Category Archives: cultural transmission

The Schaffters: Ceylonese serving Sri Lanka down the Generations

Michael Roberts

A major error by a Sri Lankan lady re Tamil representatives in Ceylon/Sri Lankan cricket in the exchanges in LINKED IN drives me to compose an item in TPS on the Tamil cricketers who played cricket for the island at the highest level in the 20th and 21st centuries (this is in process and will take time).

The Janashakthi Book on cricket sponsored by the Schaffters, which places SS Perera’s wonderful archive of work on the bookshelves, is an example of Sinhala Tamil cooperation that places  all manner of information on the island’s rich cricket history within our reach. While I will be scouring this work for data, I reach out here to aficionado seeking data (and photographs) displaying information on Tamils who represented Ceylon/Sri Lanka at the highest level in the years stretching from 1901 to 2024.

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A Classic Painting: Donald Friend’s ‘Reading’ of the Bandaranaike Legacy

https://thuppahis.com/2020/07/20/donald-friend-assessed-by-venerable-bhikkhu-dhammika-in-2003/Helene De Rosayro

This is an artwork seen at Retford Park, Bowral NSW,  hung on the wall of the residence of James Fairfax former owner of Fairfax Media. It is one of many paintings hung in his dining room where he had entertained many, including Heads of State and guests .

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Vale: Chris Rodrigo … A Scholar, Marxist & Friend

Kumar David in The Island, 26 May 2024  ….. whre the title reads thus: G.C. Rodrigo: Friend, Colleague and Comrade”

The phrase “When alone think clearly and when with others speak carefully” is attributed to Gautama Sidhartha. Though that may be apocryphal it certainly does depict his grace. Secondly, you will find that I sometimes refer to GCR as Gerard and sometimes as Chris depending on whether S. Thomas College or our later political comradeship is uppermost in the context.

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The School Thombos in Dutch Ceylon: Their Purpose

Bente de Leede & Nadeera Rupesinghe, whose article appeared in the  Law and History Review Volume 41 Issue 3 , August 2023 , pp. 501 – 521 …. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0738248022000499 ……. with the full title of the article being thus:  “Registering and Regulating Family Life: The School Thombos in Dutch Sri Lanka”

An Abstract: In eighteenth-century, colonial Sri Lanka, the Dutch church kept extensive registers of the local population. These “school thombos” contain individual registration of baptism, marriage, school attendance and death. This article argues that the school thombos reveal moral control over family life by the Dutch East India Company and the Dutch Reformed Church, while offering locals a legal and religious identity to employ in negotiating the Dutch colonial bureaucracy. These rarely studied registers shed new light on Sri Lankan family history and the practices of Dutch colonialism. What do they tell us about conjunctures of locals with colonial religion in eighteenth-century Sri Lanka? The school thombo was an instrument used to register and regulate family life, with specific functions and uses by different actors. This article explores the format, objectives and use of the school thombo. Why was the school thombo created and who were registered in these sources? What were the micro practices of drawing up the school thombo? The article is supported by several case studies that illustrate how the school thombo found its way into family life while demonstrating the value of written identities.

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Transforming Australian Culinary Tastes: “Colombo Social” run by Shaun

SEE  ….  Off Menu _ Shaun Christie-David – ABC News… which resisted all my hamhanded efforts at copying its pictures …. so ‘taste’ this

Shaun Christie-David can still picture the bin where he used to ditch his dhal sandwiches, the furtive act of a teenage boy of migrant parents desperate to fit in. He loved dhal at home. The aromatic combination of lentils, tempered mustard seeds, spices and fried onions made by his Sri Lankan-born mother, or amma, Shiranie, was his favourite meal.

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Touche! An Old Ladies Riposte …..

A Message circulated by Vernon Davidson, Keith Bennett and friends in Australia

Here is a wonderful little story.

A young MALE cashier told an older woman that she should bring her grocery bags because plastic bags weren’t good for the environment.

The woman apologized, “We didn’t have this green thing back in my day.”

The young clerk said, “Your generation did not care enough to save our environment for future generations.”

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Caste Issues in Sri Lanka: A Partial Bibliography

Michael Roberts

I came across this undated list in my computer files — one drawn up quite sometime back, maybe 20 years back. Though I would seem to have been part of the enterprise, some spellings suggest the involvement of others; while Iranga Silva of the ICES Kandy also seems to have been one of the compilers. It will, nevertheless, interest some readers & scholars and could assisit budding researchers. The items or authors presented in black were part of the File I found. I have taken the liberty of deploying a colour scheme, with red indicating rare items that I have not seen/studied; blue some highly important studies; ….

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Dharmasoka College in Ambalangoda and Its Founder

Jagath De Silva, in The Island, 19 May 2024, where the title runs thus “A valuäble publication on the history of Dharmasoka College, ambalangoda”

This is a remarkable testament to the history and legacy of Dharmasoka College, meticulously compiled by a distinguished alumnus and former principal of the college who delves deep into the origins of the school, shedding light on its inception and the challenges faced by its founder, Mudaliyar Santiago Thomas de Silva.

 

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Beverley Pinder’s PRIDE WITHOUT PREJUDICE launched at Barefoot

News Item in Elanka, c. 18 May 2024 ….. https://www.elanka.com.au/magical-night-as-pride-without-prejudice-launched-in-sri-lanka/ 

More than fifty guests recently gathered at Barefoot Gallery for the launch in Sri Lanka of Beverley Pinder OAM’s inspiring autobiography: Pride Without Prejudice on 17 May.

Bernice Roche, who emceed the launch event, Sally Grero, Beverley and Susan Riley OAM.

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“Walk Like An Elephant” …. Being Laleen Jayamanne’s Engagement with the “Aragalaya”

Walk Like an Elephant: The Island Essays 2022-2023′
These are 22 essays written by Laleen Jayamanne during the time of the Aragalaya/Struggle/Paroattam in 2022 and in the aftermath. These writings  work at the intersection of art and politics within the context of Sinhala Buddhist Ethno-Nationalism as it affected the Arts and Fine Arts Education policy since 1958. I use theoretical and philosophical ideas from Critical Theory familiar to left intellectuals at least since May ’68 in Paris. It is written for a Lankan Left intelligentsia; but as its for a daily paper I have crafted an accessible prose.

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