Galle Fort in Deterioration with ‘Trip-Traps’ and Garbage

Captain Chandra Godakanda Arachchi**, in Island, 31 December 2018, where the title is “I cry for Galle Fort”

The sun rises magnificently above Rumassala. The wind roars during Monsoon with white horses beautifully rolling over. Catamarans are in the bay and children straggle to school. Tourists roam around in Fort. What a beautiful place the Galle Fort used to be when I grew up in the 1960s and first half of 1970s. My days in Galle were very special and precious to me and, therefore, I make it a point to visit Galle regularly even though I have been out of the country, most of my life, since I left Galle in 1975.

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Discriminatory Police Action at MCG: Ben Colby’s Reasoned Protest in Support of Indian Fans

Text of Letter from Ben Colby to Melbourne  Cricket Club, 30 December 2018 … see with highlighting emphasis added by The Editor, Thuppahi and Colby bio-data at end

Dear Melbourne Cricket Club,

I am writing in relation to the Crowds Complaint Process at the MCG and the maladministration of it by Victoria Police that I witnessed in Bay M21 during the afternoon of Saturday 29th of December 2018. Indian cricket supporters were threatened with eviction and fines by a police sergeant, allegedly following the Crowds Complaint Process, for no apparent reason other than that they were supporting the Indian men’s cricket team. Supporters of the Australian men’s cricket team behaving in the same manner in Bay M21 were not targeted by police. Continue reading

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Internet Assassins: Deciphering Their World

 Michael Roberts

On different occasions friends have indicated that I should not bother to address personalized and vituperative attacks. In this instance I am disregarding this well-meant advice. For one the instances I am addressing are those arising from an essay in Colombo Telegraph which was inspired by Bill Deutrom’s observation that my analysis in another article “[would] not convince people who have already made up their mind based on emotion, ethnicity or with a hatred for Rajapaksa.”

Several of the comments provide ample evidence for Bill’s summing up. But we can decipher them more closely to read the lines of thought driving some of these individuals (mostly guys). That is my inquiry here – deciphering hardcore prejudice in what is necessarily a conjectural manner. I stress that I am addressing the Colombo Telegraph comments that reached the world up to 16th December (Dayan Jayatilleka’s note being the last embraced — one not pertinent to this essay).[1]

 

Vanderpoorten  Sankaralingam

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Marching into the New Year in Style in the 1940s

 John Kotelawela at complete EASE … on his way to knighthood …. AND ….

……………………………………………..without Banda on his mind

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Swinging into Christmas in Anglophile Style in Ceylon during the 1950s

Roel Raymond, in Roar Media, 31 December 2017, with this title “Christmas In Ceylon In The ’50’s: Swing Bands And Grand Galas”
History records social transformation. It is through the lens of historical narrative that we see the ages and eras of the past and learn of the people, places, and events that made an impact. Documented history throws a light on the customs and rituals of people as they wend their way through time, leaving their mark on a particular epoch.

In the 1950’s, Ceylon has just gained independence from the British Raj, the fruits of which were yet to be seen. Many of the cultural influences of the British were still apparent, including speaking the English language, clothing styles, and partaking in English customs and holidays.

 Galle Face Hotel. Image courtesy luxuryhotelsassociation

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Anne Abayasekara’s Sturdy Witness to Our Troubled Times

Suvendrini Kanagasabai Perera, in Island, 26 December 2018, where the title reads In the thick of it: Anne Abayasekara, Unfaltering Witness. Review of book – ‘Telling It Like It Is’emphasis via highlights below being the work of The Editor, Thuppahi

Reflecting on her life at an address to the Rotary Club in 2012, Anne Abayasekara made a telling comparison between the life of the creative writer and what she described as her own “enduring love affair with journalism”: “The distinctive feature about journalism … is that in writing for newspapers, you don’t sit in solitude, but have to be out on the street, in the thick of people and events.”

Anne Abayasekara spent over 65 years in the thick of it, thoroughly enmeshed in a world she relished and clearly loved, but nonetheless viewed with great clarity. Her extraordinary career spans Independence in 1948 (she attended the festivities as a young reporter for the fashion pages), the three grim decades of the war and the unpromising peace that has succeeded it. Through it all, she held up a mirror to the society she loved, bearing witness to its atrocities and most egregious failures, as to its small acts of grace and moments of beauty. This carefully distilled selection of her writings provides an important snapshot of this period. At the same time, emerging from its pages is a picture of the writer herself: a spirited, large-hearted, deeply humane woman, characterised, above all, by a rare, sustained courage. Continue reading

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Mouth-Watering Christmas Cake from Sri Lanka

Rachel Bartholomeusz,** in sbs.com, 2 November 2018, where the title isThe best Christmas cake you’ll ever eat comes from Sri Lanka”

The Romans might have invented the fruitcake, but Sri Lanka, a tiny island in the Indian Ocean, perfected it. It might strike you as odd that a Buddhist-majority country is home to the best Christmas cake in the world, but it shouldn’t. This cake tells the story of the cultures that have passed through Sri Lanka, of a former Portuguese, then Dutch, then British colony that still loves Christmas.

Mouth-Watering Christmas cake from Sri Lanka

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Wonders! “Silent Night” …. Its Origins

The story behind “Silent Night” ….Why was “Silent Night” written?The reason “Silent Night” was created: How the world’s most famous Christmas carol came to be written and set to music …. https://home.snu.edu/~hculbert/silent.htm

Josef Mohr, author / Franz Gruber, composer: “And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night” — Luke 2:8

 

While we were serving as missionaries in Europe we visited a small little church in Austria. That church was the birthplace of “Silent Night.” Here’s the story how this most famous of Christmas carols came to be written.

In 1818, a roving band of actors was performing in towns throughout the Austrian Alps. On December 23 they arrived at Oberndorf, a village near Salzburg where they were to re-enact the story of Christ’s birth in the small Church of St. Nicholas.

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Voices of the North Pregnant with Meaning?

Lynn Ockersz, in Island 26 December 2018, with this title  “Trilingual Wonder”

Voices of the North, Welcoming in unison the Lord’s Coming, In Sinhala, Tamil and English – Marking a ‘First’ for the Land, That by man-made divisions, Had been in the throes of suffering; A Trilingual Wonder we may call this, Thanks to the SL Army’s, Novel Hearts and Minds path to Healing, In recognition that Humanity is the key, To giving a war-wasted country, A New Birth and Beginning.

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Exploring History and Nature around Mannar with Camera Lens

in 

Daily Mirror, 18 December 2018,  where the tile is Mannar Island: A journey through History and Nature

The setting sun sets fire to the dunes, bathing them in flames of gold and saffron. Silhouetted in the flaming light, a female donkey reaches out towards its foal. The foal, in turn, nuzzles its mother. A rare moment, full of love and magic; poetic, sensitive and deeply perceptive, it is our first impression of Mannar Unbound.
This a study of the history of the Mannar Peninsula and its surrounding environment. With intelligence, feeling and art, this work captures, explains and brings to life the living beauty of Mannar, its birds, its animals, its reptiles and its marine life. The l INNin ast decade has seen two seminal works published on Sri Lanka’s environment -Rohan Pethiyagoda’s Horton Plains: Sri Lanka’s Cloud-Forest National Park (2012) and Asoka Yapa and Gamini Ratnavira’s mammoth study, The Mammals of Sri Lanka (2013). This could well be the third.

  • Mannar Unbound: A Journey through History and Nature by Jayaratne Thilak, Gallangoda Janaka, Hapuarachchi Nadika, Fernando Tamara. (Chaya Publishers, 2018.)   

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