Power of Good People: Surviving the Sri Lankan Civil War

Author(s): Para Paheer

Asian

In May 2009 Sri Lanka's long and dreadful civil war was finally brought to an horrific end. Ruthlessly driven to a small strip of land on the tip of the island's north-east coast, tens of thousands of innocent civilians died, smashed by artillery, killed by snipers, denied medical treatment and starved to death beneath the baking sun. This ferocious battle consolidated and highlighted the terrors of the preceding twenty-six years of war, characterised by vicious murders and desperate acts from both sides, where civilians were bombarded, kidnapped, raped and tortured with impunity. In such a vicious war, was there any room for humanity? Para Paheer's story could be one of tens of thousands, except that he lived to tell the world, of the horrors; but more importantly, to record and pay tribute to those, often courageous, people without whom he would probably not be alive. Para was a child born into a very poor Tamil family when one of the modern world's longest civil conflicts erupted. He was thirty-one when he was rescued from the Indian Ocean while sailing to Australia to seek asylum. I know that I would not have survived without help from many people. Many put themselves in danger and at least one person died for me. It's time for me to remember them, and to thank them ...all the good people who helped me through those terrifying times when life was hard, and survival often only a matter of chance. From my relatives and friends when I was growing up in Sri Lanka to Captain Brzica and the crew of the gas tanker that saved us from drowning in the ocean, I would like to acknowledge and say 'Nanri', the word for 'Thank you' in our Tamil language. So I say 'Nanri' to all the good people who have helped me - and others - to survive. While in Christmas Island Detention Centre, Para became penfriends with Alison Corke, a member of the Apollo Bay branch of Rural Australians for Refugees, in Victoria. On his release from detention in 2011, Para moved in with the Corke family. "From our first letters, exchanged while Para was in detention and trying to improve his English, I knew he was an exceptional young man, with an astonishing tale to tell. I am proud to be helping him share his story and to find and thank those people who helped him survive, often against massive odds ...Time and again, Para and I agreed that it is the little things that matter most - those small, often unremembered acts of kindness that can change someone's world. We all have the power to do something; only we can choose whether to use that power for the good.


Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9780648066323
  • : Wild Dingo Press
  • : Wild Dingo Press
  • : 0.35
  • : September 2017
  • : 210mm X 135mm
  • : Australia
  • : November 2017
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Para Paheer
  • : Paperback
  • : 1117
  • : 296