The essence of freedom

The most important freedom of all is the freedom to defend freedom.

COMMENT

When the Japanese invaded Malaya, I was at a barber shop getting my moustache trimmed. All of a sudden we heard this loud explosion. Boom! Everything in the barber shop fell off the shelf. The barber himself was so shocked that he lost control of his hand and accidentally shaved one side of my moustache. We looked at the street and saw people running for their lives. We did not know what was going on, but we decided to run as well. My barber ran with his bag of scissors while I ran with half a moustache on my face.

That was the story I grew up listening to. My grandpa always had wonderful tales to tell every time he visited. We used to spend hours sitting at the playground, coffee shops, street pavements and in trishaws while he told stories I could never find in any book today.

Grandpa told me how grandma got sick of eating tapioca for weeks when they were hiding from the Japanese. He told me how he was forced to become a translator for them; I still have no idea how grandpa learned the Japanese language in the first place. And he told me about sneaking under the table every time the Japanese forced him to drink liquor. Apparently it was impolite to decline invitations to drink.

My grandpa was an ordinary chap. In the mornings he would make a living with his old typewriter and his tiny table and chair strategically placed, sometimes outside the courthouse and sometimes outside the oath commission. In the afternoons he accepted invitations to recite prayers and verses from the Holy Book around the neighbourhood for minimal donations.

Money was always tight. But he was lucky he had grandma. She was an entrepreneur. Every morning there would be long queues from the street up to her kitchen where she sold tosai, idli, paratha and apam for breakfast. With whatever they made, grandpa and grandma raised seven kids.

My grandpa is no longer with me today. But his memories live in me through his stories. He did not carry any weapon. He didnt kill anyone, but he fought for the independence of our nation in his own way. He survived through the Japanese invasion and British rule, he lived to witness his motherland gain independence, and he gave the gift of freedom and peace to his children and grandchildren.

I still remember his pieces of advice.

Always trust in yourself. Always be strong. Always have faith. Always stand up for what you believe in. Always speak up when you disagree. Never let anyone step on you. Always be courageous. Always be happy. Always smile. Always remember that I love you.

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The essence of freedom

Wounded warriors getting 2nd home?

Freedom Station resident Jorge Salazar takes a moment while working around his house on Wednesday at the Freedom Station housing for vets in San Diego, California.

Jorge Salazar isnt exactly sure where he would have gone.

It was January 2014. He was finally being discharged from the Marine Corps after a 2012 bomb blast in Afghanistan took both of his legs.

He had been living at the Navy hospital in Balboa Park. But those beds are for people still in uniform.

Salazar put up a calm exterior, but, I was freaking out, the former infantryman says.

Thats exactly why Freedom Station, a grassroots transitional housing complex in San Diegos Golden Hill, was created in 2011.

The now nearly 4-year-old program has housed 30 injured post-Sept. 11 veterans as they make the transition from sergeant to civilian. And organizers are eyeing a second property to expand their services.

Back in 2004, Sandy Lehmkuhler saw the need while volunteering at the Navy hospital. Thats where the Pentagon sends some of the most gravely injured troops from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, including many amputees.

These folks, mostly Marines, were waiting months for their medical discharges to be finalized. Sitting in hospital rooms wasnt helping their morale, or their ability to imagine a life ahead.

Freedom Station president Sandy Lehmkuhler (right) talks with Janet Miknaitis (left)(a mother of a resident) and Ed Hanson (a board member) on Wednesday at the Freedom Station housing for vets in San Diego, California. Eduardo Contreras

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Wounded warriors getting 2nd home?

West Xtra: Freedom girls basketball program builds off past success

Three years ago when coach John Kaercher and his staff took over the Freedom Area girls basketball team, they had 11 players in the program.

Nine of those players were underclassmen and playing both junior varsity and varsity games.

"It was a struggle," Kaercher said of the 2012-13 season. "We had nine girls who were playing two full games but that made our program stronger and it reflected this year."

That first season the Bulldogs went 11-11, but missed the WPIAL playoffs.

Last year the roster grew to 13 and the team finished 5-7 in Section 6-AA to qualify for the playoffs.

This year the roster expanded to 18 players and a playoff berth has already been clinched.

Through 20 games Freedom is 10-10 overall and 6-5 in Section 5-AA with one remaining section contest against South Side Beaver (4-15, 3-7) and a regular-season non-section finale against Quaker Valley on Friday.

Last season Freedom lost five of its last six regular-season games and needed help in the form of an Avonworth loss to Beaver Area to clinch a playoff spot.

"Last year we backed into the playoffs," Kaercher said. "It came down to the last game."

The Bulldogs were dispatched in the first round of the playoffs by Brentwood, 49-45.

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West Xtra: Freedom girls basketball program builds off past success

Ice hockey: Freedom, Champe win together; Atholton, Marriotts Ridge will meet again

By Dillon Mullan and Daniel Gallen February 4 at 3:29 PM

Freedom-South Ridings colors are black and gold, like the Pittsburgh Penguins. Situated about six miles away, Champe dons a navy and silver color scheme thats a shade different from that of the Los Angeles Kings.

On the rinks of Northern Virginia this winter, these schools came together in separate jerseys but as a single team. The Northern Virginia Scholastic Hockey League requires 15 players for a school to form a stand-alone squad, but schools can forfeit their playoff eligibility and participate in league play as a joint venture. This regular season, 12 players from Freedom and six from Champe remained in their schools respective colors yet combined to form a lethal scoring unit that scored a league-best 85 goals.

I think a lot of teams underestimated us because they think we werent good enough to do well on our own. Typically, mixed teams dont win many games, but we were able to click with the players from Champe, and we all worked well, said Brad Cademartori, a senior from Freedom who led the team in points with 30 goals and 14 assists. It will be weird to play against them in lacrosse.

Freedom/Champe (8-2) would have easily secured a playoff spot if qualification was based on results and not team composition, but the Eagles and Knights were left without a trophy to play for. Still, the team took advantage of its situation to thrive in a relaxed atmosphere as five players finished the season with at least 16 points.

We knew going into it that we werent going to make the playoffs. It was a great exercise in team cohesiveness, said Mike Ligas, a coach from Champe who is joined behind the bench by Tyler Anderson, an English teacher from Freedom. It was never about winning a championship.

On this past Fridays senior night, Cademartori had five goals and three assists in a 17-7 mercy-rule win over a team from Herndon and West Springfield. The emphatic victory marked the end of a successful season.

Champe helped us out and was a big reason for our success, Cademartori said. But I think it would have been fun being able to play for a playoff spot. We came together as one team and didnt worry about the fact that we went to different schools.

Atholton, Marriotts Ridge set for rematch

After Atholton beat Marriotts Ridge in the two squads regular season finale last week, the victorious Raiders acknowledged there was a good chance they would see the Mustangs again. And Thursday night in Columbia, they will.

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Ice hockey: Freedom, Champe win together; Atholton, Marriotts Ridge will meet again