We
are heartbroken to share with you that Priyadarshini Thangarajah, to her
friends Priya or Thanga, passed away on 4 November 2015 in Colombo. It is hard
to think of Priya in the past tense—she was always brimming with life, laughter
and love. Each LASS conversation was all the more special, brilliant and spirited
solely because of Priya.
Priya
graduated from the National Law School University of India, Bangalore, India,
in the summer of 2010. As an aspiring young
lawyer, who took the bar examination, Priya wanted to challenge the estranged
relationship between law and justice by becoming a magistrate. In 2014-15, Priya was a fulbright scholar and completed her LLM at
Georgetown University. Priya worked with different organisations based in Sri
Lanka and India on issues of gender, sexuality, violence and human rights.
However, her passion for law and legal research was shaped through years of association
with the Law and Society Trust in Colombo; and later her work at the
Alternative Law Forum at Bangalore.
Priya
was a sensitive and brilliant researcher. We have lost a courageous lawyer,
scholar and activist, who believed in the value of cultivating principles that
straddled these different spheres. She brought a radical,
feminist politics of care to the politics of transformation she practised. Her
research ranged from sexuality, violence, state repression, torture, human
rights, and censorship. Her untimely passing is a huge
loss not only to the futures of alternate lawyering and legal research in Sri
Lanka but also South Asia.
Priya was a powerful writer. In 2010, she wrote:
I spent my initial activist days worrying that there were
not enough young people given that we lost them in the 70s, then in this war,
displacement and emigration then I suddenly found through facebook a hundred
young people who cared. We may disagree but we care and that I must say has
sustained me. And today as we light candles in street corners evading arrests
and threats and silently light the flame of dissent I am hoping we will revolt
in every street corner for we don’t have six years and I am done waiting for
the terms to stop, the war to get over.
And
more recently on the issue of marriage equality and queer struggles, she wrote
Ours should not be
a movement to make people feel comfortable and to prove that we, too, are
capable of fidelity and devotion; what we should strive for is to love and to
love whom we want, how we want to, and in as many ways as we desire.
To
all her friends, courage to deal with this inconsolable loss; for LASS, it is a
huge blow; to Priya, adieu dear friend.
In
sorrow,
Uma,
Ponni, Anusha, Svati, Brenna and Pratiksha with so many friends on LASS
Uma, umafam@gmail.com
Ponni, mailponni@gmail.com
Anusha, anju.hari@gmail.com
Svati, svatipshah@gmail.com
Brenna,
brenna.bhandar@gmail.com
More about Priya’s work:
In
2002, Priya served as a Tamil language interpreter for Women and Peace Mission
to the East of Sri Lanka; while she interned at the Law and Society Trust at
Colombo (2001-2003) researching sexual violence, human rights treaties,
custodial deaths, child rights and electoral violence among other issues.
Thereafter, Priya was also associate director and interpreter in a documentary
film project entitled ‘the art of forgetting’ where she served as Tamil and
Sinhala language interpreter during research, filming and editing of trilingual
documentary film, assisted the director/producer in all aspects of post
production. In 2003, Priya travelled to
Delhi to work as a researcher at the CSDS where she researched poverty related
migration of women; and interned at PLD helping organise a seminar on rights
based development. In 2005, Priya returned to the Law and Society Trust (LST)
where she researched the right to die.
She also worked on the Official Languages Commission at the LST. In 2007, Priya was research Assistant at LST
when she researched and helped monitor the 16 cases being investigated by the
Presidential Commission of Inquiry. She also interned with the then
Commissioner, Presidential Commission of Inquiry, Colombo, by providing
research support relating to the 16 cases under consideration by the
Commission.
Priya
worked with a number of notable organisations, lawyers and academics, which
included Women’s Support Group in Colombo when she documented the struggles
lesbian and bisexual women and transgendered persons face in Sri Lanka; researched
human rights defenders for the Human Rights Alert in Manipur, worked for Meneka
Guruswamy on the arms industry in India, wrote legal briefs for human rights
cases relating to detention under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and the
extrajudicial killings of 17 humanitarian workers (Action Contra la Faim) in Sri Lanka for K.S Ratnevel, Advocate,
Colombo and worked with feminist historian Uma Chakravarti on gender, law and
legal education. Priya also provided legal advice and gender and legal training
for women in the Mannar Women’s Development Federation, Mannar in 2011-2012.
Read Priya at:
With
Arasu, Ponni. Queer Women and Habeas Corpus in
India: The Love that Blinds the Law, Indian
Journal of Gender Studies October 2012 vol. 19 no. 3 413-435, http://ijg.sagepub.com/ content/19/3/413.abstract
Watch Priya speak:
https://vimeo.com/148836197courtesy Uma Chakravarti
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