Sunday, May 3, 2009

Boston Harbors Tamil Terrorists

Also see: Sri Lanka: Case Study in MSM Propaganda

Seriously, when was the last time the Zionist AmeriKan MSM did such sympathy piece for Palestinians?

Granted, this is a fleeting one-day presentation, but the fact that it is there at all when certain other areas are ignored speaks volumes about the Globe's editorial decisions when it comes to the newspaper.


"Tamil cause consumes and divides brothers; Sri Lanka violence repels two while a third clings to hope" by Farah Stockman, Globe Staff | April 6, 2009

It started 30 years ago with a Somerville post office box registered to a grandiose name: the Embassy of Eelam.

Three brothers from Sri Lanka who lived on Mount Vernon Street turned their dining room into an international headquarters for the struggle to create a homeland for the ethnic Tamil minority. It would be called Eelam.

They lobbied state and local officials about the abuse of Tamils at the hands of the Sri Lankan government, prompting a Massachusetts boycott. Then-Governor Edward J. King announced his support for a Tamil homeland. Their lobbying boosted a Tamil rebel army fighting in Sri Lanka.

But since then, the rebels have killed thousands with suicide bombs, and were declared terrorists by the United States. The 25-year civil war, fueled in part by donations from local Tamils, has become one of the longest, bloodiest wars in the world, with more than 70,000 dead. And now, the rebels are on the verge of defeat.

Taught to them by Israel, and most of the dead Tamils.

That has left some of the roughly 2,000 Tamils in Boston grappling with the possibility that Eelam might never be achieved. They are also faced with the reality that their most cherished cause is now inextricably linked to a guerrilla war that pioneered the use of suicide bombings.

"We used to be the victims," said Sritharan Thillaiampalam, a 69-year-old former Bank of Boston employee who helped spearhead the Eelam movement with his two brothers but is now disillusioned. "Later, a group of people started taking up arms, killing people, killing each other. That's how it changed."

But 2 miles away, his older brother, Sri Thillaiampalam, a 70-year-old former freight company assistant manager at Logan Airport, hasn't given up on the dream of Eelam. He calls the Tigers "defenders" of the Tamils. "My brother used to be my secretary general," Sri lamented. "But now he has lost his way."

There was a time when it seemed like the fate of Eelam lay on Mount Vernon Street. That was where the Thillaiampalam clan - five boys and five girls - all moved during the 1970s. While many other Tamils in America avoided politics, fearing retribution against relatives back home, the Thillaiampalams were all in Massachusetts, so they threw themselves into the cause.

As children, the brothers grew up in a time of relative peace in Sri Lanka, then known as Ceylon, an island off India's coast roughly the size of West Virginia. In the early 1940s, when they were boys, the island was a British colony.

Huh, yeah, colonial masters were better. some choice.

Sinhalese, who make up 74 percent of the population, were mostly Buddhists living in the south, while Tamils, who make up roughly 18 percent, were mostly Hindus in the north.

Yeah, that combination (and the fact that she leaves the Christian element out of it) always bothered me. Cui Bono? Buddhists violent? My state school and state media lied to me.

Living on the outskirts of Jaffna, a city populated by Tamils, the brothers played with the few Sinhalese classmates there and learned the Sinhalese language in school from Buddhist monks. But in 1956, shortly after the country gained independence, the Sri Lankan government declared Sinhalese to be the only official language, forcing many Tamils - including some Thillaiampalam relatives - out of government jobs. When Tamils protested, they were beaten by thugs.

At the time, Sritharan was a teenager fascinated by politics. He protested by defacing the Sinhalese words on the license plates of government buses - and landed in jail. "My mother scolded me - 'Why did you get involved?' " he recalled.

In 1961, he joined a strike that shut down government offices. A decade later, seeking to advance his career, Sritharan moved to Somerville to live with his older brother, Srikanthan, an engineer. Sritharan got a job with the Bank of Boston, while his wife became an insurance analyst at John Hancock. Within a year, they bought their own Somerville three-decker.

"We always thought we would return to Sri Lanka," he said. "But things kept getting worse."

By the late 1970s, some of Sritharan's friends in Sri Lanka formed a new nonviolent political party, the Tamil United Liberation Front, which demanded a separate state. In 1977, it became the largest opposition bloc in Sri Lanka's Parliament. But its separatist views were swiftly outlawed.

Frustrated, many Tamils took up arms, joining a group of militants called the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. (Eelam is a word in ancient Tamil literature that appears to refer to Sri Lanka.) Led by Velupillai Prabhakaran, an elusive guerrilla leader who inspires cultlike devotion, the militants killed 13 Sri Lankan soldiers in 1983. Riots and revenge killings followed, sparking a mass Tamil exodus.

Tamil refugees poured into Somerville, where they were hosted by the Thillaiampalams. Sritharan - pensive and serious - and Sri - gregarious and persistent - helped form a new group along with their older brother: the Eelam Tamil Association of America.

