Category Archives: patriotism

In Apprecation of Professor H.A. de S. Gunasekera

Sumanasiri Liyanage, … His Prologue to An Academic Appreciation of Professor HA De S Gunasekera

Prologue …. Vice-Chancellor, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Dean, Faculty of Arts, Head, Department of Economics, Members of Prof. H A De S Gunasekera family, colleagues, Friends and students.

It is indeed a pleasure to be in Peradeniya once again, and I felt honored and privileged when I was asked to deliver the Prof H. A. De S. Gunasekera memorial oration 2025 for which I thank Prof Sri Ranjith, Head/Economics and members of the H.A. De S. Gunasekera Memorial Committee.

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India & England Face-Off with Five T20 Matches

Shresh Shah, in ESPNcricinfo, 21 January 2025, with this title T20 heavyweights look to draw first blood ahead of five-round bout”

The two teams are in transition, but there’s plenty of firepower in both sides for what should be a high-scoring series.

Big Picture:  Gautam Gambhir and Brendon McCullum have many things in common. They were both stellar openers, they were both captain and coach of Kolkata Knight Riders at different times, they’re both known for their “aggressive” mindsets when it comes to approaching the game from the dugout, and, now, they both find themselves trying to shepherd teams in transition.
                                                                                                                                          Arshdeep Singh and Mohammed Shami work together at the netsPTI

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RIP Victor Ivan: JVP, Reporter, Stirrer …..

Rajpal Abeynayake, in The Daily News, 20 January 2025

This week marked the passing of a public figure who was controversial by any measure, and the forgettable passing of another that most Sri Lankans would for very good reason, rather forget. The controversial figure would in most people’s estimation be regarded as a good man, though flawed. He was Victor Ivan the journalist, or rebel and insurgent turned activist.

 

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Stanley Jayasinghe in Lanka Today: Still ‘Batting’ 94 n.o.

A Note in FACEBOOK from Nimal Jayasingha [no relation] of Galle …. with photos added by The Editor, Thuppahi

𝗛𝗮𝗽𝗽𝘆 𝟵𝟰𝘁𝗵 𝗕𝗶𝗿𝘁𝗵𝗱𝗮𝘆 𝘁𝗼 𝗦𝘁𝗮𝗻𝗹𝗲𝘆 𝗝𝗮𝘆𝗮𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗴𝗵𝗲! Affectionately called ‘Stan,’ he [has been] is one of the finest Ceylon Cricketers, one produced by Nalanda College. He belongs to a different class and was among very few Asian Cricketers privileged to play in English County Cricket. Doyen of Nalanda Cricket, captained Nalanda College 1st XI in 1951 and, as a schoolboy, made his First Class debut in 1949 and had the distinction of representing Ceylon, against the England team captained by Len Hutton in Colombo in 1950.
He is regarded as one of the finest batsmen Ceylon produced, an all-rounder, a former Sri Lanka Cricket selector, an outspoken Cricket Manager and Administrator. He represented S.S.C and N.C.C. before moving to England. A crowd puller when turning out for Ceylon, stylish and reliable and a regular feature in the Ceylon XI when played against visiting English and MCC teams, Australia and West Indies and on tours to India and Pakistan.
Ceylon Squad touring Pakistan, 1966/67 … with Cive inman seated on extreme left and stanley next to him beside captain Michael Tissera
Ceylon Squad touring Pakistan, 19166/67 ….. with Stanley J seated on extreme left , Abu fuard to his left, then  Michael Tissera (capt), HIK Fernando, Anuruddha Polonowita and Manager Nisal Senaratne.
Stan moved to England in 1960, to play Country cricket for Leicestershire and also in Lancashire Leagues. He gained much-needed exposure in playing on English wickets against quality bowling attacks, including against touring teams. He partnered well with another Ceylon Cricketer, the late Clive Inman as he was instrumental in getting him to play for Leicestershire. The pair built a lifelong friendship and [constituted] a batting pair for Ceylon and Leicestershire. He was an integral part of Ceylon’s XI [in the 1960s] and he always got a call to turn up for Ceylon duty, whilst playing County Cricket which he never hesitated in accepting. At the same time being a straightforward bat, he didn’t hesitate to stand firm against any politics, selectors or even administrators for the right reasons. Be it on selections, curating pitches or managing teams.

