The Colombo Chettiyar Community via Letters received by Nicolaas Ondaatje in Exile in the Cape in Dutch Times

Herman Tieken

Between Colombo and the Cape. Letters in Tamil, Dutch and Sinhala, Sent to Nicolaas Ondaatje from Ceylon, Exile at the Capeof Good Hope (1728-1737). Dutch Sources on South Asia c. 1600-1825. Volume 6. Delhi: Manohar, 2015.

In 1728, the Ceylonese Chettiyar Nicolaas Ondaatje was sent into exile to the Cape of Good Hope where he died in 1737, only a few months before the end of his term. All these years Nicolaas Ondaatje kept in contact with his family and friends in Ceylon through letters in Tamil, Dutch and Sinhala. His own letters are lost but those he received have been preserved. These letters give an intimate picture of an early eighteenth-century elite Chettiyar community in Ceylon employed by the Dutch East India Company. By contrast, at the Cape Nicolaas Ondaatje found himself in the company of the Free Blacks at the very bottom of the social ladder. Though as a convict he was allowed to move about freely, Ondaatje had to provide his own source of income, making a modest living, first as a doctor and trader and later as a home teacher. In the letters, which are kept in the archive in Cape Town, we have chanced upon a classic case of subaltern history. Here we have a protagonist who has been denied a voice by the quirk of the availability of historical documents, but whose situation comes through in the concern his family and friends show for him in exile thousands of miles away, over nine long years. The letters give an excellent picture of the loyalty of the Chettiyars to one of their own, of their unfailing Christian faith, and of their meticulous account keeping. That we will never know what Nicolaas Ondaatje did to deserve his long exile or how he died shortly before his term ended makes his life history all the more poignant.

DUTCH source-6 (1) Continue reading

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The Exile of Sri Vikrama Rajasinha, the Last King of Kandy, … amidst other Banished Potentates

Robert Aldrich, University of Sydney

In 1815, in completing their conquest of Ceylon, the British deposed, captured and exiled the last king of Kandy, Sri Vikrama Rajasinha, banishing the king, members of his family and servants to Vellore, India, where he spent the remainder of his life.  I am currently doing research on the circumstances of the king’s deposition and exile, the fate of the former sovereign and his entourage in exile, and the place of the king and the Kandyan dynasty in Sri Lankan memory, history-writing and commemoration.  Of interest, too, is the exile of leaders of the 1817-1818 resistance movement against the British to Mauritius.

capture pf Sri Vikrama Capture of Sri Vikrama Rajasinha Continue reading

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National Anthem in Sinhala and Tamil 4th February 1949

INDEPENDENCE COMMEMORATION

ALSO SEE Michael Roberts: “Ideological Cancers within the Sinhala Universe,” 13 May 2014,  https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/ideological-cancers-within-the-sinhala-universe/

AND COMPARE: “National Anthem only in Sinhala; Tamil version out,” 23 December 2010….  https://thuppahis.com/2010/12/13/national-anthem-only-in-sinhala-tamil-version-out/

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The Mysterious Background of the Monster ISIS

Ameen Izzadeen , courtesy of The Daily Mirror, 20 March 2015,  where the title reads: “ISIS: The mystery behind the monster”

“… when you see them pray, you will look to them and think they are better than you; when they fast, you will think that they are better than you; they will recite Qur’an very well but it will never reach their throats, and they will leave the deen (the religion) like the arrow from the bow…” This was a warning from Prophet Muhammad about a group who were to come at a later time. 

In early Islamic history, there was a group called Khwarij who fitted this description. They were zealots, but apparently failed to comprehend the spirit of Islam. Yet, hordes of youths lured by the Khwarij’s fanaticism left their homes to join the group. Ali, Islam’s fourth Caliph, declared war against them fearing their harmful ideology would destroy Islam.  Continue reading

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Sex and Serendipity in Lanka with Robert Aldrich’s New Book

Cultural Encounters and Homoeroticism in Sri Lanka: Sex and Serendipity has just appeared in print …. Published by Routledge, London, 2014.  Hardback and e-book, 234 pages.  (ISBN 978-0-415-74236-8)**

Sri Lanka was long known to travellers for its beautiful landscape, fascinating culture and unparalleled position at the crossroads of the Indian Ocean.  This book explores the sojourns of some of those who came to the island, those with a homosexual sensibility – figures such as the Victorian social reformer Edward Carpenter and the German naturalist Ernst Haeckel, the French dandies Count d’Adelswärd-Fersen and Count de Mauny, such American and British writers as Paul Bowles and Arthur C. Clarke, and the Australian painter and diarist Donald Friend.  The writings, art and other works of these figures showed, in addition to their fascination with Sri Lanka, a particular attraction to young Sri Lankan men, as models, companions, friends and occasionally as partners.  This homoerotic fascination was also reflected in the work of several Sri Lankans, notably in the photographs of Lionel Wendt.