They opened a PO Box and got vanity license plates - Eelam One and Eelam Two. They lobbied their state representative, Marie Howe, an Irish-American who sympathized with their tales of marginalization and struggle. Every time Howe had a function, the whole Thillaiampalam clan would show up. (Howe did not return calls seeking comment.)

Howe persuaded Governor King to declare his support for Eelam and pushed through a divestment resolution modeled on the antiapartheid campaign. She introduced the brothers to Senator Edward M. Kennedy and John F. Kerry, a rising star in politics. Howe also helped get Somerville to declare Eelam Tamil Day, and to become a sister city to Trincomalee, a Sri Lankan port claimed by both Tamils and Sinhalese. A series of Somerville mayors, including Michael Capuano, raised a Tamil United Liberation Front flag over City Hall.

The brothers met then-House Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill at a clambake fund-raiser and posed with him for a photo, creating the illusion that power brokers in Washington were dedicated to Eelam. "It had a big impact back home," Sritharan said. "They thought the US government was backing us fully. They thought we are millionaires here, giving money to Kerry and Kennedy, so that they were in our pockets."

My great liberal senators took terrorist dough?

Also see: Kerry's Colossal Insult

The brothers' success shocked the Sri Lankan government, which complained to the State Department. But it impressed Tamil politicians, who began to make regular US visits to meet the brothers, who in turn introduced them to politicians and State Department officials, helping to block millions in foreign aid to Sri Lanka.

The brothers caught the attention of India, a regional superpower with a Tamil population of its own. They met Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, and her son and successor, Rajiv Gandhi, and begged for India's intervention. The brothers also met with Tiger militants in India.

Please see: Gandhi Rises From the Grave

Inside the Fun House: Hall of Heroes

"We thought they were doing a great thing, sacrificing their lives to fight the Sri Lankan Army," said Sritharan. "We called them our younger brothers. Through emissaries, [Tiger leader] Prabhakaran would say, 'Send us money.' "

In 1984, Sri helped orchestrate a successful meeting between Indira Ghandi and Tamil militants who were seeking weapons and training from India, including Prabhakaran. "They looked at me as someone who would make the world move," Sri said. "They asked me to be part of the team. I said no. I had to draw a line, where I get off. I'm not getting involved in fighting."

In 1986, the brothers held a conference in New York and invited militants to participate, according to Sritharan. But the Tigers refused, sending a letter that read like a warning: "We are the only representatives of the Tamils. . . . We are fighting in a military battle and we need financial support. If you want to achieve Eelam, you have to help us."

By 1987, the brothers' work seemed to be coming to fruition. India sent peacekeepers and prodded the Sri Lankan government to agree to set up a semiautonomous regional council in the Tamil north. But the Tigers refused to accept anything short of a separate state. They attacked the Indian peacekeepers and later assassinated Rajiv Gandhi, who had sent them. They killed moderate Tamil politicians who tried to join the council.

They shot the Tamil leader who had traveled to Boston to meet Ed King. They killed Neelan Tiruchelvam, a Harvard-educated lawyer who advocated federalism instead of Eelam. They killed Sri Lanka's foreign minister, a Tamil, and the head of the Tamil United Liberation Front, one of Sritharan's best friends. Tiger suicide bombers, who pioneered the technique before it became common in the Middle East, also killed scores of Sinhalese civilians.

And we know who taught it to them.

The violence prompted Srikanthan, the eldest Thillaiampalam brother, to give up activism. Now living in Winchester, he did not return a call seeking comment. Sritharan, too, had a radical change of heart. At his dining room table, surrounded by newspaper clippings and photos of himself with famous people who are now dead, he explained why he stopped lobbying for Eelam.

"Everybody was being killed by the Tigers," he said. "How can you complain to the State Department - 'We are the victims. Please save us?' "

Now, he believes Tamils will have a better future negotiating with the Sri Lankan government for autonomy under a federal system. He supports Douglas Devananda, a former Tamil militant serving in Sri Lanka's Cabinet. Recently, he traveled to the United Nations to meet Sri Lanka's president.

"Today, I am a traitor," he said, describing how he believes other Tamils in Boston see him.

Across town, at another dining room table piled with copies of the same photographs and newspaper clippings, Sri says he doesn't blame his brothers but continues lobbying alone.

"I tell the State Department: 'Look at me. I am like a Jew. Look at Eelam. It is like Israel,' " he said. "I dedicate my life. This is all I do." Sri said he was shaken by the suicide bombings, but that the Tigers "only do these things when they have to."

Of course, their plight is more like the Palestinians, but when you are talking to the ZOG....

In 1998, the US government designated the Tigers a terrorist organization. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, people began to shy away from the Tamil cause. The US government cracked down on Tiger fund-raising. The Eelam Tamil Association faded away, replaced by the Boston Thamil Association, which members say is solely for organizing cultural festivals and language training.

