SLU is a youth-centred organisation that, over the last four years, has successfully managed and hosted many conferences focusing on reconciliation. The message behind the group revolves around building trust among young people and their peers, regardless of ethnicity and religion.
Such a powerful message attempts to mobilise and empower young people and SLU see it's Future Leaders Conferences (FLC) as vital. They bring together young people from different parts of the island who would never have met otherwise, to share one platform and to act as one voice.
The FLC this year was held in Jaffna, and is poignant because such a feat would have been unthinkable just 5 years ago when the war was ongoing. For many attendees this conference was their first exposure to Northern Sri Lanka. This is especially important because research shows that over 70% of Sri Lankan young people do not have a friend outside their ethnic or religious group.
Throughout the 5-day conference students grappled with various issues and challenges to reconciliation and change in Sri Lanka. The passion, intellect and commitment depicted by the students for conflict transformation was an assurance that violent conflict will be consigned to the past if the country continues to nourish its young people.
Over 400 student leaders, 80 volunteers, 60 teachers, 40 SLU team members from every district, ethnicity, religion, caste and creed came together to prove that a new generation dares to unite. Sri Lankans from across the nation and around the world contributed expertise and donations and hoped to be a part of the solution and contribute towards leading Sri Lanka out of decades of conflict.
They gathered in the glorious city of Jaffna, a former war zone, but now to those at FLC, an oasis that rekindled their passion for lasting peace, justice, equality and reconciliation. The hope is that the young people will appreciate diversity and realize the richness and value that can be brought from a multi-cultural harmonious nation that is united under one identity but one that respects, understands and seeks to cultivate others.
A gathering of student leaders from across the nation representing every nook and cranny of the island, not to mention 7 cities with the largest population of Sri Lankans outside Sri Lanka was a historic event. Three decades of war ensured that this was not possible to achieve, even post independence, an event intentionally geared towards celebrating an inclusive Sri Lankan identity in northern Sri Lanka organized by a non-partisan group not affiliated with the government may have never occurred. FLC was history in the making and led by a group of young professionals and brought to fruition by a team of which the average age was less than 24.
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