Tuesday, 14 August 2012

FLC: Form point of view of a volunteer (Sheyami Jayawardena)

I had the priviledge of attending the second annual Future Leaders Conference (FLC) for Hope and Reconciliation in Sri Lanka. Organized by Sri Lanka Unites (SLU), this 5 day conference was attended by over 250 of Sri Lanka’s top student leaders (age 15-18) from across the country, 30 of their teachers, 50 trained youth volunteers, and the SLU team. Sri Lanka Unites is the first post-war effort to promote youth reconciliation within the country. It is run solely by youth volunteers of all Sri Lankan ethnicities and is backed by a supportive board of trustees. The committee is passionate about the cause and work tirelessly. The process of reconciliation and change is occurring at the grassroots levels and spreading throughout Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka Unites is at the heart of this change, giving many youth a reason to believe in a better future.


Sri Lanka Unites does an amazing job of instilling core leadership values, exposing the students to inspirational speakers, and promoting reconciliation for youth. The conference is trilingual and incorporates a mix of speeches, interactive sessions, small group discussions, sports events, team building, art time, and music performances. There is no pretence. Honesty and describing personal hardships among students are encouraged. Bringing students together from all regions and opening their lives to other students of different economical and ethnic backgrounds have provided them with a platform for reconciliation. Can we ever accept another race if all we know is something we heard from our parents or neighbours? Can we all understand and respect another culture if we never interacted with them at a personal level? The Sri Lanka Unites 5 day schedule provides these students with the appropriate dose of activities that leave them feeling inspired, courageous to move forward, empowered to help others, and confident in the belief that they have the power to change their preconceived notions about another ethnicity.



The conference is not just a gathering of students for 5 days. It is a life changing event. You almost have to be the 17 year old boy from Jaffna who has classmates from IDP camps, and after having attended this conference has plans to serve them. You could be the girl from Colombo who has travelled to help her brothers and sisters in other districts after being inspired by the first conference. You could be the Tamil boy who admits he had grown up to hate Sinhalese and Muslims, and explains how the conference has helped him understand and respect other cultures. You could be the student from Polonnaruwa who was inspired by a speech from the first Sri Lankan blind rower, and now believes he can overcome the challenges in his life. You could be the Sinhalese Buddhist boy from Kegalle who decided to fast with his Muslim friends as the conference ran through the holy season of Ramadan. Through SLUs integration of meaningful activities, and moreover through their unabiding belief that they CAN make change, I can confidently say that not one of those students left the conference without their lives having been changed in some sort of meaningful way. The conference provided a haven for dialogue and reconciliation, an opportunity to bridge the gaps and create friendships that no other organization, to this day, has been able to provide the youth of our country.

More importantly, the work carried out by this organization and its network of future leaders never ends. The SLU network of young leaders spans 23 districts and over 60 schools. Upon returning to their respective districts, the students create SLU Clubs at their schools and spread the word to surrounding areas. Each school is given a guidebook, complete with activities to foster dialogue for reconciliation, and ideas on how to reach out to students in other areas. Some of the amazing work that these students accomplished after the first FLC include but are not limited to: fundraising for flood relief in Gampaha, providing 100 wheelchairs to Mannar hospital, and providing sports equipment to schools in districts that lacked monetary funds.



What Sri Lanka needs is a new generation of empowered, motivated individuals to initiate charitable acts for others and pave the way for future reconciliation. To put it in perspective, SLU has indirectly started, at minimum, 30 new charities in the last year and has positively enhanced thousands of lives because atleast 30 schools have helped worthy causes after being inspired by the FLC. This is a commendable method of creating change - by cultivating leadership, empowering students to discern where they think help is needed, and providing them with the support needed to reach out to others.

Sri Lanka Unites has a clearly outlined vision and mission statement, booklets on conferences, and post-conference media material. All of this helps to give us an idea of what these students achieve and continue to achieve. However, I realized how much more it can mean to anyone who is there in person. The enthusiasm and the desire to create change is contagious. If you happen to be in the country at the time of the conference please do visit and see for yourself. It is a feeling that words cannot effectively capture.

Would you like to know more about this organization? Would you like to support the youth of Sri Lanka in this mission for hope and reconciliation? Please visit www.srilankaunites.org or email uk@srilankaunites.org  (based in Sri Lanka) or sheyamij@hotmail.com (based in London).

                                                                                                                        Sheyami Jayawardena

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