Category Archives: reconciliation

About the Seenigama and Mankulam projects by FOG — basic statements

Inspired by principles of compassion Kushil Gunasekera set about philanthropic work catering to the people of his home area in Seenigama in the early 2000s. He received support from such cricketers as Muralitharan and Vaas as well as many friends. I was fortunate enough to see the place and its activities in early 2003. I was also fortunate in not being at Seenigama when Kushil and others were assembled for a Childrens’ Scholarship Programme on 26 December 2004 — when the tsunami swept in and all of them ran for their lives. Several people in the locality died. Muralitharan was on the way to star in the festivities, but was fortunately turned back at Kalutara.

   As we know, Murali continued to haunt opposition batsman thereafter, but also devoted considerable energy to tsunami relief work everywhere, especially through the auspices of the World Food Programme. He also has been a staunch supporter of Kushil Gunasekera’s Foundation of Goodness (FOG for short). Likewise, after the tsunami hit, several cricketers such as Shane Warne, Steve Waugh have supported the venture at Seenigama; while the singer, Bryan Adams, donated funds for a top-class swimming pool and the MCC was the principal sponsor of its Centre of Excellence. Continue reading

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Murali’s welfare activity depicted as “nation-saving”

Simon Hayden, for the Associated Press with title “Sri Lanka‘s superhero Murali turns from match-saving to nation-saving”

 Murali appeals for lbw against Bopara– Pic by Eranga Jayawardena

As his cricketing career winds down, Sri Lanka’s superstar Muttiah Muralitharan, the man who can spin a cricket ball like magic, is turning his sights on dragging war-shattered youngsters out of poverty and nurturing the country’s next generation of athletes. Who else but Murali, as he’s known to the whole country, could persuade the Sri Lankan president to donate a 50-acre parcel of land in the northern region that has been devastated by 20 years of civil war!

 Pic by Jason Smith for the Age and WFP

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A trilingual nation: bridging the chasm. Q and A with Lalith Weeratunga

Ruwantissa Abeyratne, in the Daily News,

It was both heartening and encouraging to hear that, in an interview with Swarnavahini TV on March 16, 2011 Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga had said that the government aims to build a trilingual nation by 2020 to remove mistrust among communities and ensure that terrorism will not surface again. The Secretary had added that the government encourages all – especially public servants and schoolchildren – to learn the two official languages Sinhala and Tamil and the link language English. There could be no doubt that the measures taken by the President, particularly in establishing a National Languages and Social Integration Ministry in pursuance of this objective reflects foresight, wisdom and leadership.

This article is intended to provide my views with regard to English as a link language from both a national and global perspective.

Conversant in English

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Jaffna comes alive with music from across the globe

Vindya Amaranayake reporting from Jaffna, in The Nation, 27 March 2011

Jaffna Municipal Grounds, in the close vicinity of famous Jaffna Library and Alfred Duraiappah Stadium, came alive last two days, as hundreds of artistes from across the country took part in the Jaffna Music Festival 2011.
More than 24 local folk art and music groups representing many areas in the country and five international folk groups from India, Nepal, Palestine, South Africa and Norway rendered performances to the applaud of the crowds gathered at the stadium.

Pic from Nation

 Kid’s Villu Paattu — Pic by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

  

Festival goers – Pic by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

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Cinderellas of Chulipuram

Elmo Jayawardena in the Sunday Leader, 27 February 2011

The hamlet sleeps under a clear blue sky. The place and the people in this almost desolate corner of northern Sri Lanka have seen and suffered decades of turmoil and had accepted the devastation of the thirty year war as a way of life. Even in peace the scars of strife clearly remain. The recollections of the people are sad and are common, of the young going to fight and returning in coffins. Many of their loved ones are buried in shallow graves in makeshift cemeteries. Seldom are they marked with name and place for remembrance. This is what insignificance and down-right poverty does to the departed. Many have gone simply missing, expendable innocents of the battles that took place in the name of ethnic divisions. A lot died at tender ages, fighting a war that was not theirs to fight, dragged into a conflict they knew little about except that they were born to a different race, in a country they rightfully called home. Continue reading

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Humanitarian Issues During the War in Sri Lanka-Speech by Don Randall MP made in the Australian Parliament on 28 Feb. 2011

Date Monday, 28 February 2011
Source House Page137
Proof Yes
Questioner
Responder
Randall, Don, MP Question No.Mr RANDALL(Canning) (12.02 pm)—

I am pleased to speak on this motion on humanitarian issues during thewar in Sri Lanka. At the outset, I congratulate the member for Werriwa on bringing this motion to the parliament and for the measured way that he addressed it. I have always had high regard for the member for Werriwa’s interest in human rights issues and migration issues. On this occasion he is quite passionate about his views as the issue stands now.

