Category Archives: Australian culture

Prussian Lutheran Migration to Australia in the 19th Century

Keith Conlon in Linked In

A momentous exodus of ‘0ld Lutheran’ religious refugees to South Australia began hashtagOTD 8 July 1838. Families from Klemzig in Prussia (now Poland) sailed down the Oder River to Hamburg, their departure point for the new reformist colony of South Australia. The ‘Paradise of Dissent’ offered freedom of religion.

A 1938 memorial for their leader Pastor August Kavel at Langmeil Church in the Barossa Valley credits him as‘The founder of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Australia’.

Kavel Memorial Monument Australia

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under architects & architecture, Australian culture, British colonialism, cultural transmission, demography, economic processes, ethnicity, European history, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, migrant experiences, self-reflexivity, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

Donald Friend’s Acid Readings of the Sri Lankan Scenario, 1957-1962

EXTRACTS From The DIARIES Of DONALD FRIEND, Volume 3** …. The Ceylon Diaries cover the period 25th January 1957 to 22nd July 1962 and run into 180 pages in small print. During this period Donald Friend, the gifted Australian artist, based himself at Bevis Bawa’s ‘Brief’, Bentota.

“His diary entries are pithy, sarcastic, self-critical and wonderfully observant of people, places and events. I dare say he was a better writer than a painter. One can only look on aghast at how little things have changed in Sri Lanka in nearly 50 years of turmoil. ….”  .… (the author of this ASSESSMENT remains unclear; while the highlights are interventions on my part: Michael Roberts).

26th January 1957: Time drifts through all this…. carrying on his back, like a turtle, a weight of the idiotic likes and dislikes….

4th February: Who like Bevis, is a hypochondriac. They both make a fascinating hobby of pills and injections …

19th March: The horrid old guide jibbered on endlessly, telling whopping lies.

24th March: Ratnapura Resthouse – nauseatingly loud Americans and a rabble of Ceylon drunks.

11th April: Orientals fortunately regard madness as something allied to holiness.

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, australian media, Colombo and Its Spaces, communal relations, cultural transmission, disparagement, economic processes, education, ethnicity, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, paintings, parliamentary elections, political demonstrations, politIcal discourse, racism, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

ODI Trophy Commandeered by South Australia

 Report in ESPNcricinfo, 1 March 2025, ….

South Australia 268 for 7 (Nielsen 68, Lehmann 67, Scott 54*, Siddle 3-40, Sutherland 3-67) beat Victoria 204 (Sutherland 50, Thornton 4-27, McAndrew 3-47) by 64 runs
Nathan McSweeney‘s game-changing cameo with the ball helped South Australia defeat Victoria by 64 runs to collect the state’s first one-day cricket title in 13 years.
SA, with Harry NielsenJake Lehmann and Liam Scott making half-centuries, posted 268 for 7 in Saturday’s battle for the inaugural Dean Jones Trophy.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Australian culture, australian media, cricket selections, life stories, performance

Rambanctious Middle-Class Ceylonese of Yesteryear

A NOTE from the THUPPAHIYAA, 25 February 2025

This email memo from a ‘middle class’ Sri Lankan born before World War Two and nurtured in an elite college whci addresses mates nourished in the same schools and planter/military circles is of considerable socio-political significance. Its implications are all the stronger because the “Letter” is An Epitaph for Richard Hermon, an Extraordinary and Rambanctious Sri Lankan of the Old School. 

 AN EMAIL MEMO from Retd Major Lalin Fernando to a  Circle of Ceylonese Pals, 23 February 2025

Dickie was in Alison, a bit junior to me. His cousins Duncan and Tyrone were there too Dickie played Rugby with me in the 2nd XV v SPC (1955) on their grounds when he was 14 or less. There were no age groups then. The Peterites average age would have been around 19. It included their Cricket captain Ken (20 yrs old) but not Russel Duckworth. Dont know if Lakshman Serasinghe too played. Our oldest would have been 16 or so. The first XV match was played before our match as the seniors wanted to watch the CR v CH match. It left us brats to the after the match mercies of the Bamba crowd!

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, communal relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, ethnicity, governance, heritage, island economy, landscape wondrous, life stories, migrant experiences, nationalism, patriotism, performance, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

Offensive Racist Place-Names face Offensive

A News Item in Australia, Today, February 2025

Black Gin Creek and Little Uncle Tom mountain are among the 43 place names in Queensland containing racial slurs with a traumatic history.

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Aboriginality, accountability, anti-racism, Australian culture, australian media, British colonialism, communal relations, cultural transmission, democratic measures, disparagement, education policy, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, political demonstrations, politIcal discourse, reconciliation, self-reflexivity, unusual people, world events & processes

George Frederick van der Hoeven: A Turbulent Career … Ceylon & Australia

Nick van der Hoeven

I wanted to write about a very complex man, one of my grandfathers …. George Frederick van der Hoeven. The main reason for doing so is because history has not been kind to him, especially the unwritten verbal history within our family. Born in 1901 in Colombo Ceylon — then under British rule — Grandpa (as we called him) died here in Melbourne in 1978. I was 6 years old.

