Family Research straddling Cairns, Lanka & the World: Larry Andresen

Over the last 12 months, researchers and visitors at the Cairns and District Family History Centre would have seen a sprightly, bespectacled, grey haired gentleman, peering intently into the microfilm reader screen. He is busily transcribing films that have nothing to do with his own Anglo-Scandinavian Heritage.

Larry Andresen, [sic?] in Cairns Family History, at  https://cdfhs.org/ancestry-in-british-ceylon-vital-records-research/  with this title  “Ancestry British Ceylon – Vital Records Research,”  3 March 2017

My name is Larry Andresen [sic?], and I am researching British Ceylon birth, marriage and death records.

Continue reading

3 Comments

Filed under accountability, Australian culture, British colonialism, centre-periphery relations, cultural transmission, education, ethnicity, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, modernity & modernization, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, travelogue, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy, world events & processes

JR Jayewardene Eviscerated by Rajiva

Rajiva Wijesinha’s New Book entitled “JR Jayewardene’s Racism, Cold War Posturing and the Indian Debacle “

This account of JR Jayewardene’s political life is a unique departure in Sri Lanka, for we have no tradition of analytical biography. This book tries to fill the void, by analysis of the first Executive President of Sri Lanka who ignored all principles in creating a constitution designed to perpetuate his power. The corrosive effect of ad hoc amendments, including to the electoral system, has not been thoroughly examined, but should be in view of the increasingly hopeless situation in which this country finds itself.

 

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, authoritarian regimes, centre-periphery relations, communal relations, disparagement, electoral structures, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, insurrections, island economy, landscape wondrous, legal issues, modernity & modernization, politIcal discourse, power politics, Rajiv Gandhi, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, unusual people, world events & processes

Lankan Grandmothers for the Roost

Capt Elmo Jayawardena  … whose preferred title for this tongue-in-cheek essay is Rata Yana Grandmothers”

Remember the bygone years! Daughters got married and became pregnant a few rounds more than the current rate. The average production line extended to a foursome. Some even went further, “A” team types and came close to two-digit figures of adding new inhabitants to walk the planet.

Today the story is different. “One is enough, and he will get all we have,” is quite a common comment and a few over-step the planned reproduction limitations purely by accident and reach the second round. Either way the count is kept low relative to the statistics of the previous generations.

Thank God.

Let’s make a few comparisons, I do recall the yesteryear, same show, as common as grass blades. The drum major of a mother-in-law invaded and took over the whole show, lock stock and cradle. Of course, she did not come alone but with Asilin or Cicilin who was her lifetime faithful in the domestic department, Mary and the little lamb type who accompanied her everywhere.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, landscape wondrous, life stories, pulling the leg, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, taking the piss, travelogue, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy

Joe Biden’s Gas Outage at Glasgow Gathering

Prince Charles at his Best at the Glasgow Summit

At Glasgow, the Duchess Camilla
Said, Biden’s a jolly good fella.
But his tasteless solution
For Mankind’s pollution
Was too lengthy and loud and a smeller.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, american imperialism, atrocities, biotechnology, life stories, politIcal discourse, power politics, security, self-reflexivity, slanted reportage, travelogue, unusual people, wikileaks, world events & processes

VANNI HOPE continues Its Charitable Reach

“the reason someone smiles today”

                                                                                                                                                                               

 ONCE AGAIN MANY THANKS FOR HELPING US  TO SERVE INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES IN THE POOREST COMMUNITIES IN SRI LANKA.

A very big thank you to  our sponsor

Our underprivileged and vulnerable community back in Sri Lanka still need  our help and Vanni Hope intend to extend this assistance and would like your ongoing support.

HERE IS THE YOUTUBE VIDEO LINK = https://youtu.be/BB9UBY3cElc

Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under accountability, charitable outreach, communal relations, cultural transmission, economic processes, education, governance, heritage, landscape wondrous, life stories, performance, plural society, reconciliation, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, teaching profession, unusual people, world events & processes

The Obelisk marking the Battle of Randeniwala

Arundathie Abeysinghe, in e-Lanka, 28 October 2021

A monument constructed at the ninth kilometer post on the *Ella–Wellawaya Road near the village of Randeniwela is a unique obelisk to commemorate the Battle of Randeniwela (Battle of Randeniya or Sinhalese – Portuguese War), a battle fought on August 25th 1630. The battle was fought between Portuguese forces commanded by the *Governor Constantinu De Saa de Noronha and King Senarath’s (1604–1635) youngest son Prince Maha Astana (pre coronation) who was later crowned as King Rajasinha II (1635–1687), the second ruler of Kandyan Kingdom and his brother Prince Vijayapala.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under atrocities, authoritarian regimes, disparagement, ethnicity, hatan kavi, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, military strategy, politIcal discourse, Portuguese imperialism, power politics, the imaginary and the real, trauma, truth as casualty of war, unusual people, vengeance, world events & processes

