As I browsed through the news items on Sri Lanka these
last weeks, looking at familiar headlines around the victory of the army in the
east versus the chilling warnings of reprisals by the LTTE. I could not help but
think that peace as a whole seems a distant reality. Having just got back from the UK where I
spent the last couple of weeks, it is evident that now globally, no one is
immune from the threat of terrorism and no one can be spared from the lessons
of mother nature.
As the Sri Lankan army juggernaut push forward with the
inevitable reprisals promised by the LTTE, one thing is for certain. It is the innocent civilian that will be
caught in the middle. And it is not just limited to the Tamils but the Muslims
and Sinhalese will also get affected in a dramatic manner.
In these very desperate times, it is easy to lose all sense
of reason and to think emotionally. It
is easy to see these times as a clash between cultures and religions and it is
easy to play the blame game or the victims card. It is easy to blame the Tamil people for
what the LTTE has done and it is easy to blame the Sinhalese for the actions of
the Government and the army. Whilst it
is true that there are people from either side who have their support for the
various actions, there are equally if not more people who genuinely are
striving for peace and justice and equality.
In this light, the heart’s relation to truth should never be allowed to
turn into emotional, passionate blindness: reason must always be called upon to
analyse the situation, temper one’s reaction and help establish an attentive
coherent relation to the other’s truth.
Hence my recent visit to London
was quite symbolic it was to witness a significant occurrence which has deep
reverberations for a country like Sri Lanka . On the 26th of June, a historical
partnership was signed between UMCOR (United Methodist Committee on Relief) and
Muslim Aid to come together to work
on the sole aim to build peace and help relieve poverty jointly. Critics may ask why is this partnership so unique?
After all many agencies have come together before....
It is about a unique partnership
between faith based organisations from two different faiths, going beyond the
rhetoric and doing work on the ground having started this partnership in Sri Lanka during a time when it is indeed such
differences that had caused the displacement of civilians mainly Muslims from
the north eastern town of Mutur
in the Trincomalee District.
“We want to create a
model for other religious and non-religious organisations to follow, to
demonstrate that people of very different, and sometimes conflicting,
backgrounds, faiths, and cultures can work together to help humanity,” says the
Rev. R. Randy Day, General Secretary of Global Ministries, the parent
organisation of UMCOR “Our partnership with UMCOR reaches out beyond our own religious communities to benefit people in need, no matter what their religious faith,” says Farooq Murad, chairman of
. “The world desperately needs that kind of hope and this is a chance to create a new peace building paradigm.”
None needs that chance more than
This is the real crux of what can be one solution for
This is the ultimate utopian dream but it can be achieved by the small steps of man. There are and will be problems in emerging economies like
It is high time now that partnerships develop and are maintained for as a wise man said
Coming
together is a beginning. Keeping together is progress. Working together is
success.”