The Panadura Vaadaya: Buddhism Vs Christianity on Debating Platform

Dash De Soysa

The controversy at Panadura or the Panadura Vadaya, which had its beginnings in 1873, may be considered a cornerstone of the modern society in which we live today. It is not a symbol of fanaticism but a landmark in the social transition which this island has undergone. 

The western engagement with Sri Lanka moved from curiosity and trading in the sixteenth century to dominance and exploitation in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries before autonomy and independence in the twentieth century. Portuguese, Dutch and British colonialists brought various forms of Christianity of which Roman Catholicism has proved the most enduring. Inadvertently they revived Buddhism and helped create the religious foundation for the modern state of Sri Lanka.

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USA’s Oligarchy & Its Worldwide Octopii-Reach

Jonathan Manz, an article sent to me by Chulanand Goonasekera, one bearing this title: “Is the World Moving Towards a ‘One-World’ Dictatorship of the Oligarchs?”

Is Trump’s conduct demented, as portrayed? Or, are the Republicans, and the Democrats playing out a charade to hoodwink the world and the American people by working towards a ‘One-World’ Dictatorship’ of the Oligarchs as was planned at Bretton Woods in 1944?

The USA pays plenty of lip-service to Democracy. Is there democracy in the USA?

Today, the Oligarchs control the USA totally; the American peoples are helpless, tied down with a 4.5 trillion Dollar debt, owed to the oligarchs.

 

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Ceylon-England-Portugal …. With Ajit on a Rollicking Ramble

Ajit Varuna Rodrigo-Candappa, … with highlights imposed by the Thuppahi who is cheered by AJIT’s free-wheeling baila-script

Hi Michael,  ………..Your site evokes warm hearts, kind reflections – it dispels the aralu-bulu-nelli of weasel political concoctions about race. The sheer puhu-manya behind this fellow’s odorous heaving-up is perhaps characteristic of what is afflicting Lanka – this hooniyama society seeks to exorcise – these obstacles to Development. Such corrosive virulence must surely come from a mortal fear lurking in that paathala-lokaya – he/she subsists in. [Ajit is referring here to an obnoxious personal jibe from one “Goonewardena” directed at me within this TPS site —Michael Roberts]

Reminded me of: Quote: ” The “obnoxiousness” of the Asuchi’s served a specific philosophical purpose: self-mortification. By subjecting themselves to what most people found repulsive, they believed they were exhausting their karma and preparing the soul for liberation (moksha).”

Leave that to readers imaginations! Living in cemeteries, eating excrement. They had a reasoning still – however grating. This fellow has none! We all create impressions – you can at once recognise an aura, a glowing presence, when someone enters a room.. You are that to my mind. He, on the other hand, fears your erudition might dredge up something misbegotten about himself. He is so virulently against truth, just the way todays Trumpian/Israeli verbal gymnastics on TV evoke a repulsiveness in most sane people.

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ICG Evaluation of Sri Lanka’s Political Economy TODAY

ICG HEADLINE = “Sri Lanka’s Bumpy Road to a Political Reset”

Report  356 Asia-Pacific  20+ minutes

Twin elections in 2024 transformed Sri Lanka’s political landscape, bringing to power a president and parliamentarians who pledged sweeping reforms. So far, however, the new government has made little progress toward this end. It has work to do to show it can do politics differently.

Sri Lanka’s President Anura Kumara Dissanayake in front of an election poster.

 

Sri Lanka’s President Anura Kumara Dissanayake speaks during the inauguration of “Nation United – National Drive”, a National Mission against drug abuse, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, October 30, 2025. REUTERS / Thilina Kaluthotage
Report  356 Asia-Pacific  20+ minutes

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Vale: Dan Piachaud, 1937-2026

Dan Piachaud (1937-2026)

Hampshire Cricket is saddened to learn of the passing of former spin bowler Dan Piachaud.

Born Colombo, Sri Lanka 1.3.1937. ‘Dan’ Piachaud was an off-break bowler who played for Oxford University from 1958-1961 winning his ‘blue’ in all four years, and for Hampshire in 12 matches in 1960.

