Federation of Tamil Sangams of North America
The Federation of Tamil Sangams in North America is a non-profit organization of Tamil organizations in the United States and Canada. It is a registered, non-profit, tax-exempt 501 organization and founded in 1987 by five Tamil organizations: Tamil Association of Delaware Valley, Tamil Sangam of Washington & Baltimore, New York Tamil Sangam, Ilankai Tamil Sangam and Harrisburg Tamil Sangam. In July 2018, it stated that it represents 50 Tamil organizations based in America and Canada.
Activities
Convention
FeTNA organizes an annual North American Tamil convention. Established in 1988, the conventions are held during the 4th of July weekend, in a different city every year. Conventions can attract over two thousand attendees from all over North America.Invited guests typically include Tamil :Category:Tamil writers|writers, :Category:Tamil actors|actors, :Category:Tamil musicians|musicians, and :Category:Tamil politicians|politicians from a variety of political parties in India and Sri Lanka.
The annual conventions were held jointly with the Indian-American Tamil Nadu Foundation until 2002; the two groups have held separate conventions starting in 2003.
The 32nd convention will be held along with World Tamil Conference during July 3–7, 2019 in Chicago.
Year | Location | - |
1988 | Broomall, Pennsylvania | - |
1989 | Washington, D.C. | - |
1990 | Staten Island, New York | - |
1991 | Hoffman Estates, Illinois | - |
1992 | College Park, Maryland | - |
1993 | Kenosha, Wisconsin | - |
1994 | Somerset, New Jersey | - |
1995 | Toledo, Ohio | - |
1996 | Stamford, Connecticut | - |
1997 | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | - |
1998 | Edwardsville, Illinois | - |
1999 | Atlantic City, New Jersey | - |
2000 | Tampa, Florida | - |
2001 | Southfield, Michigan | - |
2002 | University Park, Illinois | - |
2003 | Trenton, New Jersey | - |
2004 | Baltimore, Maryland | - |
2005 | Dallas, Texas | - |
2006 | New York, New York | - |
2007 | Raleigh, North Carolina | - |
2008 | Orlando, Florida | - |
2009 | Atlanta, Georgia | - |
2010 | Waterbury, Connecticut | - |
2011 | Charleston, South Carolina | - |
2012 | Baltimore, Maryland | - |
2013 | Toronto, Canada | - |
2014 | St. Louis, Missouri | - |
2015 | San Jose, California | - |
2016 | Trenton, New Jersey | - |
2017 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | - |
2018 | Frisco, Texas | - |
2019 | Schaumburg, Illinois | - |
2020 | Atlanta, Georgia |
Support for Tamil studies
FeTNA sponsors visits from two Tamil scholars to the United States each year; as of 2006, it had sponsored a total of 24 scholars. It has also been involved in the sponsorship of a Tamil Chair at the University of California, Berkeley and the Tamil Studies program at the University of Toronto.Fundraising for disaster relief work
FeTNA plays an active role in fundraising for disaster relief work in response to crises like the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and the 2004 Kumbakonam school fire. In June 2005, the group reported that it had raised $37,965.79 for tsunami relief and $16,020.43 for victims of the Kumbakonam school fire.Organization
The Federation was founded in 1987 by five American Tamil sangams: Ilankai Tamil Sangam, Tamil Association of Delaware Valley, Tamil Sangam of Washington & Baltimore, New York Tamil Sangam and Harrisburg Tamil Sangam. As of October 2010, FeTNA's website links to the websites of the following member organizations:According to the FeTNA website, the cost of membership varies based on the size of constituent sangams. Each sangam appoints delegates to the governing board, with votes proportional to membership. Beside the governing board, the group has a President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Communications Director.
Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka
Public stances
The Federation publicly sides with the cause of ethnic Sri Lankan Tamils in the Sri Lankan Civil War. It has issued a number of statements calling for an end to Sri Lankan government violence against Tamils, the ability of Tamils to engage in meaningful negotiations with the government, and a peaceful political resolution to the conflict.- 1995: Passed a resolution at annual convention, asking the US government not to sell arms to Sri Lanka, and calling for the US to pressure the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE to find a political resolution to the civil war
- 2005: Held the Sri Lankan government accountable for the death of Sri Lankan Tamil journalist Dharmaratnam Sivaram.
- 2005: Strongly condemned the murder of Joseph Pararajasingham, a Sri Lankan Tamil Member of Parliament
- 2006: Called for an end to extrajudicial killings by Sri Lankan government forces and paramilitaries.
- 2006: Supported a call for Sri Lanka-LTTE peace meetings, urged world leaders to pressure all parties to stop attacks on civilians, called for Sri Lankan military to withdraw from civilian homes and buildings, and called for sanctions to be initiated unless the Sri Lankan government disarmed paramilitaries
- 2006: Participated at a protest at the United Nations, condemning Sri Lankan state violence against Tamil civilians, asking for an investigation by the International Criminal Court, and calling for good faith negotiations between the Sri Lankan government and Sri Lankan Tamils
US civil rights lawsuits
In 1997, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright designated the LTTE as a "foreign terrorist organization" under the terms of the AEDPA, which, according to TamilNet, "criminalizes the provision of material support or resources to the lawful and non-violent activities of any foreign organization designated as 'terrorist' by the Secretary of State." In 1998, FeTNA and seven other organizations joined the Center for Constitutional Rights in challenging the constitutionality of the AEDPA, which would make illegal FeTNA's attempts to do service around Tamil language, arts, and cultural institutions in the LTTE-occupied "Tamil Eelam" region of Sri Lanka. The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled against the plaintiffs.
The Center for Constitutional Rights and the Humanitarian Law Project took up a similar case challenging the AEDPA and the USA PATRIOT Act in 2003. In March 2004, Judge Audrey Collins enjoined the US Government from enforcing applicable sections of the USA Patriot Act against the plaintiffs; however, FeTNA was not covered by the ruling, because they did not provide the court with adequate details to prove that their proposed actions—doing cultural work in LTTE-occupied parts of Sri Lanka—would actually be in violation of the law.
Criticism
Some critics of the LTTE, consider FeTNA overly sympathetic toward or supportive of the group. FeTNA's public statements are primarily critical of human rights abuses attributed to the government of Sri Lanka, rather than those attributed to the LTTE.A July 2003 Times of India article based on a prior article in Sri Lankan paper The Island called FeTNA "one of LTTE's front organisations," and referred to the annual FeTNA convention as an LTTE fundraiser. The accusation appears not to have been repeated in subsequent media coverage, and mainstream Indian political figures have continued to participate in FeTNA events.
Other political stances
California Hindu textbook controversy
FeTNA was actively involved in the Californian Hindu textbook controversy, in which it joined a number of other groups in successfully petitioning California's Curriculum Commission to reject allegedly revisionist edits to California's textbook curriculum on Hinduism and India, as suggested by the Hindu Education Foundation and the Vedic Foundation. FeTNA raised several specific objections about the proposed textbook revisions, which they felt sidelined the role of South Indian and Dravidian culture, and allegedly "whitewashed" caste and gender discrimination in India.Upon rejection by the Board of major proposed edits, a Thillai Kumaran, then President of FeTNA, dismissed the pending lawsuit by the Hindu organizations. "Threats of legal action are a clear sign of desperation on the part of the Sangh organizations; these organizations are perhaps not aware that the Board deals with dozens of lawsuits at any given time and cannot be cowed by such threats." Thillai Kumaran, a concerned parent, mentioned his lower-caste origins during his testimony, mentioned that his son, who attends middle school in California, did not feel insulted by the textbook's contents on Hinduism.