But it has been embroiled in controversy over terrorism. After a tsunami struck Sri Lanka in 2004, the Boston Thamil Association raised more than $200,000 for victims. But it gave $12,245 to the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization, or TRO, a charity that the US Treasury banned as a Tiger front in 2007.

Surenthira Thurairatnam, president of the Boston Thamil Association, insists that TRO is a genuine charity. "The Tamils know that TRO is the only organization in the region helping the Tamil civilians," he said. Sri, also a member of the Boston Thamil Association, said the accusations against the TRO were "trumped up."

"None of us that gave to the TRO had any intention of buying bullets," he said. "I'm struggling to pay my bills. How can I afford to buy a bullet?" But according to documents filed in a 2007 criminal case against an alleged Tiger fund-raiser in New York, the Tigers had instructed their proxies in the United States to "collect monthly donations from the Tamil communities," funneling the money through the TRO.

Now they are being treated like Palestinians!

Martin Collacott, a former Canadian ambassador to Sri Lanka, said that Tamils abroad send millions of dollars each year to fund the war, sometimes unwillingly. In Canada, home to the largest number of Tamil expatriates of any country, "heavy pressure is put on each Tamil family to contribute," he said.

Think Jewish Americans and Israel, folks.

Collacott said Tiger fronts control Tamil language newspapers, radio stations, and resettlement services in Canada. Those who speak out against the Tigers or refuse to donate risk social ostracism and physical attack.

Same kind of treatment Neturei Karta gets.

Last year, fund-raisers from Canada knocked on Sritharan's door in Winchester. "They said, 'We need helicopters, guns,' " he recalled. "They said, 'This is the final push.' " When he told them he had no money, they produced paperwork for a bank loan and asked him to sign, saying, 'When Eelam comes, we'll settle it.' "

"They know that I am against them," he said, adding that he did not sign. "But they tried it anyway." But his brother insists that he is not aware of any Tiger fund-raising here. Still, Sri got a visit from the FBI a few years ago, asking him whether he was involved.

"They know I am in the Eelam movement," Sri said. "Tigers are defending my people. I respect them. But I'm not funding them." Some Tamils maintain that the Tigers do not really use suicide attacks. Others say the Tigers are the lesser of two evils - and the only hope for self-government and respect.

Given all the false flag nefariousness, I wouldn't be a bit surprised! Given the government slant the Zionist AmeriKan MSM has given the story (for the most part), I wouldn't be surprised at the second phrase either. I'm for local rule, the smaller the better. Decentralization of power is the key in this world.

"I am not in any way supporting violence, but if there were no Tigers there would have been a lot of other things - the taking of land and the lives of innocent people," said Thurairatnam, the head of the Boston Thamil Association.

Does that ever sound like Israel and the Palestinians or what!?

But today, the Tigers are on the verge of defeat.

There is the difference. The Palestinian spirit will never be crushed.

Of course, I've been reading the verge of defeat stuff for months, MSM....

After a 2002 cease-fire broke down, Sri Lanka launched a major offensive, recently reclaiming all but 8 square miles of the once-vast area the Tigers had controlled. Now, Sri Lanka is poised to wipe out Prabhakaran and the last of his fighters. The only thing stopping them are tens of thousands of civilians mixed in with the rebels.

Some news reports say the Tigers are using them as human shields, shooting those who try to leave. Tamil media says Sri Lanka's military is perpetrating a genocide.

The terminology sounds so familiar to me, as if I've typed the words many times over several situations.

The situation has sparked a new generation of Tamil activism, State House rallies and petitions for a cease-fire. More than a dozen Tamils have set themselves on fire in India and elsewhere. Oh, my, how the Tamil soul must be suffering. Burning themselves!! Shades of Vietnam (hey, that's a Bud Tamil students across the United States, including a Winchester teen, went on a hunger strike, earning her an invitation to Washington to meet Kerry, now chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Yeah, and not only did nothing come of it, but Kerry proved what an out-of-touch, elite ass he truly is: Kerry's Colossal Insult

Also see: Kerry Turns Deaf Ear Toward Veterans

But this time, Tamils are having a hard time generating support. "We are crying loud, but it seems like nobody is listening," said Thurairatnam.

O' Palestine, I also hear thee!!!

In Winchester, Sritharan shakes his head at the burst of activism. He believes the war will end soon - "it's a matter of hours and days" - bringing a brighter future for Tamils. He believes those who are holding out for Eelam will scatter and disappear.

That was OVER a MONTH AGO!!!!

But his brother stays at the computer night and day, sending e-mails and organizing protests. Despite the news, he does not believe that the Tigers will be defeated. "This is a people's movement," Sri said. "They are not going to walk away and vanish in thin air."

--more--"

Of course, if they were Palestinian or Muslim the government would vanish into thin air, wouldn't they -- and right into a nice, clean torture, 'er, jail cell.