MacInsiders Logo

Similar Threads
Article Article Starter Category Comments Last Post
EXCHANGE: The Experience MacAbroad MacInsiders Announcements 0 11-16-2010 03:34 PM
Orgo Experience sycoman Academics 10 01-30-2010 01:28 AM
CA experience sycoman Residence & Housing 12 06-02-2009 09:16 PM
Looking for information on people's experience at McMaster isis2381ice General Discussion 10 09-25-2007 02:29 AM

And then the rains come: McMaster Alum's Experience in Sri Lanka

 
From the Hamilton Spectator

A McMaster grad in devastated Sri Lanka sees how little some people have and why we should care

Eight months and 12 days ago I was still in Canada at Hamilton Place, to be specific. I received my undergraduate degree from McMaster University that day, along with hundreds of other excited and terrified young students. I left Canada a few months later to start a job with a relief and development organization in Sri Lanka.

At the time I knew very little about Sri Lanka, and would have required a few moments to find it on a map. (It almost touches the southern tip of India). I knew that the Tamil Tigers were fighting for a separate state, and that as a result of that civil war, hundreds of thousands of Tamils the ethnic minority in Sri Lanka now live abroad, many of them in Toronto.

Rick Mercer spoke at my graduation, and asked his audience to be strong Canadian citizens. He suggested voting and travelling throughout Canada as ways of exercising that citizenship. Living and working abroad means the former is difficult and the latter impossible. Nonetheless I often reflect on Mercers words, and feel that there might still be something deeply Canadian about my present experience.

After all, isnt the humanitarian work Im doing part of that proud Canadian self-image, which sees peacekeeping and diplomacy as a responsible, considerate alternative to the callous real-politiking of our American friends? As our narrative of multilateralism goes, we care about the suffering of strangers, which is reflected in foreign policy and domestic politics.

We are a deluded nation, more today than yesterday, and more tomorrow still. Afghanistan is a violent and sustained contradiction to our wholesome Canadian self-image. Do any of us actually know how many Canadian soldiers are currently involved in peacekeeping missions? (According to the United Nations, there are 126.)

While Canada-as-peacemaker obviously requires revision, I write this with the assumption that Canadians care, and that Canadians assume their government cares as well. To care, we should also try to understand our suffering neighbours situations.

One such neighbour is Rajan Putulingam, whose story is painfully similar to many others in the north and east of Sri Lanka. He is 41 years old, his wife 39, and they live with their five children in the Eastern District of Batticaloa. Rajan works as a daily labourer on wealthier farmers rice paddy lands, and Delaney, his wife, runs a small shop. This year they used their savings from Delaneys jewellery to purchase seed and plant one and a half acres of rice paddy. Delaneys shop generates an income when her neighbours have enough work and extra rupees to spend.

Heavy rains started two days after Christmas, which is not unusual in this part of the world. As days of constant rain stretched into weeks, the family was displaced to a shared community building. More than 300,000 people, the Putulingams included, sought refuge in common shelters. As hundreds of families squeezed into buildings built for dozens, toilets filled up and food simply ran out. Rajan and his family stayed for five days in the office of the local farmers society.

For others, the situation was worse. According to John Thevatas, a senior NGO worker in the North, in certain places there was no dry land, and many did not even have a tarpaulin to cover their head. The living conditions are not acceptable, but what to do? There is water everywhere.

This was the Putulingams third displacement. War had chased them from their home twice before. Delaneys mud-walled shop is basically destroyed, as is the familys mud-walled home. Glass bottles of soda, muddied by the high water, are all that remain in her shop. Their contents are a luxury none can presently afford.

High water destroyed over 80 per cent of the paddy fields in the East. In Sri Lanka, rice is a staple food in more than one sense: for hundreds of thousands no harvest also means no labour in the paddy fields and therefore no income. Thevatas describes the two harvest seasons (October to January and April to August) as lone opportunities for a good income for 90 per cent of these flood-affected peoples. According to the United Nations, there were more than a million people affected.

