Truth Eaters: TWAIL and Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Truth Eaters: TWAIL and Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka
Abstract
Every May 18, mourners gather near the sandy beaches of Mullivaikkal, a small strip between Chundikulam and Mulltaitivu in the Northern province of Sri Lanka, to commemorate the 2009 genocide against the Tamils. Mullivaikkal is where approximately three hundred thousand Tamil civilians found refuge as they fled the military bombardment between January and May 2009.1 Starting in 2010, the remembrance day commemoration attracts thousands of locals, coming together near the beach to reflect and remember. Increasingly, the commemoration also attracts transitional justice experts, along with diplomats and international governmental organization workers. In my contribution, I reflect on the work of the local and diaspora Tamil transitional justice experts as they begin to gather evidence from the families of victims for the newly created 2024 Commission for Truth, Unity and Reconciliation. Drawing on Homer's The Odyssey and the story of the “lotus eaters,” I frame these experts as “truth eaters,” preoccupied with collecting victim narratives for the purpose of personal gratification. As they engage in the repeated collection of particular elements of the victims’ truth—elements predicated on the demands of the field of transitional justice—the truth eaters are oblivious to the root causes of the war. I explain how attention to root causes through a Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) lens can avoid the effects of the dominant liberal modes of truth seeking reflected in the work of these truth eaters.
Volume
119
Pages
64-68
Date
2025/01
Language
en
ISSN
2398-7723
Short Title
Truth Eaters
Accessed
3/22/25, 10:54 AM
Library Catalog
Cambridge University Press
Citation
Xavier, S. (2025). Truth Eaters: TWAIL and Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka. 119, 64–68. https://doi.org/10.1017/aju.2025.13
Author / Editor