Count de Mauny’s Island as “Taprobane” today in Lanka — itself “Taprobane” in Ancient Times

Michelle Green in The New York Times 26 December 2014, where the title reads “In Sri Lanka, an Island of Detachment and Desire **

Bare-chested fishermen idled on the rocks one afternoon and argued mellifluously. Bony children bobbed in the water, and tinny music drifted from a stall where glistening mahi-mahi was on offer. Not one head turned when cows stumbled into an empty beach cafe, scattering chairs and then wandering into the surf.

TAP ISLAND  Girls play in the bay at Weligama with Taprobane Island in the background. Credit Kuni Takahashi for The New York Times

But the slow-motion beach scene isn’t the attraction at Weligama, an escapist paradise open to the Indian Ocean and an infinite distance from angst. It is outshone by a dollop of an island 200 yards offshore. Ringed by gleaming boulders and topped by a cloud-white villa, Taprobane is now a landmark in Sri Lanka. Created in the 1920s by a Frenchman who claimed to be an aristocrat, the property was once owned by the writer Paul Bowles. Continue reading

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The Third Wave: Welcome to Jihad 3.0, the Unpredictable Third Generation of Terrorists

Michael Wesley, in The Weekend Australian, 21 December 2014 , where the title is Sydney siege: Welcome to Jihad 3.0, the third wave of terrorism and the most unpredictable”

JIHAD 3.0 arrived in Australia at 9.44am on Monday morning. This is a new and more dangerous form of terrorism, and if we misunderstand its methods and intentions, we risk getting our response to it badly wrong. Some commentators argue that because Man Haron Monis had no formal connection to Islamic State, the Martin Place siege should not be regarded as terrorism. Others have argued it was no more than a “lone wolf” attack, a law-and-order issue. But this is a profound misunderstanding of what terrorism has morphed into.

The attack at Martin Place was very different from first-generation or second-generation terrorist attacks — but it was terrorism, and terrorism of a brutal and more unpredictable sort.

sydney siege -APPolice assist a hostage who escaped from the Martin Place siege in Sydney- Pic from AP

First-generation terrorism, which emerged in its modern form in the late 1960s, was waged by secretive, hierarchic organisations such as the Irish Republican Army or the Palestine Liberation Organisation. Its violence was targeted and calibrated, its victims more often than not chosen carefully to be symbolically significant to the terrorist cause. Continue reading

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From within the Heart from within Lanka: Two Poignant Tales in Poem & Prose

PERALIYA plus

I. Chandra Wickramsasinghe: Death of a Son – A Tsunami story”

As the gigantic wave hit the train,

Things seemed to roll over violently

And I found myself in deep water,

Being swept away

So fast, that I could only thrash out and struggle

And think frantically about my son,

My precious child, still in the train,

Till I brushed against some branches

To which I hung on instinctively,

Till the waters ebbed and receded,

Revealing a terrible spectacle of death and devastation,

With dead bodies strewn all over,

Around the grotesquely mangled

Wreckage of the rail track and the train.

After a desperate search,

I found my little boy dead, inside a carriage,

And as I carried his limp body,

With no visible wounds on his tender face,

He seemed in a deep sleep,

From which I fervently prayed, he would wake up. Continue reading

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Tsunami Aftermath in Terrible Photo-Imagery

An aerial shot taken from a helicopter shows debris of houses destroyed by the tsunami waves in Galle, Sri Lanka, on December 27, 2004.  An aerial shot taken from a helicopter shows debris of houses destroyed by the tsunami waves in Galle, Sri Lanka, on December 27, 2004.

Courtesy of http://edition.cnn.com/2014/12/24/world/asia/remembering-sri-lanka-tsunami/

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Out of Tragedy, Fortune for Sri Lankan Seenigama Village via FOG and Worldwide Waves of Compassion

Shihar Aneez, 24 December 2014, at http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/24/us-tsunami-anniversary-srilanka-idUSKBN0K219J20141224

As towering waves came crashing into the southern coast of Sri Lanka on Dec. 26, 2004, Kushil Gunasekera gathered up his children and they ran for their lives to a nearby temple, the highest point they could find. Returning later to his village in Seenigama district, he found a heart-breaking scene of death and devastation: one in four had been killed by the Boxing Day tsunami that swept across the Indian Ocean.

