in Sri Lanka. To this end, we should engage with supporters of the LTTE and others in demanding an immediate, permanent, and confirmable bilateral ceasefire. Protests calling on the Canadian government to take an active role in bringing about such a ceasefire are important and should be supported, though not uncritically.
2. Oppose the complacency and racism of the Canadian state, media and vocal sections of the general public; and oppose police violence.
The Canadian government continues to turn a blind eye to the conflict, tacitly supporting the Sri Lankan state’s actions. Politicians at all levels have spoken to “the Tamil community” in condescending ways. The media has focused more on the plight of commuters inconvenienced by the rallies than on the thousands of dying civilians. Many Canadian citizens have expressed their xenophobia calling upon Tamils to “go back home”.
Meanwhile, at the rallies, protestors have on several occasions been literally caged into tight areas and police officers have often used excessive force on them. Protestors have been arrested merely for speaking out, [8] and, at times, have been brutalized with no provocation. [9,10]
Police violence and the complacence and racism of Canadian foreign politics, the media and vocal sections of the general public must be opposed loudly and forcefully.
3. Push for a political solution.
This conflict has no military solution. Critical leftists must not stop at the call for a ceasefire, but also push for a comprehensive political settlement that involves more than just the Sinhala-dominant Sri Lankan state and the LTTE. There are many more legitimate representatives of Tamil (including Tamil-speaking Muslim) aspirations and political views than the LTTE, whom the LTTE has repressed. Support must be given to them. However, there can also be no political settlement without the involvement of the LTTE.
The Canadian government does not label organizations as terrorist on the basis of objective criteria, but politically opportunistic ones. Moreover, designating certain groups as terrorist does little to clarify conflict situations, but more often obscures issues. Canada’s banning the Tigers as terrorists suggests that the problem of Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism is not one of discrimination and disenfranchisement, but of immeasurable violence and terrorism, and that therefore the solution to this conflict must inevitably and solely come through the military elimination of said terrorist group. Critical leftists, however, must remain firm that any long-term and viable solution to the Sri Lankan conflict cannot be military; it must involve a political settlement.
4. Work toward cross-ethnic solidarity.
Following from the support for repressed and marginalized voices, critical leftists must promote cross-ethnic solidarities in Sri Lanka and in the Sri Lankan diaspora. The fictions of ethnic homogeneity constructed by Sinhala nationalism and by Tamil nationalism must be punctured and repudiated. This does not mean an opposition to the principle of self-determination. Yet however the majority of Tamils in Sri Lanka choose to define self-determination, a lasting peace has to be based on the recognition of the vast complexity, intermingling, and transcendence of ethnic boundaries that constantly occurs in Sri Lanka – both in Sinhalese-dominated and in Tamil-dominated areas. Non-communal political formations must be supported.
To that end, critical leftists in Canada should work towards facilitating the kinds of cross-ethnic solidarity movements and conversations that have been mostly foreclosed by the terroristic strategies employed in Sri Lanka by the armed forces and by the LTTE. While acknowledging and addressing the limitations of Canadian multicultural policies here, we need to capitalise on our distance from the conflict, and the relative peace afforded by that distance (however racialised and restricted it is), to facilitate dialogue.
5. Oppose the Sri Lankan state; criticize the LTTE.
Successive Sinhala ethnic chauvinist governments have precipitated the crisis in Sri Lanka. They continue to do so with impunity. Critical leftists must be absolute in their opposition to the ethnic chauvinism and practical depredations of the parties controlling the Sri Lankan state. The Sri Lankan state has been one of the most significant obstacles toward the achievement of a lasting peace.
At the same time, the LTTE has used civilians as human shields and has engaged in forced conscription. It must be therefore also be criticized and its particular human rights violations not excused or glossed over.
6. Oppose the role of international imperialism in the conflict.
The ideology of twenty-first century imperialism is manifest worldwide. In particular, in South Asia, the discourses of “wars on terror” in Afghanistan, Pakistan and India are smokescreens for governments and imperial actors like NATO and the United States to obscure real, legitimate and popular grievances by focusing instead on military campaigns. This is precisely the strategy currently being used by the state in Sri Lanka against its local Tamil grievances. Furthermore, the Sri Lankan state receives military aid from, among others, Pakistan and Israel—supporters of American empire. China, too, in increasing its international political reach, has steadily provided arms and funding to Sri Lanka for several years. India has also played a major role through its intervention or absence of intervention, in line with its hegemonic designs in South Asia.
