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THE LTTE IS NOT ONLY BRUTAL BUT ALSO INTERNALLY CORRUPT REVEALS THE NOVEL GORILLABy Walter JayawardhanaLiberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is not only brutal but also
internally corrupt reveals the Gorilla, a new English novel published
in India according to a book review written by a London based critic.
Rocky Raj gives the LTTE the total dedication it demands of all
its followers. But the LTTE is not only brutal, it is also internally
corrupt. Rocky Rajs honesty results in him being tortured and
forced out of the LTTE. says the London based critic Vinod Joseph
in his latest criticism published in the Desicript, dedicated for book
reviews. Rocky Raj is the main character of the book under the title
Gorilla written on personal experience of the author Shobashakthi,
an ex-LTTE child soldier, now living in France. The original book was published seven years ago and recently translated into English by Random House in India. The translator is Anushiya Sivanarayanan. The review says the following about Gorilla: There are various ways in which an author can tell his story. It can be in the first person, solely from the narrators point of view. It can be through an omnipresent third person who sees and knows everything. Anthony Thasan, a.k.a Shoba Sakthi, a.k.a Rocky Raj, uses a third method while narrating his own story. Most of the novel, a fictionalised autobiography described by the translator Anushiya Sivanarayanan as autofiction, is described in the third person, though the narrator is also the author and the main character. Events unfold just a few feet from the reader and you get the feeling of being trapped inside Shoba Sakthis head, with eyes glued to the empty sockets. The main story is set in a dalit colony in an island near Jaffna in northern Sri Lanka. Civil war is raging between various Tamil nationalist movements and the Sri Lankan army. The LTTE is fighting and decimating other Tamil movements. On top of all this, Rocky Rajs father is a violent goon who has earned the sobriquet Gorilla. The narrators unsentimental and matter-of-fact language gives the reader no respite from the all pervading violence. As I read this novel in a single four hour sitting, my head was repeatedly dunked into a cauldron of war, poverty, prejudice and cruelty. Everybody is cruel to each other. Rocky Rajs father is cruel to him and other family members. The LTTE is cruel to its recruits. The Sri Lankan army and its Tamil supporters are cruel to Tamils who are perceived to be LTTE sympathisers. The French police are cruel to illegal immigrants. There is no quarter asked for and in any event, none is given. Rocky Raj runs off from home and joins the LTTE. He is stripped of his individuality and brutalised. In a telling scene, as the new recruits wind up their training, they are taught how to evade the Sri Lankan army and withstand their interrogation if they are captured. I wondered what sort of tips they would get that would teach them how to withstand torture. There are no tips. Rocky Raj and other recruits are brutally beaten up as a graduation present. Rocky Raj gives the LTTE the total dedication it demands of all its followers. But the LTTE is not only brutal, it is also internally corrupt. Rocky Rajs honesty results in him being tortured and forced out of the LTTE. Later the scene shifts to France, where the narrator is shown applying for asylum even though he has being rejected many times. Ex-fighters cannot get asylum and so the applicant has to come up with a plausible story that will hold water. In the midst of asylum applications and story fabrications, one starts to hear voices of moderation, tolerance and peace. The virtues of Gandhi and Mandela are extolled. We hear Anthony Thasan being told by Lokka, we need to combat opinions with opinions, not with fists. What kind of opinions, Lokka? If I looked you and said that I wished to ... here Anthony Thasan says something really vulgar, something no one would put up with. But Lokka looks Anthony in the eye and says, yes, thats an opinion too. Does Lokka live up to the noble ideals that he extols? Or will he succumb to a fate that is not much different from the fate of many Sri Lankan Tamils? Do read this remarkable novel which has many references to facts and actual incidents that took place in northern Sri Lanka in the 80s and 90s, and find out. The author Shobasakthi, (born) Anthony Jesuthasan) is based in
France. Once a LTTE child soldier, he has lived in France for over ten
years. Shobasakthi works as a dishwasher at fastfood places from time
to time. He has written a second novel Mmm... (describing the way Sri
Lankan Tamil nod their heads at everything the Tigers say), a third
called One Way, three collections of short stories, and most recently,
a collection of non-fiction pieces.
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