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Showing posts from 2020

Reflections one year after the Richmond House Fire

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  It has been one year since our block of flats in Worcester Park were burnt down in a fire . I thought of writing to make some notes that might be useful to people who buy properties and to those professionals whose signature can decide people’s lives.      (video credit to Richmond House residents) The structure of the four-storey building was mostly made of timber. However, people wanted answers as to why the fire spread from one end of the building to the other end within just about 20 minutes. Residents attended more than 20 meetings with the Metropolitan Thames Valley Housing Association (MTVHA) that sold us the property and St James Group Ltd of Berkeley Group Holdings that constructed the building. Still there is no clear responsibility taking, though late MD of Berkeley Group Holdings, Mr. Tony Pidgley apologised to the group of residents in a meeting held in November 2019. In his words, “I worked very hard to build this company to what it is today. But we let you

Black Lives Matter

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I am a Roboticist at Imperial College London with Sri Lankan origin. I am writing this on 9 th June 2020 with so much sadness about the death of George Floyd under police custody in broad daylight symbolising a general pattern of brutality against Black People. I am not generally categorised to be Black, but being South Asian, I may have few things to share with fellow Black academics. I must confess that I learnt about Black history in the past two weeks than I did in my whole life despite having lived in Baltimore when I was at Johns Hopkins University. Baltimore was a vivid example of how African-American communities are victimized from multiple fronts from within and outside their communities. If one walks just 200 meters from where the School of Medicine of Johns Hopkins is located, one could imagine what it would mean to grow up as a child in those neighborhoods. Schools in those areas are traditionally under-funded and going to school is not just waking up,

In memory of Ray Wijewardana

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Image courtesy of Moving Images, Moving People! One day in year 2005, Ray visited the University of Moratuwa as the chancellor. I think it was an official meeting to organize an innovations exhibition showcasing the work done by the students. After the meeting, Ray wanted to visit my laboratory located in the Sumanadasa building . I was a bit scared to show it to Ray, because it was full of junk material bought to make field robots. The research lab had no windows. So it was a bit damp and smelly too. He just smiled when I warned him of such possible disappointments. No sooner he entered; he grabbed a chair, sat, and kept looking at the work in progress of a legged robot like a child being mesmerised by a favourite toy. “Why legs? Why not wheels Thrish?” he asked. I knew that he was trying to test me. I said “simply because they have to move on soft terrains in a typical abandoned minefield”. “So you thought about how legs interact with soft soil to its advanta

තිරයෙන් ඔබ්බට​ (beyond the veil)

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මානවයා ගෝත්‍රික සතෙකි. ශිශ්ටාචාර බිහි වන්නටත් කලින් මානවයා ගෝත්‍ර කන්ඩායම් වශයෙන් ජීවත් වූ බවට ශාක්‍ෂි තිබේ. තවමත් කන්ඩායම් හැගීම මිනිසුන්ට දෙන්නට ඉතා ලෙහෙසි දෙයකි. විටෙක ආගම තේමා කරගනත්, තවත් විටක හමේ වර්ණය මුල් කරගෙනත් මිනිසා යුධ වැදී තිබේ. එපමනක් නොව තම පාසල, පාසලේ පන්තිය​, හෝ පාසලේ නිවාසය මුල් කරගෙන අනුන්ට වද හින්සා කරන පාසල් සිසුන් අප දැක ඇත​. අරුමය වනුයේ තම ජීවිත කාලය තුල සාමාන්‍ය මිනිසෙක් තම ගෝත්‍ර හැගීම් ප්‍රකාශ කිරීමට නානා ප්‍රකාර ලේබල තම පිටේ අලවාගැනීමය්. එසේ අලවාගෙන තමාත් තැවෙන අතර අනුනද දුකට පත් කරය්. උතුරෙ මිනිස්සු, දකුනෙ මිනිස්සු, උඩරට​ මිනිස්සු, පහත රට මිනිස්සු, කලු මිනිස්සු, සුදු මිනිස්සු, උගත් මිනිස්සු, නූගත් මිනිස්සු, පොහොසත් මිනිස්සු, දුප්පත් මිනිස්සු, ගැහැනු, පිරිමි, කොකේශියන් මිනිස්සු, නීග්‍රෝ මිනිස්සු, මොංගෝලියන් මිනිස්සු, සිංහල මිනිස්සු, සිංහල බෞද්ධ මිනිස්සු, මුස්ලිම් මිනිස්සු, ...මෙහි කෙලවරක් නැත​. බුදු දහමට අනුව​, මෙය සක්කායධිට්ටියේ කොටසකි. මිනිසා සංසාරයට බැදී ඇති බඳන දහයෙන් ප්‍රතමය හා මහත් ප්‍රාතමික බඳනය වනුයේ මේ සක්කායධිට්ටිය නොහොත් සමාජය විසින් නිර්මානය

One year after Easter Sunday attacks in Sri Lanka

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Last year, we were on Easter holidays in a peaceful Scotish countryside cottage when we heard the horrible news of a series of bomb blasts in Colombo mainly targeting churches and hotels. Bewildered, we were wondering who could scoop down to the level of killing innocent devotees of any religion on a sacred day. First, we looked around to see if our Christian friends were safe and were relieved that all of them were in different places at that time. Then we came to know that it was a series of suicide attacks by an extremist group linked to Daesh . In Sri Lanka, about 70% of the population are Buddhists with about 12% Hindus, 10% Muslims, and 6% Roman Catholics. But, if you visit Sri Lanka during Christmas time, you would not think that only 6% are Roman Catholics. The entire country takes a festive mood. Though there have been isolated conflicts and agitations between various extremist religious groups, there has never been a threat of this nature against any religion in peace tim

Post COVID-19 Immunity

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COVID-19 taught us the value of proactive action against tiny things that can make widespread destruction across communities with different religious believes, tribal identities, and socio-political systems. This dawns upon us a new wisdom that will make us immune to a lot of other seemingly tiny ideas that can cause large scale destruction when there is large scale adoption. Therefore, next time we hear any of the following, pause and think: 1. My tribe is the most civilized, those in the other tribe are savages: COVID-19 exposed the inner generocity of all communities in different parts of the world ranging from cooking food for the vulnerable to volunteering in the respective health services. It also exposed how we behaved in supermarkets irrespective of tribe. It showed how much effort media had to take to teach us how to wash hands, and how to think about others even if we are not in a high risk group. Basically, none is more civilized than others, though there