Continue reading

8 Comments

Filed under accountability, anti-racism, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, British colonialism, Buddhism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, education policy, Empire loyalism, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, language policies, legal issues, life stories, politIcal discourse, racist thinking, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

‘Hurricane’ Hits from Mitch seals T20 BBL for Hurricanes

Michael Roberts

Some devastating batting from opening bat Mitchell Owen sealed the BBL final played at Hobart for the Hobart Hurricanes led by Matthew Wade. Owen displayed a range of strokes to all part of the ground — not only hoicks to mid-wicket, long and long-off; but also reverse sweeps and lap shots. Assisted by two other batsmen, HE enabled the Hurricanes to reach the target of 000 runs by the  over.

************************

Tristan Lafayette in ESPNcricinfo, 25 January 2025 *

Mitchell Owen had a rollicking Bellerive Oval crowd in the palm of his hands and capped a breakout season with the equal-fastest BBL century as Hobart ……

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, australian media, cricket selections, life stories, performance, unusual people

Burgher Aussies as Emerging Footie Stars?

ITEM in some Aussie ‘rag’: article by Callum Twomey…. circulated by Victor Melder and Keith Bennett, ….. “Stars of the future: 10 draft prospects to watch in 2025”

Callum Twomey looks ahead to the best prospects for the 2025 Telstra AFL Draft………….. Callum Twomey Nov 23, 2024, 6:00am

Cooper Duff-Tytler .… Ruck/key forward……199cm….22/8/07
Calder Cannons/Vic Metro

What an exciting talent Duff-Tytler is shaping to be. Having concentrated on his promising basketball career, Duff-Tytler is now putting all his energy into making it in the AFL and the end of his bottom-age season suggests he is well on the way. His breakout game came in just his third appearance for the Cannons, when he kicked two goals from 30 disposals and 17 hit-outs in a best-afield display as a roaming ruckman. Across six games at the level he averaged 17 disposals and 15 hitouts and he shapes as one of the leading talls for 2025.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, australian media, life stories, performance

The Sam Konstas Spectacular Spectacle in Cricket

Geoff Lawson, in The Sydney Morning Herald, 11 January 2025, where the title runs thusQuiet, respectful, humble, orthodox: I watched Sam Konstas for two years and this is what I saw”

It might be confusing to be labelled an “enigma” at the ripe old age of 19. Rock stars, politicians and sports stars tend to fill the niche more than nuclear physicists or the neighbourhood postie, but no occupation is exempt.

Sam Konstas ramp shot masterclass

Australian batter Sam Konstas tells Channel Seven how he used the innovative ramp shot against India’s Jasprit Bumrah, the world’s best fast bowler, in the Boxing Day Test.

It usually takes some time and a little effort to become an enigma because you have to establish a regular persona first. This generally takes a while in the public space, then you have to ripen those characteristics, i.e. become misunderstood or inconsistent with those expected traits.

Sam James Konstas jolted fans, coaches and mentors out of their festive season lounge chair lethargy with batting that is hard to forget. The flabbergast from coaches and mentors is not about how many Test runs he is making, but how he is making them. And then there was the non-playing theatrics.

His batting in his short Test career has been outrageous – sort of in a good way and sort of in an enigmatic way; mysterious and effective, yet hard to find a niche for it in the lengthy archives of Test cricket.

England’s Ben Duckett and Harry Brook, under the gaze of Brendon McCullum, have led a charge of sorts into this rampage and scoop era, so it can’t be said that Konstas has a patent on such unorthodoxy. Javed Miandad (who learnt it off Mushtaq Mohammad) and Mike Gatting were reverse sweeping in the early 1980s. Gatting famously got out while playing the stroke to Allan Border in the World Cup final in 1987, effectively handing the trophy to Australia. A single failure led to a generation of derision for “Gatt” – and the stroke.

Sam Konstas took the cricket world by storm with his unconventional approach at the MCG on debut.
Sam Konstas took the cricket world by storm with his unconventional approach at the MCG on debut.Credit:Getty Images

Cricket’s pundits have been split in their acceptance of Konstas’ methods and his reluctance to show deference to his seniors in the opposition. Deference is a separate beast to respect. The intense media scrutiny that all international cricketers are subject to has magnified any eyebrow raise from the teenage debutant.

But he has revelled in the scrutiny and the competition, which is not surprising since he is a child of the social media-driven 21st century and has seen his picture on small screens since he was nine years old, when he started making hundreds.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under accountability, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, australian media, cricket selections, cultural transmission, ethnicity, landscape wondrous, life stories, patriotism, performance, self-reflexivity, slanted reportage, unusual people

Don Bradman embraced within the Thuppahi Realm

Don Bradman Memorabilia in Adelaide’s Sri Lankan Realms … https://thuppahis.com › 2024/06/06 › don-bradman-me…

6 June 2024 — This Thuppahi post is a potpourri of Memorabilia around the Persona of Sir Donald Bradman …. with an ink-sketch of Don Bradman by Douglas Davies

*******

Don Bradman at Cricket in Ceylon in 1930 …. Yes, 1930….  https://thuppahis.com › 2023/03/06 › don-bradman-at-…

6 Mar 2023 — On 3 April 1930, at Colombo Cricket Club, Donald Bradman played his first game of cricket outside Australia. He treated the crowd to plenty of shots …

 

 

 

 

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under accountability, art & allure bewitching, Australian culture, Colombo and Its Spaces, cricket for amity, cricket selections, cultural transmission, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, patriotism, performance, photography, Sri Lankan cricket, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes