Category Archives: performance

Sacking Chaminda Vaas. Terrible Course!

Sanjeewa Jayaweera, in The Sunday Island, 7 March 2021, where the title reads thus: “Chaminda Vass was an All-time Hero for Sri Lanka” …. with highlighting added by The Editor, Thuppahi

Fast bowling is an arduous task and is doubly so in the Asian subcontinent, where docile pitches and energy-sapping heat takes their toll on those brave enough to take up the challenge. One must have a big heart, a great deal of determination and lots of skill to succeed as a fast bowler. Chaminda Vaas (CV) had plenty of these and a few more.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under accountability, life stories, patriotism, performance, Sri Lankan cricket, sri lankan society, trauma, unusual people, world events & processes

Cricket Crazy Cricket! Dananjaya’s Roller-Coaster

in ESPNcricinfo, 4 March 2021, where the title is “Kieron Pollard’s six sixes in an over trumps Akila Dananjaya hat-trick in dramatic chase”

West Indies 134 for 6 (Pollard 38, Hasaranga 3-12) beat Sri Lanka 131 for 9 (Nissanka 39, McCoy 2-25) by four wickets

In one of the more ridiculous T20 run-chases you will witness, Kieron Pollard became just the third player to hit six sixes in an over in international cricket off the same bowler, Akila Dananjaya, who had rocked West Indies’ chase just an over earlier with a hat-trick.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under cricket for amity, life stories, performance, the imaginary and the real, trauma, vengeance, world events & processes

Tom Moody to be Director of Cricket in Lanka

Andrew Fidel Fernando, in ESPNcricinfo.com, late February 2021, with this title Tom Moody appointed as Sri Lanka’s director of cricket””

The role will have Moody overseeing Sri Lanka’s international programme and domestic tournaments

Story Image
Tom Moody had been Sri Lanka’s coach between 2005 and 2007  Getty Images

Tom Moody has been appointed Sri Lanka’s director of cricket, a broad new role that will have Moody overseeing Sri Lanka’s international programme and domestic tournaments. The appointment was made on the recommendation of Sri Lanka’s new technical advisory committee headed by Aravinda de Silva.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under cricket for amity, governance, historical interpretation, life stories, performance, sri lankan society, unusual people

UNHRC: Core Group Countries’ Statements on Sri Lanka 25/02/21

COURTESY of A Concerned Sri Lankan in UK

WATCH ……………………… Germanyhttps://youtu.be/fSvf8sKuV-U

Continue reading

3 Comments

Filed under accountability, British imperialism, historical interpretation, human rights, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, performance, politIcal discourse, power politics, self-reflexivity, the imaginary and the real, truth as casualty of war, world events & processes

Fidel Castro’s Visit to Harlem New York: The Political Ramfications Deciphered

Thomas Meaney, in London Review of Books, Vol. 43 No. 3 · 4 February 2021: reviewing book by Simon Hall entitled Ten Days in Harlem: Fidel Castro and the Making of the 1960s, September 2020, 
Faber, 276 pp., £17.99, 978 0 571 35306 4

It would hardly​ be possible, Eric Hobsbawm once said, to imagine rebels better designed to appeal to the New Left than Castro and his comrades. Despite occasional sneers from Third World elders (Nasser dismissed them as ‘a bunch of Errol Flynns’), Western liberals were just as infatuated as radicals. The New York Times published an admiring three-part profile of Castro from his hideout in the Sierra Maestra in 1957, when he was still a revolutionary newt. Two years later, after his forces swept through the lowland cities, triggering a series of popularly assisted uprisings that shattered the sclerotic regime of Fulgencio Batista, adulation came from all quarters: letters of congratulation from US congressmen, rights requests from Hollywood, invitations to ‘Dr Castro’ to address Ivy League undergraduates. ‘My staff and I were all Fidelistas,’ the Cuba desk officer of the CIA recalled.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, american imperialism, authoritarian regimes, centre-periphery relations, foreign policy, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, Left politics, life stories, performance, pilgrimages, politIcal discourse, power politics, self-reflexivity, unusual people, working class conditions, world events & processes

Sink Holes. That Sinking Feeling! Cave Diving

 Natsumi Penberthy, in Australian Geographic, 28 April 2010, where the title runs thus: The new extreme: Underwater cave diving”

CAVE DIVERS BRAVE TIGHT spaces, confusing tunnels and all the inherent dangers of taking a mammalian body underwater – just to float through some of the last lost worlds.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, landscape wondrous, life stories, performance, photography, security, self-reflexivity, the imaginary and the real, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

Three Aeroplanes. Two Crashes. One Escape via Native ‘Ingenuity’

Capt. Elmo Jayawardena

The present-day sky is crowded. Airways crisscross above continents and oceans and are  severely congested with all kinds of aeroplanes carrying passengers and cargo. Then someone crashes, people die, and we say “What a shame!” The manufacturers start defending their aeroplane, the insurance companies look for loopholes to creep through and save their bacon. Of course, there is always the ever-present ‘pilot error’ verdict to take the final blame. That is what happens in air crashes and crash causes. The dying or the surviving is seldom man-made. It is all done upstairs and has little to do with what we deduce from what we know or hear. I’ve seen enough of the sky and what happens in it to figure that out.

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, landscape wondrous, life stories, performance, security, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, unusual people, world events & processes

Sunil Wettimuny. Stylish Opening Batsman — Felled Twice … Remains Indestructible

Alston Mahadevan:  “Sunil Wettimuny was a stylish opening batsman”

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, cricket for amity, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, performance, Sri Lankan cricket, taking the piss, the imaginary and the real, trauma, unusual people, world events & processes

Shihan De Silva Jayasuriya’s Wide-ranging Work on Portuguese Creole and the Kaffir

Shihan de Silva Jayasuriya of the University of London has been researching the Portuguese in the East for over twenty years and has generated a significant number of studies on Portuguese Creole peoples, their life-style ad  languages in Sri Lanka and elsewhere. Her output of work has been as varied as commendable and I begin with a summary of one article dealing with “a nineteenth-century manuscript in Sri Lankan Portuguese Creole” because i am presently fashioning an article that refers to the work of Hugh Nevill on the Kāberi Hatana in order to ‘educate’ those who have touched on African slave labour at Galle without possessing any background information on the topic. This essay is in process and will appear soon….. Michael Roberts

Continue reading

7 Comments

Filed under ancient civilisations, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, colonisation schemes, communal relations, cultural transmission, disparagement, education, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, life stories, literary achievements, performance, photography, politIcal discourse, Portuguese in Indian Ocean, power politics, religiosity, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, world events & processes

Vaccination against Covid: Ridiculous Priorities, Confusions … Et Cetera. Lankavey Neydha!

Sanjeewa Jayaweera, whose preferred title is “How Did MPs jump the Vaccine Queue?” …. Note that highlighting is the work of the naughty Thuppahi Editor

 mey Raja Kavudha?

It was so typical! None were too surprised when it was announced in the media that the 225 Members of Parliament (MP’s) were to be vaccinated against Covid19 ahead of many others whose exposure to the virus was significantly higher. A photograph of a government minister vaccinated at the Army Hospital was published in the media before this announcement. A few erstwhile cabinet colleagues justified this by saying the Minister had twice served quarantine time due to some of his close contacts being infected with Covid19. The presumption is that the Minister was unable to carry out his duties whilst being in quarantine?

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, centre-periphery relations, coronavirus, discrimination, disparagement, governance, life stories, performance, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, social justice, sri lankan society, trauma, unusual people, world events & processes