Of what it was, and what it is now
Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai reporting from Jaffna
Jaffna’s Main Street begins at a curvy corner at the
entry point to the peninsula. and gets connected to the Jaffna town through the
long and winding A9 Highway.
Here is a street that had faced enormous challenges
and witnessed causalities. Lives have been lost on this road and its properties
damaged. The signs of devastation are still visible on this street unlike any
other main street in Sri Lanka.
At the corner of the Main Street
The street skirts the Dutch Fort, a tabled
historical monument that was ravaged by the war, and at one time occupied by
the Sri Lankan Security Forces, Indian Peace Keeping Forces (IPKF), and
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). This adds a new flavor to conservative
Jaffna. Many buildings in and around Main Street have been completely destroyed
due to aerial bombings, shellings and heavy fighting that prevailed in the area
for nearly three decades.
Destroyed studio
Very often the Jaffna Main Street has a lonely,
deserted look on it. It is so for a reason. Many of the Jaffna inhabitants have
fled the island or relocated elsewhere making it what it is today – a long
street with little activity. On the hand, it also reflects what Jaffna has
eventually become.
Residents have been displaced many times. My own
childhood memories of the Main Street in Jaffna are of a bustling place that
throbbed with life, before full- scale war hit Jaffna, leaving in its wake, a trail
of destruction and displacement . It was then a place packed with studios,
funeral parlours, tutories, art centres, a functioning nursing home, a
beautiful Church, eateries and many monuments symbolizing Tamil Nationalism,
and their early leaders.
View of Thanthai Chelva Memorial
Monument to pay tribute to people who were killed during the 4th Tamil Research Conference held in Jaffna
View of Clinton Funeral Parlour
Making peninsula's popular paper wreathe
Subsequent to the end of the war in 2009, the street
is showing slow signs of recovery, but many of the earlier monuments have been either
deliberately removed, damaged or destroyed except for the Thanthai Chelva
Memorial, and a monument that pays tribute to the people who were killed in
Jaffna during the 4th Tamil Research Conference. New residents in
the area say they hardly know the owners of the studios, and are unable to
trace the original owners and the area’s history. Much has changed the face of
Jaffna, and Main Street is no different.
Busy in news gathering
There are monuments that are getting a facelift, and
some already have been spruced up. The rebuilt Jaffna Public Library, Subramaniam
Park, Dutch Fort, Veerasingam Hall, Alfred Durayappah Stadium, Thanthai Chelva
Memorial, the memorial for people who were killed during the 4th
Tamil Research Conference, Jaffna Central College, Muniyappar temple, and
Pannai Causeway, together gives this city its identity and beauty. Year of war somehow, has not dulled the spark
that is evident in Jaffna.
View of Alfred Durayappah Stadium
Centre preserves arts and culture
View of Jaffna Prison
Notice to the prison visitors
Reverend Father. Thaninaayagam Adikalaar's Centenary celebration banner
View of St. James Church
Bicycle a common mode of transport in the peninsula
For the latest fashion for men in town
Chat and cycle
Time for Tuition
For auspicious orders
Time for Cricket
View of Pannai Causeway
Pictorial on Ceylon Today
COURTESY: Ceylon Today
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