  I come to this debate from a number of perspectives. One of them is the fact that I am the deputy chair of the Sri Lanka friendship group in this parliament and I have a keen interest in the issues. Like the member for Werriwa and others, I have had contact and lobbying from both sides of the Sri Lankan debate. Continue reading

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Kushil Gunasekera on Goodness, welfare activity , the tsunami and Murali

SEE http://groundviews.org/2011/02/22/sri-lankan-cricket-and-social-work-interview-with-kushil-gunasekera/

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Intolerance: Hues & Issues

Michael Roberts

This article was written on 3 October for Nethra No. 2 and is reproduced here now that the journal is in print –see ISSN 1391-2380 that is Vol.11, No. 02, December 2010

“We are a defeated people,” said a middle-aged lecturer friend at the University of Jaffna when we met during my brief visit to the Jaffna Peninsula in early June 2010. “People are living freely … There is no fear, but where is the political solution?” complained the journalist Aiyathurai Satchithanandam to a fellow-journalist, Ross Tuttle, when the latter visited the Jaffna Peninsula recently. The tensions and mutterings are exacerbated by the intimidating presence of a swathe of armed personnel in the northern reaches and the oversight of critical junctions by armed men and/or fortified guard posts.

   The politicized Tamil voices also claim that Sinhala colonisation is about to be unleashed on their territories, while more specific allegations assert that Buddhist shrines are sprouting in the north as one step in the government’s ulterior intentions.

 Shrine at seaside in Wellawatte which seems to draw both Tamil and Sinhalese supplicants — to judge from the two occasions [one quite teeming] that  I walked by in 2010

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An Open Letter to President Mahinda Rajapaksa on the National Anthem, late December 2010

14 December 2010                                                                                                                 

His Excellency Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of the Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, FAX = 94-11 254 2919

 A few years back I had the pleasure of seeing the Royal-Thomian rugger match on television and watched you Sir, present the winner’s cup to the Captain of the Thomian rugger team, none other than your son, Namal. On this ground I earnestly request you and your sons to sit together and watch a replay of any recent rugby international between the New Zealand All Blacks and the South African Proteas.

 There, you will hear New Zealand’s “God defend New Zealand” sung in both English and Maori; while the South African anthem is sung by all the players, whether Black, Coloured, or White, in Xhosa, Afrikaans and English. There are also versions of the latter in two other languages and it is said that “South Africa’s anthem pulls together two anthems, five languages – and over 49-million people.”

Please note that this national anthem bears the imprint of Nelson Mandela. If you have the time, also please absorb the film Invictus in association with your sons. When he came to power Mandela deployed rugby as a unifying arena. This will be evident when you watch any rugger match today and see how the players, mostly White, sing the anthem in three languages so passionately. It is truly a stirring moment and a testimony to Mandela’s vision – revealing the manner in which he enticed the powerful White and Afrikaans forces to abide by their country after the Black take-over.

The point I am making will not be lost on you: it is in your power to emulate Mandela by enabling reconciliation through many steps. One such step will be for every Sri Lankan to be nourished as Sri Lankans through their ability to sing Sri Lanka Matha in both Sinhala and Tamil.

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KP surfaces once again

Shamindra Ferdinando, from the Island, 6 Feb 2011, uner a different title

S. Pathmanathan aka ‘KP’, described as LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s successor, says his North-East Rehabilitation and Development Organisation (NERDO) will not seek political recognition. Addressing a cross section of people during a three-day tour of Kilinochchi and Jaffna beginning Jan. 28, Secretary of the NERDO assured supporters that he had no political ambitions. He said that NERDO would only engage in humanitarian work with the support extended by the Tamil Diaspora.

‘KP’ was accompanied by several members of the Diaspora, who had been once supportive of the LTTE’s war against the Sri Lanka State. During their tour, they had an opportunity to meet widows of a section of LTTE cadres killed in combat following the opening of a NERDO office at Kilinochchi. The delegation visited Anbu Illam –an orphanage, which was being built at Oddusuddan, east of A9. The delegation met those who had been recently resettled in the Oddusudan area.                                                                                                 KP as best man at Prabhakaran’s wedding in India 

They met a cross section of civilians in Jaffna on Jan 30, with the first meeting held at the Jaffna MPCS (Multi-purpose Cooperative Society). Pathmanathan told people that his only concern was how to improve the living conditions of the war affected. Pathamanathan stressed the need for providing the best possible education to the people of the North and the East. Pathmanathan and his associates also visited to NERDO branch in Parithithuri, where they met another group of war affected people.

An authoritative official told The Island that ‘KP’ was still in ‘protective custody’ of the government in spite of his being given the opportunity to engage in humanitarian work. According to him, NERDO had been set up in keeping with a national strategy to deal with some of those post-war issues, particularly in relation to Tamil Diaspora. The official dismissed the possibility of registering NERDO as a political party or bringing in ‘KP’ into politics.

In an exclusive interview with The Island in last August, KP, one-time LTTE top gun in charge of overseas operations, including procurement of weapons, said that he wasn’t interested in politics at all.

Government sources said that NERDO would continue its efforts to harness Diaspora support to provide relief to the ordinary civilians affected by the war and thousands of LTTE families. Sources said that the other priority was the post-rehabilitation support to LTTE cadres, who were being gradually released.

The Island learns that ‘KP’ was given access to those who were being rehabilitated.

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