Paliganeema: Cycles of Revenge…. Kill … Retaliate … Kill in the 1980s

Sanjeewa Karunaratne, whose chosen title = ” Stories from Civil War– Young Girl’s Wish” …. see http://www.sanjeewakarunaratne.com/index.php/blogs/hungry-counsel/stories-from-sri-lanka-s-civil-war-young-girl-s-wish

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pix from Stephen Champion’s pictorial book inserrted here to highlight the ‘fiesta’ of kill and counter-kill

I call him Jayantha to protect his identity. Calm and collected, he was a good friend at high school. His parents were middle-class schoolteachers. During high school, some of the friends visited Jayantha’s home; and they were talking weeks about how pretty his elder sister was. Not surprisingly, she was to become the beauty queen of this small town. Inspector Dammika was in charge of the police station in this town. Through my good friend Mike, I met this soft-speaking police officer and happened to spend a night at his bungalow. He was Mike’s brother-in-law. At the time, I did not know that he got charged with her murder. A few years later, Dammika and his father-in-law were assassinated. A couple of year later Mike got killed.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, authoritarian regimes, conspiracies, governance, historical interpretation, insurrections, JVP, landscape wondrous, life stories, power politics, psychological urges, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, terrorism, vengeance, world events & processes

Sri Lankan Army’s Alms as Arms across the Ethnic Divide

Retd Brigadier Hiran Halangode** has told me about a schoolmate from Ananda College, one Kumar Weerasuriya, who has donated over 15 houses with funds from friends and labour from the Army in Jaffna. He indicates that Weerasuriya is “a true son of Sri Lanka who gives back to all Sri Lankans with all his mite. You may be able to share his story in Australia and globally.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Halangode has also sent the three images presented here of houses donated by 3 different individuals to the homeless in Jaffna. Their stories can be extracted from this website, which is the Jaffna Security Forces website on Civil Affairs. [www.cimicjaffna.lk Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, architects & architecture, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, communal relations, governance, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, patriotism, politIcal discourse, power politics, propaganda, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, unusual people, welfare & philanthophy, world events & processes

A Tale of Resistance: The Story of the Arrival of the Portuguese in Sri Lanka

Michael Roberts, reproducing here an article that appeared initially in 1989 with the same title in Ethnos, 55: 1-2:69-82. … and also in Swedish in Lanka. Tidskrift om Lankesisk Kultur (Uppsala), No. 2, March 1989. I regret that the presentation here has not been able to incoroporate diacritica for indigenous words. Standing now in 2025, I have added highlighted colouring in red or purple in order to emphasize points.

ABSTRACT: This essay decodes a sixteenth century folktale which records the Sinhalese reaction to the arrival of the first Portuguese. Where the historiography has interpreted this tale as benign wonderment in the face of exotica, a piecemeal deconstruction of the allegorical clues in the ‘story is utilised to reveal how the Sinhalese linked the Portuguese with demons and with Vasavarti Maraya; the arch enemy of the Buddha. In this fashion the Portuguese and the Christian sacrament of communion were represented as dangerous, disordering forces. The piecemeal reinterpretation of this short text, however, must be overlaid by a holistic perspective and the realisation that its rendering in oral form enabled its purveyors to lace the story with a satirical flavour: so that the Portuguese and Catholicism are, like demons, rendered both disordering and comic, dangerous and inferior – thus ultimately controllable. In contending in this manner that the folktale is an act of nationalist opposition, the article is designed as an attack on the positivist empiricism which pervades the island’s historiography and shuts out imaginative reconstructions which are worked out by penetrating the subjective world of the ancient texts.

 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Aboriginality, accountability, ancient civilisations, art & allure bewitching, cultural transmission, disparagement, economic processes, ethnicity, hatan kavi, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, patriotism, politIcal discourse, Portuguese imperialism, Portuguese in Indian Ocean, power politics, racism, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, the imaginary and the real, world events & processes, zealotry

Hassina Leelarathna: In Action, In Words And In Commemoration

LT Times,  November 2021

Hassina Leelarathna, a co-founder of the only Sri Lankan newspaper in the U.S. and an activist who spurred fellow immigrants to help when disasters struck their homeland, has died at age 73. Leelarathna died in Sherman Oaks on Oct. 17 after battling lung cancer for the last five years, said her son, Sahan Gamage.

 

Hassina Leelarathna co-hosted a bilingual radio show called “Tharanga,” focusing on news, music and culture. The program began in San Francisco at KFJC-FM, pictured here, before migrating to Los Angeles when the family relocated south in 1985 (Sahan Gamage)

 

 

 

 

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under accountability, Al Qaeda, anti-racism, atrocities, communal relations, cultural transmission, ethnicity, female empowerment, heritage, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, language policies, life stories, literary achievements, patriotism, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, the imaginary and the real, tolerance, travelogue, unusual people, women in ethnic conflcits, world events & processes