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Unusual Challenges in Iraq

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Hotel Babylon Oberoi

Part Five
PASSIONS OF A GLOBAL HOTELIER

Dr. Chandana (Chandi) Jayawardena DPhil
President – Chandi J. Associates Inc. Consulting, Canada
Founder & Administrator – Global Hospitality Forum
chandij@sympatico.ca

Planning for Two Hotel Operations

I was thrilled when the General Manager of Hotel Babylon Oberoi confidentially informed me to be ready to take over the management of a competitor five-star hotel in Baghdad. That same day, I began my strategic planning, assuming the takeover would occur within two weeks. Discreetly, I identified chefs, restaurant managers, and bar supervisors who could be transferred on short notice.

My initial reaction was a shock. The Iraqi government had abruptly decided to terminate the management contract of another hotel, which was run by a professional team employed by a well-known international hotel corporation. I felt saddened for the expatriate managers who would be forced to leave Iraq once Oberoi took over the management. However, in the business world, one organization’s misfortune often translates to another’s opportunity. I was eager to oversee two large operations with 18 food and beverage outlets and around 400 employees. I always loved the challenge of running multiple operations concurrently.

Radeef – The Second Fiddle

In 1989, Iraq’s five-star hotels managed by international corporations were generally allowed to operate with some degree of autonomy. However, the Iraqi government frequently interfered indirectly with spies and occasionally interfered directly with the style of management. These hotels were primarily managed by expatriates, with a few key positions, such as Human Resources Manager, Chief Engineer, and Security Manager, held by qualified and experienced locals. All other management positions at hotels were held by foreigners, with one exception.

Each hotel also had an Iraqi Deputy General Manager, known as the Radeef, meaning “second fiddle.” Most Radeefs had no qualifications or experience in hotel management; their main requirement was loyalty to Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party. They reported directly to the State Organization of Tourism in Iraq (Tourism) and were tasked with monitoring the actions of expatriate managers, reporting any unusual or suspicious activities. In 1989 no one was trusted in Iraq.

Our hotel’s Radeef was a former school teacher before being assigned to Hotel Babylon Oberoi and he was clueless about hotel operations and administration. He never attended our management team meetings and only left his office to dine in the hotel restaurants with Iraqi VIPs and attend confidential meetings outside the hotel.

Recognizing Radeefs’ importance to the owners, I tried to maintain a cordial relationship with him, but he rarely communicated with us. After an incident where the American General Manager at the other hotel showed disrespect to the head of Tourism, leading to their expected loss of the management contract, our Radeefs’ behaviour changed dramatically. He became more active and interfering, likely following direct orders from his superiors at the Baath Party.

The Radeef began walking around the hotel, interfering in departments, giving instructions to junior staff, and micromanaging. At a morning briefing, I informed the General Manager, “Mr. Misra, I have a new problem in my division. Radeef has started giving direct orders to the restaurant managers and head waiters. Can you kindly inform him to go through me for any changes in the food and beverage division, and I will respectfully comply with any reasonable request. He should follow the chain of command.”

At that point Misra gestured for me to stop talking. When I continued to complain, saying, “Radeef must not undermine the authority of divisional heads and departmental managers,” Misra became annoyed. He stood up and gestured with his index finger for me to follow him, leaving the rest of our management team baffled.

I followed Misra to the middle of the front garden of the hotel. “Mr. Jayawardena, please don’t complain about Radeef in my office, which is wiretapped! Everything we discuss there can be heard at the Baath Party head office.” I was sceptical but decided to keep quiet.

Misra continued, “Look, I fully understand your frustration. I will deal with it. With the forthcoming favour Oberoi will do for Tourism by taking over the other hotel, I can negotiate to replace the Radeef with a properly qualified and experienced hotelier as the new Deputy General Manager. No five-star hotel in Iraq has been allowed to do this before. In fact, the Radeef will be replaced next week by Mr. P. G. Mathews, a well-known hotelier from India and a graduate of the Oberoi Hotel School.”

Wiretapping as a Welcome Gesture

Within a week, the Radeef left and vacated his office at the hotel. While the maintenance and housekeeping staff prepared the office for the arrival of our new Deputy General Manager, two outsiders with rolls of wire approached me and asked, “Which office will be occupied by Mr. P. G. Mathews?” When I inquired about their role, they responded without hesitation, “We are electricians from the Baath Party head office. We must do an urgent wiring job.” They openly wiretapped the office and left.

When P. G. Mathews (PG) arrived with his wife Roshni and their four-year-old daughter Mihika, my family immediately became good friends with them. Even after 35 years, we keep in touch with them. When I warned PG about his wiretapped office, he was surprised. Following my deputy, T. P. Singh’s funny example, I told PG, “Welcome to Iraq!” PG did not find it amusing.

