Category Archives: landscape wondrous
January 24, 2020 · 3:33 pm
Striking Shapes …. Curious ‘Arrangements’
Filed under heritage, landscape wondrous
January 21, 2020 · 3:29 pm
A Roaring Fire ravages the Southern Ocean Lodge and a Good Part of Kangaroo Island
Roy Ecclestone, in SAWeekend, 17 January 2020, ….”Trapped in a bunker and hoping for a miracle: The destruction of Southern Ocean Lodge” ……..
It was after the firestorm swept over Southern Ocean Lodge for the fourth time that one of the staff decided it was time to leave the concrete bunker beneath the world-renowned Kanga roo Island hotel.“We can go out now,” the man said, sure the danger must finally have passed. But John Hird, the lodge’s general manager, was having none of it. “No, no – you’re staying for two hours,” he insisted, sticking to their fire plan. And just then, the inferno struck again.
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January 20, 2020 · 4:11 pm
In Appreciative Memory of Karen Roberts, 1965-2018
Michael Roberts
It has been something of a shock for me to discover that the Sri Lankan authoress Karen Roberts[1] had passed away in USA in 2018 while only in her middle-aged fifties (about the same age as my daughters). What a tragedy!
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Filed under art & allure bewitching, communal relations, cultural transmission, education, female empowerment, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, literary achievements, Muslims in Lanka, politIcal discourse, riots and pogroms, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, trauma, unusual people, women in ethnic conflcits, world events & processes
January 19, 2020 · 3:10 pm
The Wat Buddha Dhamma Monastery survives the Bush Fire in New South Wales
Courtesy of Gerald Wimalasena & Palitha Manchanayake
The Wat Dhamma Buddha Monastery s located at Wiseman’s Ferry in New South Wales where the bush fires raged recently.
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January 19, 2020 · 2:07 pm
The Medium of Learning in Sri Lanka for Sri Lanka: Journeys
Wilfrid Jayasuriya, in Daily Mirror Epaper, 18 January 2020, where the title is “English as the medium of modern education”
We are glad that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa hit the nail on the head about the meaning of education. Not a promising opening sentence? I do not wish to get into a harangue on education but just want to say there is an alternative to the education modus operandi which we practise by and large for more than a century. That alternative is the United States’ system as opposed to the British colonial model which was the foundation of our lay education for the last two centuries. Suffice to say that in my own family history, my maternal grandfather was a postmaster who worked in the English medium and my paternal grandfather was a school teacher who practised in Sinhala and English media. My father passed the Senior School Certificate in both English and Sinhala media and my mother passed the Junior School Certificate in English medium. I have both certificate documents and they are signed by the Vice Chancellor of Cambridge University because education in Ceylon had been allocated to Cambridge University!
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Filed under accountability, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, democratic measures, education, education policy, heritage, historical interpretation, island economy, landscape wondrous, language policies, life stories, literary achievements, performance, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, world events & processes
January 17, 2020 · 8:40 am
Striking Camera Hits

COL01:SPORT-CRICKET AUSTRALIA:KANDY,SRILANKA,10SEP99 – Australian fielders Jason Gillespie (left) and captain Steve Waugh collide in attempting to take a catch from the bat of Sri Lankan Mahela Jayawardena on the second day of the first cricket test at the Asgiriya stadium in central Kandy September 10. Jayawardena survived with his score on 34 but the two fielders were taken to hospital with Gillespie rushed on a stretcher with a broken leg and Waugh with an injured nose. The Jayawardena swept a ball from Colin Miller and Gillespie came in from long-leg while Waugh rushed down from short fine-leg to take the catch. Sri Lanka went in for lunch at 181 for 5. al/Photo by Anuruddha Lokuhapuarachchi REUTERS
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January 17, 2020 · 7:18 am
Barefaced Lies in the OHCHR REPORT from Geneva: Weerasekera’s Challenge in 2016
Dharshan Weerasekera, in Lankaweb, 15 January 2016, with this title “A rebuttal of the OHCHR Report, 1: Outright Lies”
To my knowledge, the Government has to date not commissioned an official assessment of the OHCHR report (also called the OISL report) or at any rate if it has, such report is not available to the public.[1] And yet, one reads in the newspapers that the Government is about to start ‘the consultation process to design’ mechanisms to probe the ‘past,’ in order to satisfy recommendations made in UNHRC resolution A/HRC/30/L.29.[2]
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Filed under accountability, american imperialism, authoritarian regimes, communal relations, disparagement, doctoring evidence, governance, historical interpretation, human rights, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, LTTE, news fabrication, patriotism, politIcal discourse, power politics, Rajapaksa regime, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, Tamil Tiger fighters, trauma, truth as casualty of war, UN reports, unusual people, war reportage, world events & processes
January 16, 2020 · 3:03 pm
Everyday Scenes from Sri Lanka, January 2020
Vistas —The Ordinary, the Daily and The Greenery from the Camera Lens wielded by young Asela Atukorala of Adelaide
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January 16, 2020 · 6:41 am
From Cricketing Leadership to Pioneering Space Law: Nandi
Nandasiri Jasentuliyana Today ….. and THEN when he led the Southern Province Schools Team against the Australian Schoolboy Team in 1958
The First Australian Schools team to visit Ceylon seen in 1958 with the Combined Schools Team that played in Galle with Nandi Jasentulyana (aka JLN De Silva then)as Skipper (seated in centre) …..
Standing l to r: NM Pinnaduwa, Percy Amendra, Nalin Pieris, Sriman Jayawickrama, Hyndley Perera, Hemasirie fernando, Stanley Amendra, H. Hamilton, Lalith Fernando.
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Filed under accountability, education, growth pole, heritage, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, literary achievements, performance, politIcal discourse, security, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, teaching profession, the imaginary and the real, unusual people, world events & processes

Southern Ocean Lodge before the fire.





