Amma Gives Aid to Sri Lanka
February 18, 2005
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Amma & The President
Amma
met with President Chandrika Kumaratunge on 18 February at the President's
residence in Colombo. Amma told the president that She would like
to build 300 homes for Tamil and Sinhalese tsunami victims in Sri
Lanka and expressed her willingness to provide more relief aid,
such as free pensions and the adopting of orphans.
Amma also expressed the need for the men and women of Sri Lanka
to awaken their universal motherhood—qualities such as love,
compassion and patience.
During the discussion, President Chandrika Kumaratunge expressed
to Amma that there has been so much strife and trouble in her country.
Some progress was being made with the peace negotiations, but now
with the coming of the tsunami, there once again is so much trouble
and pain. Amma told the president that she indeed felt the pain
of the people. Amma told her that as in every situation a favourable
outcome depended on two factors: human effort and God's grace.
Amma & The Prime Minister
On
17th Amma travelled by helicopter with Sri Lankan Prime Minister
Mahinda Rajapakse to a Sinhalese tsunami relief camp in Hambantota,
where She participated in the camp's foundation-stone-laying ceremony.
Amma then flew back to Colombo, where She and the PM are to meet
with President Chandrika Kumaratunga later this evening.
Earlier, Amma had spent more than one hour with the PM discussing
the Ashram's tsunami-relief efforts, including its plan for building
tsunami-proof homes. Amma told the PM that She is willing to establish
an orphanage for Sri Lankan children and a free-pension scheme in
the country. If the circumstances permit, Amma said, She would do
more. Upon the conclusion of their discussion, the PM expressed
the Sri Lankan government's gratitude for the help and compassion
Amma is showering upon the country.
Members
of LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) & Tamil Special Task
Force, that have have brutal wars against each other since 1983,
came for Amma's Darshan in Ampara On 17th. Amma visited a Tamil
relief camp in the district of Ampara, where she distributed 15,000
free saris and dhotis. At the camp, Amma gave darshan to 5,000 people,
including 15 LTTE officials and 20 members of a Tamil Special Task
Force. Maheswari Velayudham, the political secretary to Minister
Douglas Devananda, was also in attendance. The secretary was overwhelmed
at seeing the two groups peacefully together. "Amma is the
unifying force," she said later. "She is the catalyst.
Only Amma can bring all these people together."
At
a press conference earlier that morning, one of the reporters had
asked Amma whether she could predict when Sri Lanka would enjoy
peace in full spirit. To this Amma responded, "We can awaken
a person who is sleeping, but cannot awaken a person who is pretending
to be sleeping. We should keep trying for peace. Feeling sympathy
alone is not enough. We should work hard for it,'' Amma said, adding
that peace is possible only when spirituality is practiced.
-- Kannadi
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