He was educated at St Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia, Colombo where he was cricket captain 1955/6. He came to England to study at Keble College, Oxford and at the University he made his first-class debut against Gloucestershire in May 1958, batting in the middle order but not bowling – in that first year a score of 40 against Derbyshire in the Parks would be his highest in first-class cricket. He did eventually bowl regularly taking 41 wickets at 20.07 including figures of 15-9-14-1 in the Cambridge first innings in the ‘Varsity’ match at Lord’s. In 1959, he took a couple of top order batters as Oxford won and in the hot, dry summer reached 50 wickets for the University. 

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Village Tank Cascades, the Great River Quartet and the Ditwah Cyclone

Lokubanda Tillakaratne

 This past November and December, Ditwah showed us how dark, eerie, and haunting cyclones can be.  Past generations have suffered: per PWD records, in 1834, the Mahaweli rose 60 feet above its usual flood level at Gampola, and the Canberra Times reported in 1911 the great flood of Ceylon on December 30 of that year. It killed 200 people and left over 300,000 homeless. Half a century later, on December 25, 1957, a nameless cyclone brought severe rain to the North Central Province (NCP). The Nachchaduwa reservoir near Anuradhapura city breached, releasing its full volume into Malwatu Oya, a mid-level river flowing through the city, nearly washing away its colonial-era bridge near the Lion Tower.   A cyclone paid a visit to the Eastern Coast of Sri Lanka on November 17-23, 1978.

Half a century later, Ditwah came with swagger.

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In Felicitation of “J.B.Sir” aka JB Disanayaka

Professor Sandagomi Coperahewa …. in  Facebook 

Happy 89th Birthday, Professor J. B. Disanayaka

I first met Professor J. B. Disanayaka (fondly remembered by his students as “J.B. Sir”) during my first year, in his Introduction to Language course at the University of Colombo in 1992. That initial encounter left a lasting impression on me, as his teaching combined clarity, scholarly depth, and a remarkable ability to make complex linguistic ideas accessible to undergraduates. Since then, we have worked together on many occasions in the field of language studies in Sri Lanka for over 33 years. These professional engagements have further strengthened my respect for his intellectual contribution and his enduring role in shaping the study of linguistics and Sinhala language in the country.

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A Succinct Picture of Trump from An American Dissident

James Phelan  in USA **

I am confident that I speak for the majority of Americans.  Ten percent of the rest are still in denial and thirty percent are misled by Trump’s pathological lying.  The facts are that Trump is the biggest narcissistic fool on this planet.  He embarrasses us, our country and everything we stand for.  In addition Trump is so thoughtless and stupid and without any moral benchmark that he poses an imminent threat to the entire global community.  Though we continue to make legal and political progress to reclaim our country as the democratic leader of the free world,  our progress is stymied in large part until the mid-term elections.  Furthermore, America still faces the challenge that Trump will try to block, postpone, obstruct or eliminate the midterm elections entirely.

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Press Release: Pathmanathan’s New Book on Jaffna, 300 BC-500 AD

Colombo — The evening of 11th April 2026, marked the launch of Professor
Sivasubramanium Pathmanathan’s groundbreaking research, Glimpses of an Ancient
Civilization, Society and Culture in Jaffna 300 BC–AD 500. Distinguished academics,
legal luminaries, and members of civil society gathered at the Cinnamon Grand Hotel for an evening of celebration of the seminal new book. The event was graced by President’s Counsel Mr Kanag-Isvaran, who served as the Chief Guest and Dr J.M. Swaminathan, Dr B.A Hussainmiya and Dr Jehan Perera who participated as the distinguished speakers.

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A Bridge-Building Historian: S. Pathmanathan

Jehan Perera, reviewing the new book by Professor  Pathmanathan … entitled Glimpses of an Ancient Civilisation: Society and Culture in Jaffna (300 BC to AD 500)  SSSR Investments Pty Ltd, Australia, 2026 ,,,, 370 pp……

In reflecting on the work of Professor S. Pathmanathan, my mind goes back to the difficult years of war, when fear and mistrust had entered almost every sphere of national life. Those were times when it was easier, and often safer, to remain on one side than to reach across to the other. Yet what I remember most about him from those years is not only the depth of his scholarship, but the steadiness of his convictions and the generosity with which he engaged those who differed from him. At a time when history was often invoked to divide, he remained committed to using it to illuminate and connect. It is with that memory in mind that I read his latest work, Glimpses of an Ancient Civilization.

Pathmanathan- Glimpses of an Ancient Civilzation Book Cover

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