Our Social Life in Baghdad

Despite the unusual challenges we faced in Baghdad, we enjoyed the friendliness of the Iraqi people and the camaraderie among our expatriate colleagues and friends. The expatriate community was like a close-knit group of career diplomats, always sticking together and watching each other’s backs. We celebrated every occasion, such as birthdays of expatriate managers at the hotel or their kids, with parties.

Our Sri Lankan friends from other hotels, especially the Happuwatte family (Kamal, Preethi, and their daughter Varunika) from Al Rasheed Hotel, visited us frequently, and we visited them at their staff quarters. We also learned from each other’s experiences living in Iraq during these peaceful yet uncertain times.

The Plight of the Kurds

Coming from Sri Lanka, which was in 1989 embroiled in an ethnic separatist war, I was naturally interested in the minority Kurds in Iraq and some neighbouring countries. During my visits to the northern parts of Iraq, I had the opportunity to associate with Kurdish communities.

Some of our new Kurdish friends visited us at our suite at Hotel Babylon Oberoi, though they feared to speak openly about their plight. A regular Kurdish visitor to our suite was a single father named Azad and his three-year-old beautiful daughter, Jiyan. My son Marlon was intrigued by Jiyan’s blond hair and blue eyes, features that are not uncommon among certain Kurdish tribes.

Kurdish people, or Kurds, are an Iranic ethnic group native to the mountainous region of Kurdistan in Western Asia, which spans southeastern Turkey, northwestern Iran, northern Iraq, and northern Syria. Kurds speak the Kurdish languages and the Zaza–Gorani languages. The Kurdish population worldwide is estimated to be over 30 million. Despite their significant population, Kurds do not comprise a majority in any country, making them a stateless people.

Much of the geographical and cultural region of Iraqi Kurdistan is part of the Kurdistan Region, an autonomous area recognized by the Constitution of Iraq. During World War I, the British and French divided West Asia arbitrarily, creating waves of social, political, religious, and economic conflicts over the next century. Defiant to the British, in 1922, Shaikh Mahmud declared a Kurdish Kingdom with himself as king. It took two years for the British to bring Kurdish areas into submission. During World War II, the power vacuum in Iraq was exploited by the Kurdish tribes, leading to a rebellion in the north that effectively gained control of Kurdish areas until 1945, when the Iraqi government, with British support, could once again subdue the Kurds.

During the Iran–Iraq War, the Iraqi government implemented harsh anti-Kurdish policies, resulting in a de facto civil war. Iraq was widely condemned by the international community but was never seriously punished for its oppressive measures. These included the use of chemical weapons against the Kurds, resulting in thousands of deaths just before I arrived in Iraq in 1989. Some accused Saddam Hussein’s government of committing systematic genocide against the Kurdish people, including the wholesale destruction of some 2,000 villages and the slaughter of around 50,000 rural Kurds, by the most conservative estimates.

Hosting Uday Hussein

While awaiting the decision from the Oberoi Hotel corporate office about taking over the management of a competitor hotel in Baghdad, I was compelled to regularly provide hospitality to the notorious Uday Hussein.

Uday, the elder son of President Saddam Hussein, was an influential and feared figure in Iraq. He held numerous positions, including sports chairman, military officer, and businessman, and was the head of the Iraqi Olympic Committee and Iraq Football Association. He also commanded the Fedayeen Saddam, a loyalist paramilitary organization that served as his father’s personal guard. Although dynastic succession is rare in a federal parliamentary republic, Uday was widely considered Saddam Hussein’s heir apparent.

Mrs. Mishra hosting an Oberoi expatriate birthday party for Mihika

Before my first meeting with Uday, I had heard many horror stories about his behaviour. He was reportedly erratically ruthless and intimidating to both perceived adversaries and close friends. Relatives and personal acquaintances were often victims of his violence and rage. Witnesses alleged that he was guilty of rape, murder, and various forms of torture, including the arrest and torture of Iraqi Olympic athletes and national football team members whenever they lost a match.

Uday was reputed as a flamboyant womanizer who financed his lavish lifestyle largely through smuggling and racketeering. He was feared in many circles in Iraq, and people generally avoided making direct eye contact with him. It was my misfortune that Uday’s favourite hangout night club happened to be Githara at Hotel Babylon Oberoi.

One Thursday around 10:00 pm, while I was working as the hotel’s duty manager, I was abruptly approached at the hotel lobby by a tough-looking man in uniform. “I am Ali, the head bodyguard for His Excellency, Uday Hussein. Clear our favourite corner at Githara Night Club for six VVIPs,” he commanded. His words were not a request but an order. “Sure, will do that immediately”, I said and reached to shake his hand, a gesture he rudely ignored.

Working with staff accustomed to these visits, especially on Thursday nights, I quickly made the arrangements. When the group arrived, they were all armed with guns, which they did not surrender at the entrance to the night club, unlike all other patrons who obeyed this house rule. None in my team had the courage to request Uday’s group to respect the house rules.