The international dimensions of the conflict are too complex to be examined in detail here. However, we should engage in further study of the international dimension of the conflict as well, for in resisting the violence of the Sri Lankan state, as critical leftists, we are also taking a stance against certain operations of international imperialism. We must recognize, however, that ultimately the problem is one of Sinhala ethnic chauvinism and the lack of meaningful political representation of national minorities in Sri Lanka.
In conclusion, it is important to note that these six items should be regarded as points of departure for critical leftists. By no means is this a conclusive programme on how activists in Canada, whatever their ethnicity or personal connection to the war, should approach the conflict. That sort of conversation is much more difficult, and must be had in conjunction with all the members of Canada’s Sri Lankan diaspora, including its Sinhalese, Tamil, and Muslim communities.
—
I got back last week from a five-week long stay in Sri Lanka. I’ll write more soon about how that stay shifted my politics, but for now it seemed the timely thing to do was address some of the issues that the rallies were bringing to the fore, while the rallies were still going on.
14 Responses to “The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto”
1 Antony May 17, 2009
I think the leftists should first do introspect within themselves. The writers of this article, out of their ideologically biased myopic view have tended to paint the problem as something caused only by Western Capitalist Imperialism. Of course, they played a major role in ensuring Tamils’ defeat. But the more criminal culprit in the suffering of Tamils is ‘Communist China’ controlled by the world’s largest communist party. While the self-righteous ‘Human Rights’ conscious West disarmed the Tamils by smashing their funding networks and destroying their arms ships, they turned the other way when China was arming the Sinhalese with the most lethal of weapons including banned chemical explosives. Even India’s dominant Left CPI(M) is also a overt supporter of Sinhalese chauvinist JVP calling it a Marxist party. The CPI(M)’s unofficial spokesman and media baron N.Ram is an anti-Tamil Aryan supremacist Sinhalese supporter. I think you sound ridiculous when you say Tamils as a whole can not be considered as pro-LTTE and LTTE does not represent Tamils. Please get your basics in politics right. Will you say Indian PM Manmohan Singh or his govt does not represent India as his party only got 40% vote share in the elections. If you say only 90 out of 100 Tamils support the Tigers and so you can’t say Tigers represent Tamil community or CTC does not represent Tamils then you better say that you don’t recognize any democratically elected govt in the world.
The Tamils are the aggrieved party who have been heaped with so much injustice and unimaginable brutality. The LTTE was just a violent reflection of what was and is still being done to the Tamils. They are justified in whatever they have done and whatever they will do also. Instead of holding the shameless international community which has tied the hands and legs of one group and armed the other group with the most lethal weapons and enjoying the ‘bloody show’ and also issuing stupid and useless statements, people like you also display your uselessness with your stupid ideological rhetoric. I know I am not being gentle or decent or civilized in my response to your article. There is no more decency or civility left in us. The Tamils will be forced give barbaric response very soon to all the culprits in this war much more deadlier than Al-Qaeda or Taleban or both put together.
2 fathima May 17, 2009
that China isn’t mentioned in this article, isn’t to suggest that we don’t believe China is involved in the war. rather, we highlighted the North American connections to the conflict because that’s the audience on which we’re trying to impress the relevance of the war in Sri Lanka. [But the article has since been amended to address that flaw.]
i do have deep anxieties about the putatively representative force of democratic elections, but those aside, neither the Tigers nor the CTC are elected bodies. besides the fact that collapsing the Tamils and Tigers is a disingenuous move, it’s also exactly what the government of Sri Lanka does. it is on the basis of precisely that homogenisation that the government justifies killing not just Tiger combatants, but Tamil civilians as well. that the you politics you profess reflect so exactly the politics used to oppress Sri Lankan Tamils should be indication enough of how deeply flawed they are.
They are justified in whatever they have done and whatever they will do also.
no, they are not. they are not justified in trapping Tamil civilians in the warzones that those civilians are currently desperately trying to flee. they were not justified in killing over 170 muslims in Polonnaruwa in 1992. nor were they justified in the Kathankudy massacre, engineered by Karuna who has since gone from being VP’s shadow to an MP in the Sri Lankan government. and then there the countless Sinhalese civilians whom the Tigers have targeted.
it can legitimately be argued that as a community, the Tamil population of Sri Lanka has been the most victimised by the war. it does not follow that they are the war’s only victims, or that the LTTE is driven by altruistic motives that it won’t betray for its own opportunistic ends.
