Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Young and brave

The young gold and silver medalists at this year’s Civilian Bravery awards, share their experience­s with Oshani Alwis

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ISunday, October 27, 2019 t was a Thursday afternoon on February 1 last year when 19- yearold Hashindu Madushan suddenly heard a commotion in his neighbourh­ood of Karandeniy­a, Galle. The shocking news was that a baby had fallen into a well nearby.

Rushing to the well, Hashindu could see the infant in the water. The villagers were gathered around. Without a second thought, Hashindu decided to go down the well, which was 23 feet deep. Bracing his back against one side of the wall and legs on the other, he slowly made his descent, reached the water level and picked up the baby who was already unconsciou­s. “

His courageous act won him the prestigiou­s Budal Na Gold Medal of Civilian Bravery 2019, the highest bravery medal given by the Foundation for Civilian Bravery.

Sharing his experience with the Sunday Times, Hashindu says after he lifted the baby, the villagers sent down a rucksack attached to a rope, and he put the baby into it. The villagers had rushed the baby to hospital and in their haste forgot about Hashindu who was stuck inside the well, with no means to climb up. “I called for help and some neighbours came and threw a rope for me to climb up,” Hashindu says adding “when I saw the baby inside it didn’t occur to me that my own life could be at risk by climbing down the deep well.”

Later it was revealed that the baby’s mother was arrested by the Karandeniy­a police as she had allegedly thrown the baby into the well. Hashindu relates with a heavy heart that the baby he rescued with much effort passed away on February 16 at the Karapitiya Teaching Hospital, Galle. “If I had got to the baby a few minutes earlier his life could have been saved,” he says.

A past student of Madakumbur­a Maha

Vidyalaya, Karandeniy­a, Hashindu was an athlete and cadet at school. He is grateful to his principal, Dharmadasa Rajapakse for nominating him for the award. Currently employed as an excavator driver – he drives the big yellow machines used in constructi­on to dig out dirt, he is struggling to support his family. His father does masonry work while his mother works in Kuwait, as a domestic.

Saving a Chinese national stuck in a pit for seven days

The Police and the Army sent out search patrols on May 12 last year in search of a missing Chinese national who had been working on the Matara to Hambantota stretch of the Southern Expressway. Fliers with his picture were distribute­d among the villagers of Aparekka, Matara.

On the 19th, a Saturday evening, 14-yearold Ravindu Lakmal and Pabasara Jayaratne walking in the Dandeniya

Forest Reserve in Aparekka, Matara to collect a beehive heard sounds of moaning deep inside the forest and went in search. They found the man dressed in shorts lying in a seven foot pit.

“He was mumbling things that we couldn’t understand. He looked as if he had lost his mind,” says Ravindu. “Our immediate thought was to take him out of the pit and save his life,” adds Pabasara.

Going to a house about half a kilometre away, they returned with a rope which they tied to a nearby tree. Navindu climbed down and tried to bring him up but he was too heavy to carry. Back they went to the same house, this time to call the Police. The Thihagoda police rescued the man who was taken to Matara Hospital. The boys later learned that when they found the man, he had already been in that pit for seven days.

Ravindu and Pabasara, Grade 9 students at Yatiyana Maha Vidyalaya,

Matara were awarded Silver Medals of Civilian Bravery.

“We live in a society where people video accidents instead of helping. But these children set an example to society by saving a person’s life,” says M.S.Indika, Principal of Yatiyana Maha Vidyalaya. K.G.Victor, teacher-in-charge of counsellin­g nominated Ravindu and Pabasara for the award.

At the 25th award ceremony of Foundation for Civilian Bravery held in late July at the BMICH, 13 awardees were recognized

The Community Harmony awards of Civilian Bravery were given to Sujeevani Chandima of Mallakele, Thunmodara, Naththandi­ya for taking in 14 Muslim children and adults into her home when mob violence broke out in Thummodara following the Easter Sunday bombings.

Entries can now be sent in for the 2020 awards.

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 ??  ?? Hashindu: No thought of his own safety. Pix by Sameera Weerasekar­a and Ishanka Sunimal
Hashindu: No thought of his own safety. Pix by Sameera Weerasekar­a and Ishanka Sunimal
 ??  ?? Ravindu and Pabasara: Quick action
Ravindu and Pabasara: Quick action

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