An ELEPHANT assisting a Lion Cub and Its Mother
Courtesy of Dr Mervyn De Silva whose headline was “Displaying Love & Compassion, Really the best Photo – What better message can I send for a great weekend”
Courtesy of Dr Mervyn De Silva whose headline was “Displaying Love & Compassion, Really the best Photo – What better message can I send for a great weekend”
Filed under landscape wondrous
Published by Perera & Hussein (Bay Owl Press)….……..PRICE: Rs 1250/- (approx US$7.50 / Aus $10.50 / Euro6.50/ Stg 6) ………………….. World-wide orders – copies may be purchased online at the following link:-
https://pererahussein.com/index.php/books/non-fiction/telling-it-like-it-is-phph.html…… Postage (approx Rs 1000 for Australia & Europe)
Filed under cultural transmission, education, ethnicity, female empowerment, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, language policies, life stories, literary achievements, meditations, modernity & modernization, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, social justice, sri lankan society, tolerance, unusual people, world events & processes
Michael Roberts, courtesy of The Daily Mirror and Colombo Telegraph
Mark Field’s visit to Sri Lanka is very, very significant. His pronouncements are threaded by the paternalistic air of an Etonian schoolmaster pontificating to students. That should not be allowed to mask the Sword of Damocles that is above the Sri Lankan body via the UNHCR as the instrument of the Western international community.
Filed under accountability, american imperialism, British imperialism, communal relations, democratic measures, electoral structures, ethnicity, governance, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, law of armed conflict, legal issues, life stories, LTTE, patriotism, politIcal discourse, reconciliation, rehabilitation, security, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, terrorism, the imaginary and the real, truth as casualty of war, UN reports, vengeance, war reportage, world events & processes
Diego Garcia is part of the Chagos Atoll, a “group of seven atolls comprising more than 60 individual tropical islands in the Indian Ocean” (Jayaweera 2018). Though discovered in 1512 by the Portuguese explorer Pedro Mascarenhas, it was uninhabited till the French moved in and took over in 1783. The atoll passed to the British after the Napoleonic wars in 1814/15. Thereafter the atoll was administered from Mauritius and was considered part of its domain. Over the years the overseers and workers imported to work the plantations and settlements on the islands became indigenized as “Chagossians” and by the 1960s are said to have been around 1500 in number (note the imprecision).
Filed under accountability, american imperialism, atrocities, British colonialism, British imperialism, centre-periphery relations, colonisation schemes, discrimination, economic processes, foreign policy, governance, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, legal issues, life stories, Middle Eastern Politics, nationalism, politIcal discourse, power politics, Responsibility to Protect or R2P, security, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, transport and communications, trauma, truth as casualty of war, unusual people, working class conditions, world events & processes, World War II
Kamanthi Wickramsingha in Q and A, in Daily Mirror, 14 March 2018, where the title runs “Peace and unity should be in everyone’s heart”
Dharmasiri Bandaranayake, the maverick of Sinhala cinema and theatre, has attempted to portray the reality of the state in every production. From Hansa Vilak to Bawa Duka, Bawa Karma and stage plays such as Eka Adipathi, Dhawala Beeshana, and Makarakshaya [he has] addressed issues from the 1980s riots to the dogma of Buddhism in Sri Lanka to other issues of national and political importance. “If the perpetrators of previous riots and crimes were identified and punished, what happened in Digana would have never happened,” said Bandaranayake in a candid interview with the Daily Mirror. He recently directed ‘Paradise in Tears’ a documentary film which portrays the historical evolution of the ethnic crisis in the country through its various phases. During the interview, Bandaranayake expressed his concerns over the manner in which the country’s rulers have treated people and how they have suffered as a result of ethnic violence, the role of artistes and how people should respond during incidents such as what happened in Kandy.

