dc.description.abstract |
The difference between Northern (Jaffna) Tamils and Eastern (Batticaloa) Tamils has
always been there at varying intensities. This difference was thought to have been
completely obliterated under the overwhelming power of Tamil nationalism in general and
LTTE’s extremist and exclusive “eelam” ideology and its unforgiving intolerance towards
any form of dissent. However the conflict within LTTE on the basis of Geography
fundamentally shattered first the theoretical dictate that ethnonationalism is the most
fundamental identity giving its an aurora of inevitability second the belief of monolithic
Tamil national identity.
A prominent geographer once argued that we cannot legislate against geography.
Sooner or later geography will defeat legislations that defied former. Not only one cannot
legislate against geography, one cannot suppress geography through nationalist ideologies,
Threat and intimidation and terrorism. Geography is profound in social and political life of
people. Even extremist nationalism is subject to the profound gravity of geography. But
Sri Lankan historians and political scientists who have denigrated geography simply as
length of rivers and height of mountains, failed to see the socio-political causation
generated by geography that could have profound impacts on the history, society, culture
and politics. The time has come for Sri Lankan social scientists both within and outside
universities and the so called international experts on Sri Lanka to take basic lessons in
geography and also to read recent social theory which argues for place specificity in social
analysis as amply discussed by Anthony Giddens.
Ethnonationalist studies in general and those on Sri Lanka have been entrenched in
nationalist ideology through the uncritical acceptance of the existence of a monolithic
nation. In this context, a more appropriate engagement of monolithic nation which has
overwhelmed nationalist historiography in general and that of Tamil ethnonationalism in
particular requires us to turn inward by digging deeper into actual ethnonationalist
politics. The task of this paper is precisely that. The paper examines how and why
geographical identity came to challenge Tamil national identity. The paper traces the
history of the geographical uniqueness and how it became both a cause and effect in its
own definition and manifestation.
The conclusion arrived at in this paper is that monolithic view of Sri Lankan Tamil
ethnonationalism as projected by Tamil ethnonationalist leaders and Tamil intellectuals is
not supported by ground realities. Jaffna and Batticaloa are two different Tamil localities
with their own specific and unique socio-economic, cultural and political histories giving
rise to competing needs and aspirations as amply proved by the heightened difference
between the two regions when it was expected to be completely obliterated under the
power of monolithic Tamil nationalism. Only the reverse became a reality. Geography is
indeed thicker than blood. |
en_US |