| Heartbreak in Post-War Jaffnaby Adele Barker, The Huffington Post, February 2, 2010   
	
		| Several months ago the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Jaffna  made his way down to Kilinochchi and somehow got 400 of his students  released. He brought them back to the university which was the only  place they had to go. They had lost everything but the clothes on their  back. Most of all they had lost family. In some cases family members  had been killed, in other cases separated and put into different camps.  There are still families here, lots of them, who can't find each other.  |  On a sandy street on the northern shore of the Jaffna Peninsula in  Sri Lanka, an innocuous building surrounded by mango and palmyra trees  houses a rehabilitation center run by a Catholic priest, who in January  2005 just days after the tsunami began to counsel survivors.  "Now our population has increased," he told me the other day. Now we  have war victims and people who were put in the IDP camps. Some of  these people are survivors of the tsunami, the war and the camps. I  need more counselors up here. I'm trying to train as many as I can. It  is going to take a long long time to recover from this."  The stories I hear in Jaffa are heart wrenching. They hide behind the  surfeit of activity--the bustle in the marketplace, the investors from  the south, the ads and billboards that have sprung up--that define the  surface of this town. Underneath there are stories that are not  fathomable. Basically what happened was this. In the last years of the  civil war, the violence in Jaffna escalated. People thought they would  be safer in an area south of here called the Vanni. And so they left.  Among them were students from the University of Jaffna who went south  to be with family in the city of Kilinochchi. The problem is that the  war shifted south to precisely the area where the students had  relocated. During the final weeks of the war, civilians got caught in  the cross-fire. Many were used as human shields by both the LTTE and  the Sri Lankan army and were then shoved into IDP camps as the war  ended. That was in May. Most of the several hundred thousand who ended  up in the camps are still there despite government promises to have  everyone released by January. Friends tell me that with an election  just over two weeks away the government may speed up the release of  these people. But it hasn't happened yet.
 Several months ago the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Jaffna  made his way down to Kilinochchi and somehow got 400 of his students  released. He brought them back to the university which was the only  place they had to go. They had lost everything but the clothes on their  back. Most of all they had lost family. In some cases family members  had been killed, in other cases separated and put into different camps.  There are still families here, lots of them, who can't find each other.  I met with some of the female students the other day over at the  university. I thought I was going to meet with five. Fifty showed up.  They had all been in the camps, and all were just recently released  thanks to the efforts of the Vice-Chancellor. Two of the young women  have children who are still in the camps. I asked how old the children  were. "Two years old, Madam," came the answer as the young women  pressed their handkerchiefs to their faces to hold back their tears.  "They are so young," I said to someone later. "Yes, madam, you are  quite right. People got married so that they wouldn't be recruited by  the LTTE (the Tamil Tigers). "Mostly it worked, but then this  happened."   There are no easy answers either existential or practical to what I  witnessed the other day. The onus is on the Sri Lankans just now to  deliver themselves from this mess, most of the aid agencies having been  kicked out of the camps. I have been told that the situation down in  the Vanni is beyond one's ability to imagine, but the government has  denied most agencies access to the area. Quietly, however, Sri Lankan  agencies and private individuals are moving about the island doing, as  one Sri Lankan put it "the needful." A Catholic nun in Colombo moves  tirelessly every week between Colombo and the Vanni to help school  children; Sarvodaya, a Sri Lankan aid organization, is still able to  access areas off limits to international aid organizations. Some  psychologists I know visit the camps doing what they can do while  quietly trying to reunite families. I observed this same phenomenon in  the first days after the tsunami and wrote about it in "Not Quite  Paradise" (Beacon Press, 2009). While international aid organizations  were stuck on the tarmac dealing with red tape, Sri Lankans themselves  filled their trucks, emptied their shelves, bought out the local stores
 
  
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    | Prof. Adele Barker |  and headed to the coast via the back roads that only they knew and got  to the survivors before anyone else. It is left to them again on this  island to do the heavy lifting, this time to recover from a man-made  catastrophe that has wrecked as much havoc over here as the 2004  tsunami.  There are finally the intangibles of war that no amount of material  aid can address. It is trauma I am speaking of. I asked a colleague the  other day how one of the female IDP students was doing. "Frozen," was  all he answered.
 ------------ University of Arizona Prof. Adele Barker's 2009 book Not Quite Paradise about her time teaching at the University of Peredeniya.  |