I Remember the Genocide – May Massacre of 2009

By: EnnaDa- Kiruthika Thusyanthan

I remember the cries of mothers desperately trying to revive their children to life, half alive themselves

I remember the screams of young girls and women tearing apart the sky in its last strain for help

I remember fathers scrambling to find and protect their families, frantic and panicking

I remember her skin burning in flames at 3 years old, still learning the difference between hot and cold

I remember his asthma attack caught in thick black fumes, left with only one able leg and half an arm to move

I remember the crumble of buildings and walls that sheltered people alive

I remember it blasted to pieces until the alive had died

The syringes and medication buried in dirt while the sick  and injured cried

as make-shift hospitals were targeted for its saviours

along with the blasting of prayer sights

targeted for providing mere hope

along with the blasting of schools

targeted for the upbringing of our new generation

targeted for the protection and preservation, of our culture and race

so they chased down the innocent,

in a race with time

ruthlessly slaughtering and murdering our kind

This was our brothers our sisters, our people, our ties

being tortured and silenced, lie after lie

This was our land being exploded, our winds being polluted, our waters being contaminated

Our identity and culture under attack, our religions and values disgraced and harassed

what have we done, what have they done to deserve that?

Story after story that made its way through the news,

Made its way to their relatives,  as loss made its way to their rooms

we didn’t stand still, till the streets knew

regardless of the sun and the moon, the heat and the cold, the snow and the rain

we were going to stand up stand loud, till our voices were drained

And I remember the elderly and the youth working hand in hand,

out in the bitter winters to spread the message and take a stand

I remember endless days, sleeping numb against a curb, voice so strained it could barley be heard

but even in our sleep we were still whisperin the words

“stop the genocide…

media media open ur eyes

stop bombing, schools and hospitals”

candle lights flickered, with our hearts dying out

papers passed around, petitions signed for help

spread awareness, peaceful protests, educated ourselves

to bring about political change so our oppressed minority could get out,

from the bloody claws of a criminal government made from hell

But all this violence was met by silence,

as the world turned its head in negligence,

and its people turned their backs in ignorance

hense the innocent lives lost by the thousands, for simply breathing as a Thamilan

children who will never meet their dreams and desires

knock on the doors of my sleep

lulling away dreams of who they wanted to be

“ a doctor, a teacher a sailor at sea….”

hovering above were thick black clouds as it collided with hopes

as blood rained from above

and in the crowds of our protests, as we chanted out loud

I see them roaming, invisible to sight

watching over their families as each bomb shell shut an eye.

I  remember their hunger, dry throat to their thirst

cramped in overcrowded tents feeding on dirt

bleeding and injured, pain filled and hurt

with no one to recover

with our voice as their hope

I remember the Genocide

because its truth that you can’t hide

as it resurfaced on its own through black lies

I remember the Tamil Genocide

May Massacre of 2009

Rest In Peace

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