http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=Parama_Weera_What_it_takes_and_what_it_means_20120615_02
'Parama Weera': What it takes, and what it means
The eyes stared
expressionlessly back at me from the fifteen small pictures, some clear, and
some blurred; reflections that only hinted at the men behind those eyes. But
sharp or soft, they all looked so innocuous, so devoid of any indication of what
they had once seen. So normal.
To look into those fifteen pairs of eyes, to read their names on
the Wall that held thousands of similar names, was to gain no hint of the
impossible acts of bravery that their owners had committed. Acts that would now
see them join the eight who had gone before.
Twenty-three names for twenty-three men. Twenty-three individual
acts of supreme courage, selected out of twenty-eight years of war. The faces
were tucked away in the second page of the Sunday Times, and I stared back at
them for awhile before reading the short paragraph beneath each. The words were
trite, cliched, dry; unable to capture the struggle of courage over fear that
must have dominated each man's last moments; the pain, the heat. And of course,
that ultimate singularity, as they stepped forward and died, alone.
That solitude was also what singled them out, along with their
courage, for none of them had done what they did as part of a whole, or at the
order of someone else. They had each decided alone to do what they did, each for
hisown reasons.
At this year's commemoration of the defeat of the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the government decided to award the 'Parama Weera
Vibushanaya(PWV)', Sri Lanka's highest award for bravery (equivalent to the
British Victoria Cross and the American Medal of Honour) to fifteen members of
the Sri Lankan Armed Forces for courage displayed in combat and, almost without
exception, conducted in the last two years of the war.
Fifteen may not seem like a huge number, but to give you an idea
of its significance, consider that since the PWV was established in 1981, it had
been awarded only eight times in the twenty-one years that preceded the
Cease-Fire-Agreement between the GoSL and the Tigers. Therefore, for it to be
awarded over a dozen times in two years is an indication of the intensity of the
fighting after the CFA collapsed, and the sacrifices needed to destroy the
Tigers; particularly in the last year of combat.
The Presidential Proclamation of 1981 that brought the PWV into
effect states that the medal is to be awarded for ... individual acts of
gallantry and conspicuous bravery of the most exceptional order in the face of
the enemy, performed voluntarily whilst on active service and with no regard to
the risks to his own life and security with the objective of safeguarding
thereby, the lives of his comrades or facilitating the operational aim of his
force.
The twenty-three recipients of the PWV are all men and, with few
exceptions, young. These are not generals or admirals. They didn't command
thousands of subordinates, or carry out great acts of strategy that would be
recorded in military textbooks.
Usually, they were in charge of less than a dozen men.
Sometimes, not even that; being the youngest and most junior soldiers in their
units. Only eleven of them, less than half their number, were officers.
Twenty of them were soldiers. Two were sailors and one an
airman. Twenty-one were Sinhalese, one a Moor, and one a Tamil. And all of them
are dead. In the eighteen years since the PWV was first awarded in 1991, not a
single one of its recipients has ever lived to feel that medal's weight on his
chest or test the military code that requires even the Chief of the Defense
Staff to salute, without regard to rank, the wearer of that 32-mm wide crimson
ribbon. Some died leading attacks that would drive the enemy back to ultimate
defeat; but many died in desperate rearguard actions to ensure that their
comrades and friends retreated to safety; and at least one to save the life of a
politician. As many of them died to save someone as those who died whilst
killing the enemy.
Although the PWV was instituted in 1981, it wasn't awarded for a
full decade. Then in June 1991, a dramatic battle at the gates to the Jaffna
Peninsula captured the imagination of the country's population. Elephant Pass.
Arguably, no other battle in the Eelam Wars would ever attain the legendary
status of that engagement, for it contained all the elements necessary to
elevate a mere battle into a legend worthy not just of the history books but the
story books as well - a memorable name, a brave and outnumbered group of
warriors surrounded by a cruel enemy, ultimate victory against all odds and,
finally, and perhaps most importantly, a tragic hero.
(To be continued...)
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