இது உங்களுடையதுThis archive belongs to you.Not a company. Not a government. A tool the diaspora can hold.
If you are Tamil and live outside the homeland — London, Toronto, Sydney, Paris, Singapore, Dubai, wherever — this page is for you. Below is exactly what you can do with this archive today, what it cannot yet do, and why that honesty matters more than any promise.
Most Tamil sites are either news (fleeting), charity (asking), or nostalgia (passive). This is different. It is a living evidence institution — designed to outlast its founder, to hold truth without claiming to own it, and to route power back to the diaspora rather than concentrate it.
If you have ever said "someone should write this down properly" — this is that someone. Built. Open. Yours to use.
Not another petition. Not another hashtag. What the diaspora needs is credible, citable, durable infrastructure — something a journalist can quote, an MP can table, a student can footnote, a family can trust across generations.
That is what this archive tries to be. It is not there yet. But it is further along than anything else built by the diaspora, for the diaspora, without state or corporate backing.
What you can actually do right now.
No account needed. No payment. No waiting list. These are public surfaces, open to anyone who finds them. The only requirement is honesty — about what the archive can and cannot do.
Velicham is an AI archivist trained on 150+ cited sources — not the open internet. Ask about demilitarisation, maritime law, GSP+ compliance, legal memory, press freedom. It will answer from the corpus, refuse what it does not know, and cite its sources.
Ask VelichamSeven live MP evidence packs — Mullivaikkal, Demilitarisation North-East, Enforced Disappearances, Katchatheevu, Press Freedom, GSP+ Compliance, Tamil Legal Memory. Each one is citation-anchored, PQ-drafted, and Hansard-traceable.
Browse packsThe Unmai desks publish only what can be anchored to Tier-A sources — UN, OHCHR, ICG, Amnesty, journalism with bylines. If you see a claim about checkpoints, disappearances, land grabs, or fisher arrests, cross-check it here first.
Enter UnmaiThe Charter. The Seven Sacred Rules. The Twenty-One Roots. The two-layer rule (Now / Becoming). Understanding what TLTE is — and what it is not — protects you from misframing it, and protects it from being misused.
Read the CharterAcademics, journalists, researchers: the citations registry is public, the methodology is documented, the outreach templates are downloadable. You can cite this archive. You can build on it. You do not need permission.
Open Reading RoomMagalir Avai is not a service provider and not a substitute for legal or medical help. It is a governance organ with a public charter, economic-power framework, and a safety architecture. Read it before you frame it.
Enter Magalir AvaiWhat you cannot do — and why that protects you.
Every system that refuses to state its limits is dangerous. These are TLTE's hard boundaries. They are not temporary inconveniences. They are design choices that keep people safe.
TLTE does not accept direct survivor or witness intake. If you or someone you know has testimony, you will be routed to PEARL, ITJP, OMP, OHCHR, or UK authorities — not stored on this site. This is not modesty. It is safety.
The Unmai desks do not name perpetrators, do not publish geotagged checkpoints, and do not accept on-the-ground intelligence. If you need to report a specific incident with names, this archive routes you elsewhere.
This is Aarambam — the founding era. Six Graduation Gates are open. The archive is honest about its incompleteness. What you see is real. What is missing is acknowledged. Both are true.
There is no paid tier, no membership card, no treasury to contribute to, and no democratic voting mechanism live. When those exist, they will be announced with an audit trail — not a marketing campaign.
One person, one era, one civilisational bet.
This archive was built by a single founder — a Tamil diaspora member, a researcher, a UK-registered CIC director — working alone for the founding era. That is not the target state. It is the honest present. The architecture is designed for distributed stewardship: five rotating Councils, two-Archon verification, a Continuity Protocol that survives the founder's exit.
The founder's role is Architect during the PhD, Steward at adoption, Ancestor in the long run. Never owner. The Twenty-One Roots and the Continuity Protocol exist precisely to make that transition enforceable — not aspirational.
Use it. Share it. Cite it. Question it.
The most valuable thing you can do for this archive is not money or praise. It is use. Ask Velicham a hard question. Read an evidence pack and tell someone what you learned. Cross-check a claim you saw on social media. Cite the archive in your work. Hold it accountable to its own rules.
