Jaffna based journalist, Thulasi Muttulingam, uses social media and guides visitors to a once war-torn area which she says hasn’t lost its beauty
Beauty
of Northern parts of Sri Lanka is something the rest of fellow Sri Lankans
missed out on for a few decades. Now that the Northern Province welcomes the
world to experience its beauty, most of the travellers are eager to visit the
area. The Nation
suggests readers visit the Facebook page ‘Humans of Northern Sri Lanka’
or the blog eyeofthecylone.wordpress.com/ before you visit the area. These
will give you information about the places you can visit, the history, culture
and the communities. It will be a virtual tour of Northern Sri Lanka before you
actually go visit the place, giving you a heads up on what you can explore
while providing you with background information.
“I grew up in the Maldives. My parents fled the ’83 riots here
and were so traumatized by it that they refused to come back to Sri Lanka, or
allow us to come back to Sri Lanka to resettle here,” she recalled. Thulasi
didn’t feel welcomed as a child, growing up abroad and she always wanted come
back to Sri Lanka and understand the culture and the heritage of the place
where she actually belonged.
She has been 21 when the ceasefire agreement was signed in 2002
and this gave her the leeway to convince the parents that she should be allowed
to return to Jaffna. “A few months later, they joined me.”
After coming back to Sri Lanka, she joined the Sri Lanka College
of Journalism. She reminisced how she enjoyed her days at The Nation newspaper as
an intern while she was a student of journalism. After her graduation in 2008,
she worked at Sunday Times, Sunday Observer, Ceylon Today and now contributes
to the Dail FT and the Daily News as a freelancer.
As one of the few Tamil speaking journalists working in
English print media, she said, she was often called on to help file stories from
the Northern Province while she was working as a full-time journalist based in
Colombo. She wasn’t satisfied with how they managed to get those stories. “Very
often it was over the phone, or at best a one to two day visit to the North.
This is not enough to get a feel of the North or its myriad issues,” she said.
“So at one point, I gave up my full time job and took on a job as a Reporting
Officer with an Aid Agency working to rehabilitate war affected people,” she
added. This job, which Thulasi took on two years ago, provided her ample opportunity
to travel widely in the North, especially into its rural interiors, allowing her
to gain firsthand insights into the people’s issues.
“Unfortunately, I didn’t have the time to write all these
stories up. Thus I found myself sitting on top of a number of unique stories,
which deserved wider reach – yet I was unable to disseminate them,” she
explained what paved the way to create her Facebook page. “I finally figured
out I could use social media and short snippet form story-telling in the manner
of the much loved Facebook page Humans of New York (HONY), to get my stories
out. So I started a Facebook page which I modeled on HONY.”
She wanted to provide a wider understanding of the people of
the North and the issues they face, to people who don’t have active access to
the North, but are yet interested in them. A quick glance at her page,
scrolling down would provide enough evidence that she has so far been
successful in achieving her goal.
Speaking on how social media helped her to take the stories
from Northern Sri Lanka to the world, she said that one can actually get the
large stories out via a few words and a couple of pictures. “It doesn’t have to
run into thousands of words in order to tell a proper story. With those
shortened Facebook updates, far more people are able to read, follow and share.
As such they get a much wider
reach,” she pointed out. “With the click
of a button, I can ensure that the stories I want to disseminate are read, not
only by people within Sri Lanka, but all over the world.” She also said how
these Facebook posts came to her as a relief while she was frustrated that she
didn’t gain wide reach of readership for the long research articles she wrote
as a journalist.
People from the other parts of country didn’t have access to culture,
traditions and arts of Northern Province for a long period. When asked what the
other fellow Sri Lankans missed she said, “Well, I am still figuring out what I
missed,” adding that there is yet much more to be explored.
Speaking further she appreciated projects like Jaffna and
Galle Music Festival funded by Norway for the valuable work they do in reviving
dying traditional arts in the North and using it to join North with South.
“The greatest tragedy is that the Arts took a backseat for
nearly 30 years as the war raged in the North. It is only now that artists
are slowly taking up their arts again – especially the traditional folk
artists. In some cases, this might have become irretrievably lost as younger
people migrated out and older people died,” Thulasi reiterated.
When she was asked whether she believes that there are enough opportunities for the people from other areas to mingle with the people, arts and culture of the Northern Province, she said, “I am not sure about enough opportunities, but there are certainly opportunities,” she said adding that there are already artists and activists from both the North and South, working actively to connect with each other. “They have been doing so for quite some time now, from since before the war ended. There could be more of such efforts though.”
When she was asked whether she believes that there are enough opportunities for the people from other areas to mingle with the people, arts and culture of the Northern Province, she said, “I am not sure about enough opportunities, but there are certainly opportunities,” she said adding that there are already artists and activists from both the North and South, working actively to connect with each other. “They have been doing so for quite some time now, from since before the war ended. There could be more of such efforts though.”
In her perspective, a better understanding of each other is
needed among the common people in order to enhance the relationships between
the North and the South. “For too long, the vernacular media has demonized each
other to the Tamil and Sinhala people, by giving only one sided stories. We need
a more responsible media seeking to bridge the divide instead of working to
increase the gap,” she stressed. “As a journalist myself, this is something I
am trying hard to do.”
She also said that understanding the people’s aspirations,
the source of their pain and hurt, and seeking to redress that should be given utmost
most priority in addressing the issues in the Northern Province. “Right now in
the Northern Province, which is functioning as a post-war economy, there are
several raging problems such as widespread unemployment, marginalization of
women especially war affected widows, and breakdown of law and order,” she pointed
out.
“Many visitors from the South travel on the glittering new
highways to the North and think much development has taken place in the North.
Just off those highways however, are rutted bumpy rural roads that would rattle
your teeth along with your intestines. These are what the common northern
people use. All that glitters is not development,” she further said.
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