Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

What do we fight for? This Independen­ce, it’s time to think and put our plans to action

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It’s a natural instinct to protect what’s ours. What is ‘ours’ is indeed, a whole different discussion of philosophy, the morality of our pure existence. From the beginning of time, we have fought to protect land, our perception­s of religion, our property, our political agendas anything and everything which we label like ours.

Not even for a fraction of a second would you have second thoughts on destroying another human to protect what is so-called ‘ours’.

The simple concept of ‘attachment’ creates issues in a family and on the bigger picture it even leads to war. We protect our race, our ethnicity, our country, our everything! But looking at the reality of the situation, neither does any of these ‘ours’ and neither are we labeled and divided into race, ethnicity or religion. The natural ways of basic existence were so simple that, there was no division in society.

At present, while we cannot immediatel­y get rid of the concept of ‘protecting what’s ours’, simply because the world has expanded, evolved and is far more advanced than when Adam and Eve were born or any other belief of the first human ever created.

While we do fight to protect our land, territory, country, religion, and beliefs, it wouldn’t hurt anyone so much to consider taking the middle path of existence. Practicing, none other than love, kindness and most of all the well being of every human. As the saying goes “Your freedom ends where my nose begins”, which describes perfectly how to respect another person’s privacy, freedom, space, and thoughts.

Every time you force your belief, your religion, your perception­s of someone else, you are creating an unnecessar­y rift between each other. This eventually creates ripples and may go to extents unimaginab­le.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienabl­e rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” --Thomas Jefferson The Basic principle of human existence is to live. And to protect this, we need to establish a sense of understand­ing between other humans.

Freedom to practice your own religion, freedom of speech, freedom to exist and live without hindering the other persons’ perception or values and way of thought will go a long way.

There won’t be thirty year long wars, there won’t be invasions, colorizati­ons, slavery and amounting to all this, there won’t be rebellion objecting to unfair terms of life. A simple gesture of reserving the thoughts uninvited and controllin­g anger at the root cause of an issue will stop millions of blood-shed. While celebratin­g the 70th year of winning over a sovereign country after a brutal rule of British 152 years, let›s set an example of practicing compassion and empathy as a country and oppose the war.

What our brave rebels endured to gain freedom from the cruel rule of the white Masters was truly remarkable. If the Dutch, Portuguese and British, simply contemplat­ed for one moment of the repercussi­ons of invasion; the bloodshed, torture, mass destructio­n and the loss of precious lives, there would have never been rifts between our own Natives, laborers imported, foreign creoles. As a Nation, we gained independen­ce from the British. We had a 30-year war with the Tamils to protect our independen­ce; we may in the future have another which even may be the mass destructiv­e war between Nation all over the world; simply because of forcing another human to embrace what they dislike and intruding personal space and their own safe havens.

The take-home message on this week of independen­ce celebratio­n to ponder on while you walk, drive or relax would be to ask yourself; What is really ‘ours?’, Why do we force our perception­s on others?, Why create such a hullabaloo over petty matters and resort to violence?, Are we really independen­t from our own misdoings?

Let Humanity win its battle and Liberty be the Global medium of resort to peace and empathy. Devuni Goonewarde­ne

Dutch

Dutch originally came to Sri Lanka to help the King of Kandy at the time Vimaladhar­masuriya I to fight the Portuguese The Dutch replaced the

Portuguese in 1658 They took over the coastal areas of the island but the Central Highlands remained free The Dutch were more interested in the prospects of trade the island had and turned Ceylon’s coast into Ports in their trade routes to China, India, Japan, and the Far East

What the Dutch Left Behind!

Roman – Dutch Law (Land, Marriage)

Architectu­re (Churches)

Place Names – Leiden (Velanai island in Jaffna), Beira Lake Personal Names – Johanna, Henrietta, Hendrick, Cornelis Cuisine – Kokis, Lamprice

What the British Left Behind!

Infrastruc­ture (Railway,

Hospitals, Schools, Roads) Education System

plantation System

(Coffee, Tea, Rubber)

Place Names – Barnes Place, Horton Place, Rosemead Place, Torrington Square, Gregory’s Road)

Cricket After much struggle and bloodshed, Ceylon gained Dominion status from the British Masters in 1948.

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