Sharmila Seyyid
Poet, Writer
Sri Lanka

Sri Lankan journalist, poet, writer, activist, and mother Sharmila Seyyid was barely 30 when she was forced into exile from eastern Sri Lanka. Seyyid has dedicated her life to addressing the socio-economic vulnerability of women in Sri Lankan society through both writing and activism, as a social worker, journalist, and author. As a writer, Seyyid interrogates themes related to women’s rights, children’s rights, humanitarian conflicts, youth activism, gender and sexuality, and more. Her novels center on the multiple burdens that Tamil-speaking Muslim women in Sri Lanka face, especially in the wake of the Sri Lanka’s decades-long civil war.
However, Seyyid’s dedication to advancing gender equality has not been without challenges, and Seyyid herself has become a target of the very persecution she seeks to fight. On November 18, 2012, following the release of her collection of poems Siragu Mullatha Penn, which translates to The Women Who Grew Wings, Seyyid was interviewed on BBC Tamil, where she observed that legalizing sex work would help keep sex workers safe. However, in Eravur, the conservative village where Seyyid lived, such statements sparked furor among the fundamental religious community. Seyyid rapidly became a target of vitriolic criticism, harassment, and death threats. Although she later clarified the statement, the clergy asked for an apology, and Seyyid fearlessly refused. Since then, Seyyid and her family have faced incessant attacks, including threats of acid-attacks and rape. Not longer after her interview, the English academy she ran alongside her sister was vandalized, and her students and their families were subjected to further harassment.

Seyyid and her son. Photo courtesy of Ancla.
Capturing the lives of three young women, Ummath dissects the complex realities of extremism, nationalism, chauvinism, fundamentalism, and sexism that governed Sri Lankan society during and in the aftermath of the civil war. The novel has since been translated into English and published by HarperCollins in Delhi, India.
The civil war and its legacy have had a profound impact on human rights in the country, including on freedom of expression. Although freedom of expression is guaranteed in the constitution, for decades crimes against journalists have been perpetrated with general impunity. Members of the Tamil minority find the climate particularly hostile toward free speech. Academics have reported facing discrimination for studying Tamil issues, and in November 2019, Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was credibly accused of massacring Tamil civilians during the civil war, became prime minister of Sri Lanka. It is in the midst of this threatening environment that Seyyid found herself embroiled.

“I began writing by writing about myself. My writings are a testimony of my inner-self and real life. The inception was virtually a journal of my everyday life.”
— -Sharmila Seyyid, in an interview by journalist Judy Fernando for The Morning, Nov. 18, 2018.

Sharmila Sayyed. Photo courtesy of HuffPost.