A decade on, Seenigama has risen from the ashes and is now a model of prosperity, thanks in large part to the efforts of Gunasekera who led a relief drive from the ruins of his ancestral home and later gave up his lucrative sugar business to devote himself to a charity he had founded in 1999.   Continue reading

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Sangakkara deployed in Political Canard from Anti-Rajapaksa Circles

Michael Roberts

SANGAOne of the most repulsive dimensions of Sri Lankan society is its propensity to manufacture lies and half-truths demeaning individuals and families. This type of malicious story-telling occurred in administrative and bureaucratic circles from early British times, being encouraged by the institutionalisation of the petition. While petitions could be formal signed documents, unsigned canards and slanders were often deployed by individuals seeking jobs with the target being potential competitors. Such practices must surely have been fostered by the propensity of decision-makers to take note of such machinations — so  much so that kusu-kusufying became an item of Ceylonese English. Continue reading

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American Critique of George Bush in the Light of ISIS and Iraq Today

American DEMO poster

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December 25, 2014 · 2:23 pm

Harrowing Memories! Profound Gestures! Harrow, Tsunami, Galle, Cricket and Vidyaloka College … Two Tales

I= Peter Foster: “Harrovian cricketers return to tsunami scene,” in The Telegraph, 24 December 2014.

A group of Old Harrovian cricketers has marked a symbolic moment on Sri Lanka’s slow road to recovery three years after the island was hit by the Boxing Day tsunami. Charlie Pelham, now 20, was with a team from Harrow School warming up for a match at the cricket ground in the fishing town of Galle when the wave swept in, lifting up their team bus and depositing it on the outfield.

HARROVIANS AT GALLE Julian Ayer’s widow, Harriet, and her son, Spencer Crawley, at the ground in Galle 

The boys and their coaches took refuge on the balcony of the ground’s pavilion and watched in horror as the bus-stand behind was engulfed by a 30ft surge of seawater, killing several thousand people. Continue reading

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Tsunami !! A Survival Celebration at Wijaya in Southern Lanka for the Hill Family from Adelaide

Meredith Booth in The Australian, 22 December 2014,

the HILLs-news corp the Hill family today in Adelaide-Pic News Corp

ADELAIDE survivors Emily Sharp and Michael Hill will mark the tsunami’s anniversary in the same Sri Lankan beach guesthouse, owned by the same couple, from which they miraculously swam on Boxing Day 2004. They’ll be sharing the “humbling experience” of their survival and put a landscape to the story for their sons Finnley, 9, and ­Orlando, 5.

Ms Sharp was six months pregnant with Finn when she and her partner managed eventually to escape to hills behind the village of Wijaya, south of Galle. “We were running through the courtyard while the bar was being ripped and chairs and tables were flying everywhere. Our first instinct was just to run upstairs,’’ she said at the time. Continue reading

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Primordialist Strands in Contemporary Sinhalese Nationalism: Urumaya as Ur

M-roberts by Eranga  Michael Roberts* This article was composed in 2001 and appeared in the Marga booklet series on A History of the Ethnic Conflict in Sri Lanka. It is reproduced here without changes, but has also been embellished with hyperlinks to pertinent items on web — some of which may have been presented more recently. Pictures have also been inserted. As of November 2016 emphases have been introduced via highlighting in blue or dark blue;while paragraph separation has been increased.

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In recent years* I have been working on the subject of Sinhala consciousness over the last four centuries. In the present context of a hot war between forces that represent the Lankan Tamils and those seen to represent the Sinhala majority in particular [in 2000-01], this interest necessarily forces one to take a stance on the contemporary situation. Broadly speaking, my political position is liberal humanist and favours a devolutionary scheme that recognises the Sri Lanka Tamils as a “nationality” and involves a sharing of power, whether at the centre or through federal units or a mixture of the two. This places me alongside articulate elements in Sri Lanka, including several friends at the Colombo branch of the International Centre for Ethnic Studies, the Social Scientists’ Association, the Marga Research Institute and the universities, who advocate this line of politics. Continue reading

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