Lionel Wendt Photo Continue reading

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Charles Sarvan’s Essays in Sri Lanka : A Paradise Lost?

cvr_1 -Charles

“This modest collection is dedicated to those few Sri Lankans, women and men, who have publicly and persistently stood up for values which would make the county a truly ‘beautiful’ island: a happier place for all, irrespective of ethnic group, religion, sex or class. (I mean attributes such as freedom and justice, decency and equality: sama samaja).  In different ways and in different degree, they have paid a price.” ……..ISBN 978-93-84129-59-0

Publisher: CinnamonTeal Publishing, Goa, India ………………Email: contactus@cinnamonteal.in

II. ‘Race’ versus religion: sharing some thoughts ….. A fresh essay by Charles Sarvan

One of my sons took me to see the Martin Luther King film, ‘Selma’, which opens with 15 September 1963 and the explosion at an African-American Baptist church in Birmingham, Alabama, killing four children. The scene reminded me of the poem ‘Ballad of Birmingham’, published in 1968 by African American Dudley Randall (1914-2000): “Mother dear, may I go downtown        Instead of out to play, And march the streets of Birmingham In a Freedom March today?” “No, baby, no, you may not go, For the dogs are fierce and wild, And clubs and hoses, guns and jails Aren’t good for a little child.” “But, mother, I won’t be alone. Other children will go with me, And march the streets of Birmingham To make our country free.” “No baby, no, you may not go For I fear those guns will fire. But you may go to church instead And sing in the children’s choir.” She has combed and brushed her night-dark hair, And bathed rose petal sweet, And drawn white gloves on her small brown hands, And white shoes on her feet. The mother smiled to know that her child Was in the sacred place, But that smile was the last smile To come upon her face.  Continue reading

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A Rich History! Richmond College, Galle

Forgotten History of Richmond College by Ananda Dias Jayasinha is now available ….

Richmond HISTORY COVER

I. A Review by Ananda Ariyaratne

Social enlightenment is a natural reflection of level of the intellectual capacity of any society. It in turn was always dependent on the civilizations both local as well as those interacted. Sri Lanka is a land that can boast about her own unique civilization that had evolved in an environment that was always open to outside influence while providing the opportunity to progress in a kind of isolation that affected its identity which is in several ways similar to all the island civilizations of the world. Sri Lanka is such an island civilization that clearly shows that external influence coming from another land thousands of miles away.

Although, Sri Lanka was affected by all the seafaring nations that had their people crisscrossing the vast Indian Ocean, the most outstanding and inseparable features had been left behind by the British. Two other European nations had a foothold in the coastal regions but were unable to penetrate deep into the hinterland like the British who took the complete control of this land in 1815 after controlling the coastal lands from 1796, within a very short period like nineteen years. Continue reading

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Let us ALL hail King Sangakkara” — A British Reporter

Stephen Brenkley in The Independent 16 March 2015, with the title Kumar Sangakkara: Why all should kneel before king Kumar…”

SANGA 1 Towards the end of his great speech at Lord’s four years ago, Kumar Sangakkara offered an inkling of what drives him. By this time the audience was already rapt to the point of eating from his hand and soon, to a man and woman, it would be on its feet cheering. “In our cricket we display a unique spirit, a spirit enriched by lessons learnt from a history spanning over two-and-a-half millennia,” Sangakkara said. “In our cricket you see the character of our people, our history, culture and tradition, our laughter, our joy, our tears and regrets. It is rich in emotion and talent. My responsibility as a Sri Lankan cricketer is to further enrich this beautiful sport, to add to it and enhance it and to leave a richer legacy for other cricketers to follow.” Continue reading

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Sri Lanka’s Ancient Rainforest Human Being!

The Hindu, March 2015 where the title is Humans adapted to living in rainforests much earlier”

evolutionAn analysis of teeth dating back up to 20,000 years in Sri Lanka has suggested that humans adapted to living in rainforests much earlier than thought. The researchers from Oxford University, working with a team from Sri Lanka and the University of Bradford, analysed the carbon and oxygen isotopes in the teeth of 26 individuals, with the oldest dating back 20,000 years.

They found that nearly all the teeth analysed suggested a diet largely sourced from the rainforest. The study, published in the journal Science shows that early modern humans adapted to living in the rainforest for long periods. Previously it was thought that humans did not occupy tropical forests for any length of time until 12,000 years after that date, and that the tropical forests were largely ‘pristine’, human—free environments until the Early Holocene, 8,000 years ago. Continue reading

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Sangakkara in Superlatives: Beyond the Boundary

Michael Roberts, courtesy of Colombo Telegraph, 13 March 2015 – where there may be blog comments eventually: see https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/superlatives-for-sangakkara/

Kumar Sangakkara has rightfully received measured accolades as well as superlative praise from many a quarter for his unprecedented batting mastery marked through four World cup centuries in a row. Perhaps the most meaningful comments came during the early part of his innings at Bellerive Oval, Hobart when Mark Nicholas and Tom Moody referred to (1) his meticulous preparation and batting practice at the nets, (2) his Colin Cowdrey lecture and (3) his library of books and (4) an abiding interest in cultural artefacts which leads him to visit antique stores and bookshops in every which place.

This breadth of vision and acumen makes his sporadic, but not infrequent errors[1] in calling for runs all the more stark and unusual: not only because these errors signal a failure in assessment , but also because each error can make a difference between victory and defeat for his side.[2] Continue reading

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