Friday, July 1, 2011

BOOK REVIEW: Tamil Tigress

Title: Tamil Tigress


Author: Niromi de Soyza

Publisher: Allen & Unwin

RRP: $32.99

ISBN: 9781742375182

Release Date: July 2011

Pages: 336



Description:

In 1987, 17-year old Niromi de Soyza shocked her middle-class Sri Lankan family by joining the Tamil Tigers. Equipped with a rifle and cyanide capsule she was one of the rebels' first female soldiers. Now married and living in suburban Sydney, this is her story of her time as a guerrilla.

Description

Two days before Christmas in 1987, at the age of 17, Niromi de Soyza found herself in an ambush as part of a small platoon of militant Tamil Tigers fighting government forces in the bloody civil war that was to engulf Sri Lanka for decades. With her was her lifelong friend, Ajanthi, also aged 17. Leaving behind them their shocked middle-class families, the teenagers had become part of the Tamil Tigers' first female contingent. Equipped with little more than a rifle and a cyanide capsule, Niromi's group managed to survive on their wits in the jungle, facing not only the perils of war but starvation, illness and growing internal tensions among the militant Tigers. And then events erupted in ways that she could no longer bear.

How was it that this well-educated, mixed-race, middle-class girl from a respectable family came to be fighting with the Tamil Tigers? Today she lives in Sydney with her husband and children; but Niromi de Soyza is not your ordinary woman and this is her compelling story.

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Niromi de Soyza speaks fluent Tamil and Sinhalese and writes vivid beautiful English. For many years she worked for the Red Cross in Sydney, where she still lives with her husband and two young children

Review:

Living in a free and relatively peaceful country such as Australia, it is hard to imagine life in a place like Sri Lanka where war is a daily part of life that affects a fair whack of the population. While most 17 year old Aussies are finishing High School, partying or thinking about what career path they are interested in pursing, youths in countries like Sri Lanka are picking up arms and fighting in wars, and for the most part, totally untrained and unprepared for the horrors ahead. In Tamil Tigress, young Niromi tells her story as part of an elite militant group fighting in a civil war.

Niromi’s background is not that of someone you would expect to find linked to a guerrilla group of female soldiers, but that is what makes this story a compelling read. I found every page of this book to be absolutely amazing and at times, totally unbelievable. It was also interesting to see the complete turn around this woman made from a militant freedom fighter to a member of the international organisation, The Red Cross, years later.

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