3 noaman May 17, 2009
I’m not sure what part of the article suggests that the problem is “caused only by” Western capitalism. In a sense, yes, the problem is a legacy of British colonialism, and the kind of liberal, parliamentary democracy established in Sri Lanka that allowed the Sinhala-majority to continually sideline Tamils. But that’s the problem, and we identify the problem: Sinhala ethnic chauvinism. We also identify that Tamil resistance is a response to this oppressive tendency of the Government of Sri Lanka.
Antony is right about the help Sri Lanka receives from China as well. And the article should be rewritten to incorporate this aspect — there is no reason for a leftist or anyone to support the adverse machinations of international Chinese interference anymore than one should support American interference. Having said that, there’s a difference in that we are far closer to this imperial centre than we are to that one, and for the same reason we activlely oppose intervention in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Haiti, we should refuse American machinations in and around Sri Lanka.
As for the CPI(M) and JVP, they are both problematic parties, and it’s folly to ascribe to all leftists support for the CPI(M) or its particular allies in Sri Lanka. There is a tremendous deal of resistance from the left against the CPI(M) in and outside of India.
4 Syed/Ahmed May 18, 2009
I’m sure everyone’s keeping up but just got this over twitter:
“[Velupillai] Prabhakaran reported killed today while trying to flee in an ambulance.”
Seems to be backed by Democracy Now.
Many of the protests (at Union Station anyway) bore a remarkable similarity to the Israel-Palestine Protests from this year. I feel that a similar debate about homogenized opinion and drowned out voices was developing then as well.
God help them and us.
5 Syed/Ahmed May 18, 2009
Looks like ‘victory’ was claimed in the region:
‘Several other senior Tamil Tigers have also been found dead. On Sunday, the Sri Lankan military claimed victory after the Tamil Tigers said it was “prepared to silence its guns” and admitted that the fighting had reached a “bitter end.” An estimated 8,000 civilians have been killed in Sri Lanka since January…’
More here…
Also we missed you in T.O. FC.
6 Tamils Blocc University Part 2 | rabble.ca May 18, 2009
7 Racializing assumptions of Canadian multiculturalism exposed by Toronto protests against Sri Lanka « Restructure! May 19, 2009
[...] May 19, 2009 — Restructure! In “The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto”, Fathima Cader and Noaman Ali write (May 17, 2009): The recent burst of mass mobilizations by sections of the [...]
8 A Funkaoshi Production :: Page 2 May 21, 2009
9 links for 2009-05-25 at Racialicious - the intersection of race and pop culture May 25, 2009
[...] run like the wind » The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto Mainstream media’s responses to the protests have been overwhelmingly racialist, exposing many of the limits of Canadian multiculturalism. In order for Canadian multiculturalism to accept any given group of people as a cultural community, it must define that group by differentiating it from a supposedly mainstream Canadian identity. This focalising Canadian identity—in effect a non-identity—is white and middle-class. Thus, when the Toronto Star publishes an editorial entitled “Protesters vs. the public” [1] it effectively notes that the protesters are not part of the public by pitting (Tamil) protesters against the (Canadian) public. Rather than focusing on the war, media outlets have focused on the inconvenience posed to commuters, thereby shifting attention away from deaths in Sri Lanka to traffic regulations in Canada. " (tags: via:restructure racism race identity) [...]
10 HiMY SYeD May 25, 2009
Fathima,
Thank you for penning this wonderful commentary.
May I have your permission to repost this article onto Torontopedia.ca as well, as a city blog I run, with full by-line credit and link back to this url.
Please leave a comment here and let me know.
Thank You.
HiMY SYeD
11 fathima May 27, 2009
hello Himy,
by all means go ahead, but do note the edit at the top of the post that addresses the end of the military campaign against the Tigers.
-f.
12 The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Tor… « Talk Islam May 29, 2009
[...] The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto The recent burst of mass mobilizations by sections of the Canadian-Tamil community in Toronto has brought to the fore several contradictions concerning the conflict in Sri Lanka and its presence in and connection to Canada. Mainstream media’s responses to the protests have been overwhelmingly racialist, exposing many of the limits of Canadian multiculturalism. [...] But if the coverage of the protests has made certain contradictions about the performance of cultural politics in public spaces in Canada apparent, other contradictions about the negotiation of those politics within cultural communities have also been rendered largely invisible. [...]
13 T. Toronto. Period. » The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto - By Fathima Cader and Noman Ali Jun 10, 2009
[...] Fathima Cader and Noman [...]
14 run like the wind » On the Interwebs: The Medium and the Message Jul 12, 2009
[...] Internet are from each other. The first example of this is the article Noaman and I wrote, “The War in Sri Lanka and the Left in Toronto.” I can’t speak for Noaman, but I wasn’t prepared for how overwhelming the [...]