I clearly remember all details of my first encounter with Uday Hussein, although he avoided speaking with me directly. In his eyes hoteliers were simply servants who must cater to whims and fancies of VVIPs. He was imposing, nearly six and a half feet tall, and looked much older than his official age of 25 in 1989. There was always uncertainty about his exact birthday or whether the person in front of me was Uday himself or his body double, who was reputedly forced to undergo many plastic surgeries. Like his bodyguards, Uday was already under the influence of alcohol. When he spoke with his five bodyguards, I noticed that he had difficulty speaking clearly due to an abnormality in his mouth.

As soon as the group settled in their favourite corner, they scanned the night club for attractive single women. The atmosphere changed immediately; most of the other customers and all our night club staff looked uncomfortable and worried.

Ali then gave his second order to the Night Club Manager, “Twelve portions of the usual! Now!” The bar staff knew the drill and promptly prepared a strong cocktail with whiskey, brandy, vodka, cognac, and champagne. “That’s his favourite to get the girls drunk,” my deputy, T. P. Singh, whispered in my ear. “Boss, I am off now. As per your new instructions, I must return to work before breakfast service. Enjoy your duty manager shift till 4:00 am,” TP left, looking relieved.

I observed as the cocktail was served in a large ‘cup of friendship’, and Uday’s new female friends had to drink it all. Uday was known for forcing guests to consume large quantities of alcohol at his parties. According to some rumours, whoever earned Uday’s friendship had to drink that cocktail, also named the ‘Uday Saddam Hussein’. They were preparing for a night of ‘fun, outrageous adventures, and horror’.

To be continued next week, including a section: ‘My Final Encounter with Uday Hussein’…



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The Ramadan War

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Benjamin Netanyahu, Donald Trump and Mojtaba Khamenei

A Strategic Assessment of a Conflict Still Unresolved

The Unites States of America and its ally, Israel attacked Iran on 28 February, or the 10th day of the month of Ramadan. More than a month of intense fighting has passed since, and the Ramadan War has settled into a grinding, attritional struggle that defies early declarations of victory. Despite sustained U.S. and Israeli air and naval bombardment, Iran remains standing, and continues to strike back with a level of resilience that has surprised many observers. The conflict has evolved into a contest of endurance, adaptation, and strategic innovation, with each side attempting to impose costs the other cannot bear.

Iran’s response to the overwhelming airpower of its adversaries has been both simple and devastatingly effective: saturate enemy defences with swarms of inexpensive drones and older ballistic missiles, forcing them to expend costly interceptors and reveal radar positions, and then follow up with salvos of its most advanced precisionguided missiles. This layered approach has inflicted severe physical damage on Israel and has shaken its national morale. The country has endured repeated missile barrages from Iran and rocket fire from Hezbollah, straining its airdefence network and pushing its civilian population to the limits of endurance.

The United States, meanwhile, has been forced to evacuate or reduce operations at several bases in the Gulf region due to persistent Iranian drone and missile attacks. For both the U.S. and Israel, the war has become a test of strategic credibility. For Iran, by contrast, victory is defined not by territorial gains or decisive battlefield outcomes, but by survival, and by continuing to impose costs on its adversaries.

The central strategic objective for the U.S. has now crystallised: reopening the Strait of Hormuz to secure global energy flows. Ironically, the Strait was open before the war began; it is the conflict itself that has rendered it effectively closed. Air and naval power alone cannot achieve this objective. The geography of the Strait, combined with Iran’s layered defences, means that any lasting solution will require ground forces, a reality that carries enormous risks.

U.S. Strategic Options

The United States faces five broad operational options, each with significant drawbacks.

1. Seizing Kharg Island

Kharg Island handles roughly 90% of Iran’s oil exports, making it an attractive target. However, it lies only a short distance from the Iranian mainland, where entrenched Iranian forces maintain dense networks of missile batteries, drones, artillery, and coastal defences. Any attempt to seize Kharg would require first neutralising or capturing the adjacent coastline, a costly amphibious and ground operation.

Even if successful, this would not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. It would merely deprive Iran of export capacity, which is not the primary U.S. objective. At least ostensibly not; there are those who argue that the U.S. simply wants to take over Iran’s petroleum (see below).

2. Forcing the Strait of Hormuz by Naval Power

Sending U.S. naval forces directly through the Strait is theoretically possible but operationally hazardous. Iran has mined all but a narrow channel hugging its own shoreline. That channel is covered by overlapping fields of antiship missiles, drones, artillery, and coastal radar. Clearing the mines would require prolonged operations under fire. Attempting to push through without clearing them would risk catastrophic losses.

