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[The drop]( THESE WOMEN LOVED THEIR AK-47S In Sri Lanka, women soldiers who once carried firearms and commanded respect now find themselves shunned. Sponsored by [Cariuma]( âIt Was Much Better in the Junglesâ Sonia Sarkar in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, and New Delhi [@sonia_26]( When Malathy returned home in 2009 after serving more than a decade with the Tamil rebel group [Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam]( (LTTE), she was expecting her family would embrace her with open arms. Instead, they were embarrassed by her homecoming. âInitially, for several months, my family didnât allow me to step out of home and talk to locals,â Malathy, a resident of Kilinochchi, a town about 37 miles from Jaffna, the capital of Sri Lankaâs Northern Province, told OZY. âThey even blamed my previous association with the LTTE for the rejections that my younger sister faced in matchmaking.â Malathy, who asked to be identified only by her first name, had served in the LTTE since she was just 16 years old. She and her family are of [Tamil]( ethnicity, which means they are minorities in Sinhalese-majority Sri Lanka. The Sinhalese held high-ranking roles during colonial rule, and the Tamil people have faced [discrimination]( from their government ever since the island nation gained independence from the British in 1948. The post-colonial years saw anti-Tamil pogroms that led a group of Tamil revolutionaries to found the LTTE in 1976, with the goal of creating a separate sovereign state called Tamil Eelam. In 1983, a civil war erupted between the LTTE and the Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan army. That war lasted [26 years](. Malathy and many other women of the LTTE felt powerful during the years they spent with AK-47s and T56s hanging around their shoulders. Women like Malathy made up as much as [one-third]( of the LTTE forces, which enlisted [thousands]( of children as well as women into its ranks and used many of them as human shields. At least [40%]( of the LTTEâs suicide attacks were carried out by women combatants, with rebel leaders instructing women to hide explosives in their undergarments and then infiltrate [high-security zones](. (The [FBI]( has credited the LTTE with pioneering the modern suicide belt and the use of women in suicide attacks.) Sri Lanka has lately seen renewed upheaval following the economic collapse that led to the ouster of its president last July. Notably, amid recent street demonstrations, protesters in the capital city of Colombo openly [mourned]( Tamil casualties from the civil war. That civil war killed more than [100,000 people](, maimed over [110,000]( and left thousands of LTTE cadres â including women like Malathy â in a terrible lurch. ADVERTISEMENT
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Return to âNormalcyâ The Sri Lankan government claimed to rehabilitate [12,000 LTTE militants]( between 2009 and 2012, in an effort to reintegrate them into society. In the case of women, that effort was geared toward making the ex-combatants more âfeminineâ by training them as [makeup artists, seamstresses and nursery school teachers](. Today, Malathy works at a local grocery shop. She tried but failed to borrow a sum of 500,000 Sri Lankan rupees, or about $1,360, to establish a photography studio. It would have been a rare studio run by a woman in her village, Malathy said. She dreamt of using her photography skills, which she honed during her LTTE days, to become financially independent, and she had hoped to train local girls in photography as well. People donât think we deserve to be part of the society. - Kilinochchi resident Malathy A former combatant who asked to be referred to only as Lakshmi told OZY that she wanted to teach self-defense lessons to local girls. But locals refused to send their children to her. Lakshmi, now 41, suspects that parents worry she would teach the children something âbadâ and influence them to become âimmoral.â âPeople donât want girls to be self-dependent because that would mean she would defy societal norms,â Lakshmi said. Based on interviews with 20 ex-combatants, the Routledge Handbook of Human Rights in Asia [found]( that business loans have not provided sufficient economic stimulus to women who served the LTTE, and that they continue to have difficulty finding other work. These women face other challenges too. Satkunanathan said there have been human rights violations in the form of sexual abuse during the so-called rehabilitation process. Rinehart said women who served in the LTTE are more likely to be viewed as âlooseâ by men. âPeople donât think we deserve to be part of the society,â said Malathy. âThey want us to remain isolated.â What other issues or regions of the world would you like to read more about on OZY? [SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS HERE]( [TV]( | [PODCASTS]( | [NEWS]( | [FESTIVALS]( OZY is a diverse, global and forward-looking media and entertainment company focused on âthe New and the Next.â OZY creates space for fresh perspectives, and offers new takes on everything from news and culture to technology, business, learning and entertainment. #OZYMedia, #TheDrop OZY Media, 800 West El Camino Mountain View, California 94040 This email was sent to {EMAIL} [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Read Online](