Filed under accountability, centre-periphery relations, citizen journalism, cultural transmission, education, electoral structures, ethnicity, fundamentalism, historical interpretation, human rights, Islamic fundamentalism, landscape wondrous, life stories, performance, Rajapaksa regime, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, social justice, tolerance, unusual people, world events & processes
Courtesy of My Computer Controller behind the Scenes
Filed under landscape wondrous
Tissa Devendra, in The Island, 3 October 2018, with this title “Mirror of Civilisation” being a book review of The Kandy Asala Maha Perahera – by Dr.Lorna Dewaraja (Vijitha Yapa Publications 2018)
In publishing this fine book, Vijitha Yapa has faithfully fulfilled the last wish that Dr. Dewaraja expressed to her family – to hand over to Vijitha Yapa the manuscript of her book on the Kandy Perahera. I now have the privilege of reviewing this publication.
Filed under art & allure bewitching, British colonialism, cultural transmission, education, elephant tales, heritage, historical interpretation, landscape wondrous, life stories, religiosity, self-reflexivity, sri lankan society, the imaginary and the real, travelogue, unusual people, working class conditions, World War II
Mark Field, in Daily Mirror, where the title is “Why does reconciliation in Sri Lanka matter to the UK?”
Next year Sri Lanka will have enjoyed 10 uninterrupted years free from the misery of armed conflict. Whatever your view on how Sri Lanka has progressed since, that very fact alone is one to cherish. I know how deep the scars from decades of conflict run. When I visited last year I heard first-hand from the families of disappeared persons. It was a stark reminder of how much all communities in Sri Lanka have suffered.
Filed under British imperialism, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, cultural transmission, democratic measures, devolution, Indian Ocean politics, landscape wondrous, legal issues, life stories, modernity & modernization, performance, politIcal discourse, power politics, reconciliation, rehabilitation, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, the imaginary and the real, truth as casualty of war, UN reports, world events & processes
Sanjana Hattotuwa, in The Island, 29 September 2018, where the title is Ïdentity and Belonging”
Sixteen years ago, I met a child soldier. He had a T-56 and was cocky. The A9 had opened up a few months ago, and taking it to Jaffna with a group of journalists, we encountered a checkpoint manned by the LTTE, past Omanthai. The children at the checkpoint, with guns strung around their torso loosely, were in the LTTE’s signature fatigue. Hostile and demanding, they curtly instructed our driver to provide the documentation to enter the area, which at the time the LTTE provided. One clambered into the driver’s seat as I sat in the passenger seat, knowing that if they wanted to be difficult, we would be stuck here for a while. I smiled. He didn’t. He looked around slowly, T-56 placed on the dashboard.
Filed under accountability, authoritarian regimes, communal relations, cultural transmission, democratic measures, economic processes, ethnicity, governance, historical interpretation, human rights, legal issues, life stories, LTTE, politIcal discourse, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil Tiger fighters, truth as casualty of war, world events & processes
Michael Roberts
The years 1966 to 1975 were heady days in Ceylon. Especially so for some of us in Peradeniya Univeristy where the CEYLON STUDIES SEMINAR was launched in November 1968 by a few members of the Arts Faculty assisted by the facilities provided by Professor Gananath Obeyesekera at the Sociology Department – located then on Lower Hantane Road away from the centre of teaching. Not least among these facilities was the service provided by the Sociology Department peon Sathiah[i] who cyclostyled the written seminar papers beforehand for circulation so that those who were keen could read any presentation beforehand if they so wished – a procedure that also maximized discussion time. This background service was seconded by the typing services of Mrs Hettiarachchi in the History Department and Mr Kumaraswamy in the Sociology Department.
A . Jeyaratnam Wilson
Gananath Obeyesekera
Filed under accountability, British imperialism, caste issues, centre-periphery relations, communal relations, cultural transmission, disparagement, education, historical interpretation, language policies, Left politics, life stories, literary achievements, nationalism, parliamentary elections, politIcal discourse, power politics, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, teaching profession, unusual people