Some of his memorable innings for Ceylon include 135 against All India at Hyderabad in 1964 while putting on a record 224 runs partnership for the 4th wicket, 118 against Pakistan at Lahore in 1966, he also had a match bag of 9 for 52 including 6 for 38 in Sri Lanka’s first Test win over India in Ahmedabad in 1965. In 1965 he publicly refused to play against the white-only South Africans who were touring England, after his own experiences of racism playing against the South Africans in 1960. Here’s wishing Stan, peace, love and happiness on this day!
Watch his exclusive interview with Quadrangle here:
https://youtu.be/85V41rVCOvQ
#legends #nalandians #SriLankaCricket #quadrangle 

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— at Nalanda College.
Nimal Dias Jayasinghe
                                                             &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

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Kittu, Tamil Tiger Commander, reaches the Heights of Wikipedia

WIKIPEDIA Item: … https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kittu_(Tamil_militant)

Colonel Kittu (Tamil militant)

 

Born S. Krishnakumar

2 January 1960

Died 16 January 1993 (aged 33)

Indian Ocean

Nationality Sri Lankan
Years active 1978 –1993
Organization Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam

Sathasivam Krishnakumar (Tamil: சதாசிவம் கிருஸ்ணகுமார்; 2 January 1960 – 16 January 1993; commonly known by the nom de guerre Kittu) was a Sri Lankan Tamil rebel and leading member of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a separatist Tamil militant organisation in Sri Lanka.

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Victor Ivan, RIP: …. The Wikipedia Memo on Victor

Michael Roberts,

 I got to know Victor at a convivial session at Ananda Chittambalam’s house in Bambalapitiya in 1989. Our common interests in the island’s history and its tempestuous present meant that we kept in sporadic touch. I have his illustrated book PARADISE IN TEARS  …. and I will present a Vale as well as items referring to his articles and work in Thuppahi. His demise at a relatively early age is a blow to all Sri Lankan patriots.

WIKIPEDIA

Majuwana Kankanamage Victor Ivan (Sinhala: මාජුවානා කන්කානම්ගේ වික්ටර් අයිවන්; 26 June 1949 – 19 January 2025) was a Sri Lankan journalist. He was a Marxist rebel in his youth and later became the Editor of the controversial Sinhalese newspaper Ravaya. He served as the Editor of Ravaya for 25 years consecutively from its inception. Victor was an investigative journalist, political critic, a theorist, social activist and also an author of several books.

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Kittu as LTTE Commander: A Violent, Tempestuous History

DBS Jeyaraj in The Daily Mirror20 January 2025, where the title reads “How Tiger ‘Col’ Kittu lost a leg when a bomb was thrown at him in Jaffna”

Former Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) Jaffna District Commander Sathasivamillai Krishnakumar alias ‘Col’ Kittu was regarded as the uncrowned king of Jaffna in the mid-eighties of the twentieth century. The greater part of Jaffna peninsula was under LTTE control then. This state of affairs [received] a rude shock when an unknown person lobbed a bomb into the vehicle driven by Kittu. The incident which rocked Jaffna in 1987 resulted in the Tiger commander losing a leg. The third part of this article focuses primarily on matters related to that explosive incident.

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Lisa Sthalekar: From A Pune Dustbin to Cricket Captaincy of Australian

An Item courtesy of from Guy de Silva** in USA  <guydes42@gmail.com>

Can you believe this? This Laila girl was dumped into a dustbin in Pune when she was born in August 1979. She ended up becoming the captain of the Australian Cricket Team and now she is in the ICC’s Hall of Fame. This is extreme misogyny at its worst on the part of some Indians. ……………. Chauhan Babu Nath’s Space 1·  ……. Manisha Babu,  Jan 7

The girl who was thrown in the dustbin as soon as she was born, [became] the captain of the Australian cricket team.

 

There is an orphanage in Pune city of Maharashtra, which is called ‘Srivastava Orphanage’. On 13th August 1979, a girl was born in an unknown corner of the city. As soon as the girl was born, her parents threw her in a dustbin outside the orphanage. The orphanage manager named that cute little girl ‘Laila’.

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Mind-blowing Choreography From 11-Year Olds at Hirana, Panadura

Mayura Botejue

HIRANA KANISHTA VIDYALAYA CONCERT: I attended this concert on Friday (Jan 17) staged at the Panadura Town Hall and it literally blew me away!

Hirana (where I live) has emerged from a village status to a small town that adjoins Panadura. I have befriended many of the locals and occasionally stop by to chat with a couple who live with their extended family (home by my walking trail). During a recent visit, one of the granddaughters (cute kid) asked me to come to her school concert that she and her siblings were taking part in. I said sure, thinking that the matter would be soon forgotten. Not so! The talk spread that I was coming and they notified my ‘man Friday’ that they had bought a ticket for me. Okay, so no big deal. It will be at the Hirana Primary School located nearby and I could make the time to attend this small concert staged at the school premises. I received the ticket and it indicated location – Panadura Town Hall.

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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.

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