The Putulingams have few prospects. They were not a part of that lucky group whose crop survived. The childrens school supplies are gone, drowned along with hundreds of thousands of chickens, goats and cows. In Rajans words, every time we start to earn something again it is destroyed by war or displacement.

He said that days before a second equally massive flood arrived. Most families lost all that remained of their homes and livelihoods.

Bob Dylan should have followed when you got nothin, you got nothin to lose with, when you have next to nothing, you have everything to lose. The Putulingams and countless families like them will require support long after the flood waters finally recede, first to survive, and then to rebuild.

So what do the Putulingams, or any desperate family in poor country X, have to do with Canadian citizenship? Maybe nothing, but maybe by listening to these stories we start to appreciate a little bit of what it means to be displaced, to be one of one million flood-affected peoples. As a result, we can exercise that supposedly Canadian capacity to care, and in a more substantial and responsible way. Statistics take on a much deeper meaning when faces are paired with figures.

Finally, with that little bit of knowledge we can see this country in at least a few more shades of grey. A boat full of Tamils seeking asylum is not simply a terrorist threat to national security (no matter what Vic Toews tells us) and the Tamil Tigers are not the one true voice of the Tamil people.

Those shades of grey also reveal the dignity and extreme perseverance of many Sri Lankans, who dont choose to be Sri Lankan any more than I choose to be Canadian.

Jesse Bauman is McMaster University graduate now working as a management trainee at ZOA Refugee Care ( www.zoa.nl). E-mail him for more information at [email protected] . You can best support ZOA through its Canadian partner, the Canadian Foodgrains Bank ( www.foodgrainsbank.ca ).

Elliott779, frhnh, nila* all say thanks to lorend for this post.

sinthusized likes this.
Published by
lorend's Avatar
MacInsiders VP
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 7,615

Article Tools

Deleted Post
Old 03-05-2011 at 10:36 AM   #2
RyanC
Elite Member
RyanC's Avatar
Real name: R
Year: Other
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 5,014

Thanked: 408 Times
Liked: 2,314 Times
Definately gives me a little perspective.. I had pretty negative feelings regarding the Tamils... kinda easy to dismiss these peoples when you live in your safe and secure bubble...
  Deleted Post Deleted Post
Old 03-05-2011 at 10:59 AM   #3
nila*
Senior Member
nila*'s Avatar
Real name: Nila
Program: Electrical & Biomedical Engineering
Year: Masters
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 251

Thanked: 28 Times
Liked: 52 Times
Quote:
Originally Posted by RyanC View Post
Definately gives me a little perspective.. I had pretty negative feelings regarding the Tamils... kinda easy to dismiss these peoples when you live in your safe and secure bubble...
I am assuming it is because of the protests two years ago?
__________________
Electrical and Biomedical Engineering
Class of 2012

Last edited by nila* : 03-05-2011 at 08:48 PM.
  Deleted Post Deleted Post
Old 03-05-2011 at 06:26 PM   #4
Mazer
Senior Member
Mazer's Avatar
Real name: Brian
Program: Computer Science
Year: Fifth
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 116

Thanked: 8 Times
Liked: 60 Times
and then
__________________
AZIZ, LIGHT!
  Deleted Post Deleted Post



Article Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new articles
You may not post comments
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On



McMaster University News and Information, Student-run Community, with topics ranging from Student Life, Advice, News, Events, and General Help.
Notice: The views and opinions expressed in this page are strictly those of the student(s) who authored the content. The contents of this page have not been reviewed or approved by McMaster University or the MSU (McMaster Students Union). Being a student-run community, all articles and discussion posts on MacInsiders are unofficial and it is therefore always recommended that you visit the official McMaster website for the most accurate up-to-date information.

Copyright MacInsiders.com All Rights Reserved. No content can be re-used or re-published without permission. MacInsiders is a service of Fullerton Media Inc. | Created by Chad
Originally Powered by vBulletin, Copyright 2019 MH Sub I, LLC dba vBulletin. All rights reserved. | Privacy | Terms