A mosque in bombed-out Jaffna.
A mosque in bombed-out Jaffna.

The quest and the redemption

A new report finally allows Sri Lanka’s Northern Muslims to tell their story.
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Before Sri Lanka's war, there was a noteworthy Muslim presence in Chavakachcheri, a well-known town in the Jaffna peninsula that was completely destroyed in a major battle in 2000. The town's name comes from the expression chaavaka cheari, meaning the camp of the Javanese, the people known today as Malay Muslims. Both at Chavakachcheri and Jaffna town, the Muslims lived for generations, working primarily as traders. In the Vanni region, the Muslims were also landowners, extensively involved in agriculture and fishing.

On the main street in Jaffna town there stood, among others, the famous tailor shop of Meeralabhai & Sons, renowned for its service and patronised by Jaffna families for decades. These businessmen and their ancestors were long-time residents of Jaffna town. The Northern Tamils and Muslims related to one another, individually and collectively, without hostility or animosity. Throughout Jaffna's history there was no Tamil-Muslim rioting or violence. 

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