The Mount Mary Railway Fraternity in Colombo: Forgotten ‘Lore’

Ar Fernando ….  whose prefferred title is “The Ghosts of Mount Mary: A Forgotten Railway Lega,cy”

Colombo’s history is not always found in grand landmarks. Sometimes, it exists quietly within the forgotten neighbourhoods—like Mount Mary in Dematagoda.

Built during the height of the railway era, these “Little English” bungalows were once the heartbeat of a community defined by routine, labour, and a shared culture. The Sri Lanka Railway—originally the Ceylon Government Railways (CGR)—was conceived in the 1850s, with service beginning in 1864. While it was initially built as an industrial artery to transport tea and coffee from the hill country to the port of Colombo, the railway soon became the lifeblood of the nation.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Hanson’s Australia and the Rise of Populism

Vox Populi

TAKE IN THIS ITEM: ….https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-05-23/poll-predicts-one-nation-federal-opposition/106714586

One Nation inherits the right-wing throne …..

Australia faces a fractured, Americanised future…..
The Liberals are dead. One Nation is predicted to become the new opposition, resulting in the total destruction and annihilation of the Liberal Party. This is not surprising, as the Liberals have become a dysfunctional party divorced from reality.However, this shift also serves as a warning. One Nation is a populist party driven by a fear of outsiders, particularly immigrants from India, Sri Lanka, and China. It is also fuelled by ideological self-interest. Should they come to power in Australia—a scenario that is now conceivable—the country could be transformed into a Trump-like, egomaniacal society of division, governed by a radical white manifesto.Both the Liberals and One Nation hold anti-Asian sentiments, with One Nation being explicitly anti-Islam. Perhaps if Pauline Hanson becomes Prime Minister, she will wear her prized burqa to Parliament.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

An Erudite Appreciation of Female Beauty in Mid-Nineteenth Century British Ceylon

JP… that is John Prins [?] …. “FEMALE BEAUTY IN CEYLON”[1]

“Ladies! – Young ladies! Be advised; hear the warning voice of one, who although an ardent worshipper at the shrine of beauty, yet despises the false conceptions and grand-mistaken notions entertained of female beauty and elegance. Nothing can be beautiful which seeks for its perfection the destruction and perversion of nature’s laws – nothing elegant, which ascribes to itself the rules of art in opposition to the dictates of nature”…… 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Australia’s Dictation Test as Hurdle for Asian Migrants in Colonial Era

https://www.elanka.com.au/memories-are-made-of-this-the-agar-hewawissa-plunkett-forbes-lineages-of-ceylon-by-michael-roberts/Editor Thuppahi:

In support of his revelatory essay on Asian migrants to Australia in the late 19th and early 20th century, Earlson Forbes has sent TPS examples of the DICTATION TEST that was deployed to keep out the unwanted illiterate.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Anthropology in Depth … Far & Wide: Q & A with Bruce Kapferer

BRUCE KAPFERER Interviewed by Bjørn Enge Bertelsen, …. date not up front

Photo by Andy Lewis.

Moving at the margins to re-center anthropology. From having been supervised by Bruce Kapferer and having worked on and off with him since 1999, I knew that pinning him down long enough to interview him would be hard. After weeks of failed attempts, I finally became lucky in November 2010 when I managed to abduct him to my office. This strategic re-location was necessary to escape the constant ringing of telephones in his office as well as his office’s avalanche-prone ever-expanding piles of papers and books. All verbal encounters with Bruce are characterised by a direct, critical and engaging dialogue – as also documented in other interviews (see esp. Smedal 2000). This rang true also for the dynamic of the interview situation, so only after five minutes of discussing critically recent developments in anthropology did I succeed in posing my initial question. 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Alcaraz to Miss Wimbledon

NEWS ITEM at ??

Carlos Alcaraz‘s hopes of regaining his Wimbledon crown have been crushed after the World No.2 was forced to withdraw from the grass court grand slam due to an ongoing wrist injury. The Spaniard won back-to-back titles at the All England club before going down to World No.1 Jannik Sinner in last year’s decider, and his absence leaves the Italian as a massive favourite to retain his title this year.

Alcaraz has been plagued by the wrist injury since last month’s Barcelona Open, causing him to withdraw from subsequent events in Madrid and Rome. Alcaraz was already set to miss the upcoming French Open – where he is the reigning two-time champion. And he’s been forced to pull out of the upcoming grass court swing, in news that has left the tennis world shattered.

Two-time Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz (L) has been forced to withdraw from this year's grass court grand slam due to an ongoing wrist injury. Pic: Getty
Two-time Wimbledon champion Carlos Alcaraz (L) has been forced to withdraw from this year’s grass court grand slam due to an ongoing wrist injury. Pic: Getty

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Amira Cader’s Appraisal of the Gratiaen Award Short-List

Amira Cader: “Diverse voices and compelling storytelling define this year’s finalists [for the GRATIAEN PRIZE]” ** … DAILY MIRROR

The Gratiaen Trust, in partnership with the John Keells Foundation and with the support of the British Council announced the shortlist for the 33rd Gratiaen Prize, underscoring the continued vitality of Sri Lanka’s English literary scene at the British Council Colombo last week.

The winner of the 33rd Gratiaen Prize will be announced on 6 June 2026, at a ceremony celebrating the country’s literary talent and cultural expression.

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Gratiaen Prize in Lanka: Five in Shortlist

Five on the shortlist for Gratiaen Prize, …. May 5, 2026

The Gratiaen Trust, in partnership with John Keells Foundation and with the support of the British Council, announced the shortlist for the 33rd Gratiaen Prize on Monday evening. This year, a record number of entries highlighted the energy and creativity in Sri Lankan writing in English.

The five shortlisted works cover a wide range of genres, including historical fiction, contemporary satire, lyrical prose, and experimental poetry.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Vale: Angela Hobart …. Scholar Philanthropist

Maya Hobart, in The Guardian newspaper, 9 October 2025  “Angela Hobart obituary” … with the highlights being impositions by The Editor, Thuppahi

My mother, Angela Hobart, who has died aged 86, was a social anthropologist who specialised in the study of the sacred art of Balinese shadow puppetry, by which poet-priests tell stories, projecting shadows of puppets at night under the flickering light of a coconut oil lamp.

She first encountered shadow puppetry when living in Bali in the early 1970s, and conducted research into the topic for many years afterwards, resulting in two books on the subject, Dancing Shadows of Bali: Theatre and Myth (1987) and Healing Performances of Bali: Between Darkness and Light (2005).

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Scuba Diving Deaths in Maldivian Cave ….

Natalie Finn, in Online where the title runs thus: Maldives Diving Tragedy: What Happened on Excursion That Ended With 5 People Dead”

Five Italians, including a professor and her 20-year-old daughter, died during a scuba diving excursion in the Maldives. An investigation is underway into what went wrong.

Muriel Oddenino/Facebook; Greenpeace via AP; Albatros Top Boat; Federico Gualtieri/Facebook; Instagram

Four Italian tourists, all experienced divers, and their instructor set out on a scuba excursion May 14 in the Maldives to explore a sea cave.  None of them survived the journey.

The body of instructor Gianluca Benedetti was recovered later that day from the mouth of a cave in the archipelagic country’s Vaavu Atoll. The four others—Monica Montefalcone and her daughter Giorgia SommacalFederico Gualtieri and Muriel Oddenino—were found inside the cave May 18, the culmination of a multi-agency search effort that was postponed May 15 by bad weather and temporarily suspended the next day after a Maldivian military diver died during the recovery mission.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized