Father Kenneth J. Gavin, S.J., the Regional Director of Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, is in Sri Lanka this week for a meeting of JRS Regional Directors. He will be writing daily updates on what it is like in Sri Lanka, seven months after the end of a devastating civil war that left tens of thousands dead, and hundreds of thousands displaced. This is the fourth installment.
Wednesday, December 2. “Speak on our behalf,” a human rights activist in Trincomalee urged us today as we watched a short PowerPoint presentation on the history of injustice and violations of human rights endured by the Tamil people of the north and east of Sri Lanka over the past 60 years.

Victims of intense shelling during the war seek help at a hospital in Sri Lanka.
“Speak on our behalf because we have no voice,” he repeated. Many of us were shaken by the presentation’s photos of atrocities committed against the Tamil civilian population. One of the facilitators of our reconciliation workshop has lived through the brutal years of partisan bloodshed in Northern Ireland and has spent much of his life there in the difficult struggle for peace and reconciliation. Visibly shaken, he reflected on the photos of human slaughter by saying in a choked voice, “I had never seen a picture of a child hanged.”
In fact, as a Sri Lankan present explained, the harrowing photo was only a small piece of a larger, more brutal story. In 2006, a Tamil woman was raped and murdered while her husband and young children were forced to stand by and watch helplessly. Afterwards, the children themselves were slashed with machetes and hanged in front of their father who was then himself finally killed.
This story and so many others like it fill the pages of the sad history of Sri Lanka’s recent conflict — a conflict marked by inhumanities committed by all sides of the conflict. In a real way, these crimes against humanity force us to ask ourselves not simply what has become of the people of Sri Lanka, but what has become of humanity itself. How can we, as humankind, face and understand such brutality?
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