Film on Malwatu Oya secures Award …. with A Screening due on 28th October

“In Search of the Malwatu Oya (Sri Lanka)” (45 min; 2019; English) will be screened on 28 October 2022, 06:30 pm at  the C.D. Deshmukh Auditorium, IIC main building

Directors: Dr. SinhaRaja Tammita-Delgoda, Hiranya Malwatta 

Recipient of the Best Short Documentary Film Award, Mokkho International Film Festival, Pondicherry 2021; Best Short Documentary, Rome International Movie Awards 2022; Short Film Award, Mumbai International Film Festival 2022; Best Documentary Short Film Award, International Motion Picture Festival of India 2022

Dr. SinhaRaja Tammita-Delgoda will briefly introduce the film, highlighting the link between history, culture and the environment, a story which has several parallels with the history of India

The Screening will be followed by a discussion

In Search of the Malwatu Oya is a journey to the heart of an ancient civilization. Starting from the holy mountain of Ritigala, Malwatu River, the second longest river (102 miles) in Sri Lanka, flows across the face of the Raja Rata (Land of the Kings) to enter the Bay of Mannar of the Indian Ocean. The most historic river basin in Sri Lanka, called Malwatu Oya in the native language, the River of Flower Gardens,

 

 

 

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the Malwatu Oya passing Anuradhapura … & the point at which it reaches the sea … marked in Wikipedia

ALSO NOTE

2 Comments

Filed under art & allure bewitching, cultural transmission, education, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, nature's wonders, performance, photography, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

2 responses to “Film on Malwatu Oya secures Award …. with A Screening due on 28th October

  1. Jeni Nathanielsz

    Michael, would it be possible to contact the producers of this documentary and show it in Australia… or available online?

  2. A subject close to my own heart. Wish you a successful launch and due national and global acclamation. Please refer this to the BBC via its South Asia correspondent Rajani Vaidyanathan.

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