Category Archives: Australian culture

Errol’s Reflections on India’s Truimph in Perth

An EMAIL Letter from Errol Fernando in Melbourne to his alter ego …. one Fitzroy, 25 November 2024

Dear Fitzroy, I see that Captain Bumrah won Man of the Match for taking 8 wickets.  I would have given him MOM simply for batting first and not inserting. It was a spicy wicket indeed and very tempting to bowl first especially if you are the opening bowler. However, he resisted the temptation and bravely decided to bat first. At 73 for 6 it looked like a stupid decision. However, in the end it brought him victory. If he had inserted, I have no doubt that Australia would have won.

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A Journey.…. A Journey: Working Up a Documentary: “A Pilgrimage to Sri Lanka

Dodwell-Keyt to Victor Melder, mid-November 2024

The series of videos will showcase Sri Lankan culture and way of life. A few scripts have already been written, though I plan to revise and refine them further. The series will follow the journey of a young Sri Lankan girl, portrayed by the talented actress Nimmi Harasgama, whose website you can visit here: ………………..
https://www.nimmiharasgama.com/home-1.html
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Cricket at A Deserted Adelaide Oval

Michael Roberts

On Monday 4th November the South Australian Cricket team led by Alex Carey completed an assertive victory over Victoria in a Sheffield Shield match. — winning by 00 runs. I was among the 50 or so spectators watching this victory unfold.

All of us were at the ground level in the Western Stand. There was only one eatery open and no bars. …… a barren terrain that was out of step with a good victory. For the record I note that SA scored 307 runs and 270 for 8 decl while Victoria assembled 232 and 207 runs  — with the last day’s headline running “Pope spins South Australia to a Drought-Breaking Victory”  .… even though it was Manenti  who secured the Man of the Match award.  Continue reading

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An Ingenious Engineering Prank: A Prosh ‘Hanging’ in 1971

From THE LUMEN, October 2024

Visit online = lumen@adelaide.edu.au

Email = lumen@adelaide.edu.au

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Doug Walters: AN ODE from a Sri Lankan Fan

Nimal R. Chandrasena’s Cricketing ODE for Doug Walters … within a book entitled LOOKING FOR DOUG … Doug Walters: An Australian Cricketing Legend

Short Synopsis of the Book

The Book tells the story of a Sri Lankan-born cricket fan (the author) and his journey following the life and achievements of his boyhood hero – Doug Walters, a personal friend. The book is replete with material and opinions gleaned from interviews with Doug and Ian Chappell, the former Australian cricket captain under whom Doug played most of his cricket.

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Ceylonese Migrants to Australia in the 1950s and 1960s

Earlson Forbes, whose title in THE CEYLANKAN, vol 27/2, May 2024 is Fortress White Australia: What early Ceylonese migrants [1949 t0 1969] were up against” now placed in TPS in a revised form to accomodate illustrations that proved recalcitrant

The Six Australian Colonies came together on the 1st  of January 1901 to form the independent Nation of the Commonwealth of Australia.  From 1788 (First Fleet arrival at Sydney Cove) to the time of Federation, Australia was populated by convict and free settlers almost exclusively from Britain.  The 1901 census put the population at 3.7 million.   Aboriginals were not counted in this census. A small percentage of the population was made up of Pacific Islanders and Chinese.  The Chinese entered Australia in the second half of the 19th century at the time of the Gold Rush in Australia (mid-19th century) and in the years following. Between 1851 and 1870 about 50,000 Chinese were estimated to have entered Australia. Pacific Islanders had been brought to Australia in the second half of the 19th century as labourers.

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Birdwatcher’s Tour at Belair National Park, Sunday 22nd September 2024

Michael Roberts,

We happen to live a stone’s throw from the Entrance to BELAIR NATIONAL PARK, the second oldest park reserve created in colonial Australia. I had little hesitation in taking up an invitation to join a Birdwatcher Tour of the arena known as Long Gully at the western end of the park  on the 22nd September.  Alas, it was a cold wintry day …… But …

 …… there were a sprinkling of birds for the smallish cluster of about twenty people who turned up to listen to three volunteer guides with birdie-know how.

 

 

 

 

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Geeth’s ENCORE for the Adelaide Sri Lanka Association’s  50th Year Tamasha

Dear Nishani, Manoj & ASLA Committee,***

I am writing to express my sincere gratitude for organising the ASLA, 50th Golden Jubilee dinner dance on August 31st. The event was a truly memorable night filled with music, friendship, and celebration.

The performance by Corinne and the Ashra band was absolutely exceptional. Corrine’s talent and experience are legendary, and her contribution to the evening made it truly special.

 

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Nurturing Crocodiles for Top-End Consumer Market ….!!!

An YOU TUBE presentation of a sophisticated billionaire market  ….. a find….  courtesy of Joe Paiva in Adelaide ….

VINTAGE LEATHER HAND BAG — Hand made in the 70’s …..
AU $250.00

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Sri Lankan ‘Outposts’ on Thursday Island in Colonial Times

Á Booklet by Stanley J. Sparkes and Anna Shnukal entitled The Sri Lankan Settlers of Thursday Island …. presented by …………….. httpsy ://www.elanka.com.au/the-sri-lankan-settlers-of-thursday-island-by-stanley-j-sparkes-and-anna-shnukal/

... I regret that the pictorial illustrations with this text proved obdurate and refused replication; while the whole process of reproduction was difficult”–Thupahiyaa

Introduction

The dismantling of the White Australia Policy in the early 1970s, allied with periodic civil strife in their homeland, brought significant numbers of Sri Lankan immigrants to Australia. Few Australians, however, are aware that, a century before, hundreds of mostly male ‘Cingalese’ (as Sri Lankans were then called),2 mainly from the southern coastal districts of Galle and Matara in the British colony of Ceylon, came as labourers to the British colony of Queensland.3 The first of these arrived independently in the 1870s to join the Torres Strait pearling fleets, but larger numbers were brought to Queensland a decade later as indentured (contract) seamen on Thursday Island and, shortly thereafter, as farm workers for the cane fields around Mackay and Bundaberg, where many of their descendants still live. The arrival of the first batch of 25 indentured Sri Lankan seamen on Thursday Island in 1882 coincided with the importation of ‘Malays’ and Japanese. Yet, unlike the latter, comparatively little has been published on their origins, lives and destinies, nor their contributions to the business, social and cultural life of Thursday Island. Some of those first arrivals demonstrated a remarkable entrepreneurial flair, taking up employment as ‘watermen’ (boatmen), ferrying passengers and cargo from ship to shore and subsequently taking out licences as small businessmen: boarding-house keepers, billiard-room proprietors, shopkeepers, pawnbrokers, boat-owners, gem and curio hawkers and commercial fishermen.

VISIT THIS SITE FOR MAP etc https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thursday_Island

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