Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
22
October 2019
PRESS
FREEDOM & EASTER BOMBINGS
The day the Australian Press blacked out its front
page was also the 6 monthly anniversary of Sri Lanka’s Easter Bombings. As I
watched Ms Haneke Manoharan
on SBS news last evening, I automatically made my own connections between the
two (press freedom and Easter Bombings)– as per my experiences in Sri Lanka.
For Example:
1. Haneke : says she often feels guilt that she
does not carry any physical scars from the bombings unlike so many others who
were at the churches and hotels which were targeted that day.
Gaja: I was with the war victims in
2009 and could easily have been physically attacked – including when I was a
lone passenger in a bus due to falling asleep on the way to the camps. The
driver was more regulated than the conductor who kept giving me ‘looks’ . I
asked the driver to drop me off - so I
could catch the bus back to Vavuniya – given that we had come well past the
last camp. I had asked the conductor to inform me when we were close to
Ramanathan camp where I had heard that an Australian Tamil known to me was
being held. No I did not feel guilty that I had escaped custody – while the
other Australian was in custody. I believe I did not because I operated within
the law and after that I followed the Truth that the law took me to. The
following day – a government engineer
who was going to the camps in relation to digging tube wells – said I could
come with him and said also that he
would drop me off there and pick me up on his return. The officers in the camp
did look for the two persons – one Australian and the other New Zealander – and
said they were not there. I had with me some books for Year 12 students – given to me by a WHO officer for
distribution and the officers did distribute the books. To me the experience
was not coincidence. The fact that I was taken there in government vehicle
confirmed that I had been loyal to the path of law – even though I did not have
any official portfolio. In effect – the system of Truth was showing through the
path of Dharma that I had every right to be there as if I were a government
facilitator.
2. Haneke and her
friend, Sam Nottle, were in the Colombo on an eight-day Easter trip… On a recent trip to Sri Lanka, Haneke visited
victims of the Easter Sunday attacks, some who were still recovering in
hospital.
“There
are people in hospital unable to go home or still having operations,” she says.
“I saw
a man who had shrapnel extracted in the last week. People have needed multiple
surgeries.”
Gaja
– I have been going to Sri Lanka regularly since 2003 as per my insight into the
needs of the folks there. We did go on holidays as a family in the nineties.
Then too we spent time with our relatives and friends in Colombo for they
suffered pain and loss in 1983 and 1977. We became stronger relatives through
that pain-sharing . If Sri Lanka was hurting due to ethnic problem then as Sri
Lankans we also hurt.
I did not ‘see’ the pain or loss
but felt it due to my own experience as a Sri Lankan. That is the
root-connection.
3. Soon after returning to Sydney,
Haneke decided to organise a fundraising campaign to help the victims of
the bombings.
With a team of just under 20 volunteers, she
organised a series of dinners, a self-published cookbook and an online silent
auction.
“Starting DineForLanka was really about giving
people an opportunity to contribute from all over the world,” she says.
Gaja – writes practically every day
sharing her feelings through her own experience as if she were Sri Lanka. Due
to her association with Kingsbury hotel, Gaja planned to stay there in June
this year. But Truth led Gaja to stay at Galadari hotel which to her was Muslim
owned and thus shared her protective Energy with Muslim hoteliers. Gaja shopped
specifically at Muslim shops and listened to them lamenting about the
discrimination pain that targeted them. Gaja also identified with the Muslims
who were put through stronger checks on
the way to Jaffna - by the Armed Forces as
Tamils were until the Easter Bombing.
Yesterday – both Sri Lankan press as well as
Australian SBS – shared their space with Haneke – confirming that they do not
connect to experiences at the root level but packaged to suit their taste. If
the Press had weaker laws than the citizens – then they would have more ‘business’
by criticizing the government more freely. They then do not belong to the group
of citizens who became victims of the government / custodians of power but
would be more like that very government and would end up creating their own
victims.
Truth is the authority of ‘freedom’ to express. The
most deserving of the protection of law
is the citizen with least status. When the press renounces its extra status –
truth will lead and guide the person. This may result in punishment through
law. But one who seeks true freedom would accept that as a necessary cost to
being with the needy.
Truth often leads the seeker to ‘commonness’ through
time and place. The good are guided by angels and the bad are guided by
demons/ghosts. The Australian press yesterday was haunted by Sri Lankan press
which has done very little to bring its own angels who put their lives at risk to publish the
truth they had experienced. If they had joined forces with Australian Press or
v.v. – they would have earned the moral right to Freedom of Expression. All
those who are in the media for an income / profit (Money plus Status) – are bound
by the law applicable to the citizen with least money income and status.
If the Sri Lankan media had genuinely been connected
to the victims of Government – in the war against LTTE – they would have
connected naturally to the Indian Journalists who were connected to and been
alerted by Indian Intelligence – including that of Mr Subramanian Swamy – a strong
investor in Indian Politics and LTTE Opposition and one who used the legal path
to include himself and have his say in important issues.
Those who ‘find fault’ with another to elevate
themselves need to be regulated by the law. Only those who travel through the
path of law and discover the truth in that form – become facilitators within
law-abiding groups and therefore are immune from prosecution. I was one of them
and yet neither the Australian media nor
Sri Lankan media used their publishing space to share in my pain. Hence to my
mind – they are not entitled to the protection of law any more than I was.
No comments:
Post a Comment