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We are living through an era where the powers that
be have become very cynical about life. In their very nature it suits them to dismiss
any attempt to remember one life lost or to seek justice for one killed as
wasting time over a single speck among tens of thousands who suffered a similar
fate. They know that to go deep into any one death, to expose culpability and
explain the irreparable harm it does to all of us, is to place the edifice of
power on trial. That is why the memory of Rajani is
so important; she was just such a person who insisted that the memory of every
person who was a victim of organised, institutional
violence was sacred, and that the whole truth should be placed on record for
the people to judge. The public values she espoused, worked, and died for, are
an important part of our heritage, particularly of left activism, that are an
inspiration to those who come after her…
Rajani came into left politics conscious of the
developments sketched above. She did not look to building a party, but rather a
plural social movement in her locality, which would gain strength through small
victories, and by forming ties of solidarity across Lanka, South Asia and the wider
world…
Former
Tanzanian foreign minister and subsequent political prisoner and exile, Mr.
Mohamed Abdul Rahuman Babu,
testified to Rajani’s internationalism and her faith
in the triumph of justice at the commemoration for her at the University of
Jaffna, 22nd November 1989:
“I first met her at a meeting organised by the African students in London in support of
the Eritrean people to self determination. You’ll be surprised that Rajani, coming from Jaffna, getting herself involved in an
issue that does not concern Tamils,…but concerns a remote people, three million
people, in a corner of Africa, which Africa itself has ignored. You hear of
liberation struggles, of Angola, of Mozambique, of South Africa. It’s
fashionable to talk about these struggles, but you don’t hear about the
struggle of the Eritrean people, because it has been embargoed, because it is a
black colonial power against a black people. So to find somebody like Rajani conscious of this says a lot about the kind of
person she was.
“Rajani lived and died at a great moment in history
when we are seeing significant changes taking place in the Third World. The
Third World went through the first phase of struggling for independence, and we
were all involved in the national liberation struggles in one way or another.
We got our independence only to discover that that independence has been
hijacked. It had not served the people, but served a handful of people. It has
left the poor people of Africa and Asia in a most poverty stricken state of
affairs ever experienced in history…
“It is no longer a struggle against a distant
oppressor…But it is a struggle within ourselves, and it needs a lot of
determination and sacrifice because in this struggle it is easy to be isolated,
it is easy to be called the enemy of the people, an enemy of the state. So the
cost is very high and Rajani sacrificed her life for
that, to side with the people.”
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