3. Capturing Qeshm, Hengam, Larak, and Hormuz Islands

These islands dominate the Iranian side of the Strait and host radar, missile, and drone installations. Capturing them would degrade Iran’s ability to close the Strait, but the islands are heavily fortified, and the surrounding waters are mined. Amphibious assaults against defended islands are among the most difficult military operations. Even success would not guarantee the Strait’s longterm security unless the mainland launch sites were also neutralised.

4. Invading Southern Iraq and Crossing into Khuzestan

This option would involve U.S. forces advancing through southern Iraq, crossing the Shatt alArab waterway, and pushing into Iran’s Khuzestan province — home to most of Iran’s oilfields. The terrain is difficult: marshes, waterways, and narrow approaches. Iranian forces occupy the high ground overlooking the plains.

While this route would allow Saudi armoured forces to participate, it would also expose U.S. and allied logistics to attacks by Iraqi Shia militias, who have already demonstrated their willingness to target U.S. assets. The political and operational risks are immense.

5. Capturing Chabahar and Advancing Along the Coast

The most strategically promising — though still costly — option is seizing the port of Chabahar in southeastern Iran and advancing roughly 660 kilometres along the coast toward Bandar Abbas. This approach offers several advantages:

· Distance from Iran’s core population centres complicates Iranian logistics.

· Chabahar’s deepwater port (16m draught)

would provide a valuable logistics hub.

· U.S. carriers could remain at safer standoff distances

, supporting operations without entering the Strait.

· The coastal route allows naval gunfire and missile support

to assist advancing ground forces.

· Local Baluchi insurgents

could provide intelligence and limited support.

· Capturing Bandar Abbas would

outflank Iran’s island defences and effectively reopen the Strait.

This option is likely to form the backbone of any U.S. ground campaign, potentially supplemented by diversionary attacks by regional partners to stretch Iranian defences.

The Limits of U.S. Superiority

The United States retains overwhelming superiority in naval power and manned airpower. But whether this advantage translates into dominance in unmanned systems or ground combat is far from certain.

The 2003 invasion of Iraq is often cited as a model of U.S. military prowess, but the comparison is misleading. Iraq in 2003 had been crippled by a decade of sanctions. Its forces lacked modern mines, antitank missiles, and effective air defences. Tank crews had little training; some could not hit targets at pointblank range. RPG teams were similarly unprepared. The U.S. enjoyed numerical superiority in the theatre and total control of the air, allowing it to isolate Iraqi units and prevent reinforcement.

Even under those favourable conditions, Iraqi forces managed to delay the U.S. advance. At one point, forward U.S. units nearly ran out of ammunition and supplies, forcing the diversion of forces intended for the assault on Baghdad to secure the lines of communication.

Iran is not Iraq in 2003. Its armed forces and industrial base have adapted to nearly half a century of sanctions. It produces its own drones, missiles, artillery, and armoured vehicles. It has built extensive underground facilities, hardened command posts, and redundant communication networks.

Moreover, the battlefield itself has changed. The RussoUkrainian war demonstrated that deep armoured penetrations – once the hallmark of U.S. doctrine – are now extremely vulnerable to drones, loitering munitions, and precision artillery. The result has been a return to attritional warfare reminiscent of the First World War, with front lines stabilising into trench networks.

Yet, as in the First World War, stalemate has been broken not by massed assaults but by small, highly trained teams infiltrating thinly held lines, identifying targets, and guiding drones and artillery onto enemy positions deep in the rear. Iran has studied these lessons closely.

Mosaic Defence and Transformational Warfare

Iran’s military doctrine has evolved significantly over the past two decades. Its “mosaic defence” decentralises command and control, ensuring that even if senior leadership is targeted, local units can continue operating autonomously. This structure proved resilient during the initial waves of U.S. and Israeli strikes.

Iran has also absorbed lessons from U.S. “shock and awe” operations. The botched U.S. invasion of Grenada in 1983 exposed weaknesses in joint operations, prompting the development of “effectsbased operations,” “rapid dominance” and the broader concept of “transformational warfare.” These doctrines (better known colloquially as “Shock and Awe”), influenced by Liddell Hart and Sun Tzu, emphasised simultaneous strikes on strategic targets to paralyse the enemy’s decisionmaking.

While the U.S. struggled to apply these concepts effectively in Iraq and Iran, Tehran has adapted them for asymmetric use. Its drone and missile campaigns have targeted not only military assets but also economic infrastructure and psychological resilience. Israel’s economy and morale have been severely tested, and the United States finds itself entangled in a conflict that offers no easy exit.

Iran has also pursued a broader strategic objective: undermining the petrodollar system that underpins U.S. financial dominance. By disrupting energy flows and encouraging alternative trading mechanisms, Iran seeks to weaken the economic foundations of U.S. power.

Will the USA Achieve Its War Aims?

The United States’ core objective appears to be securing control over global energy flows by reopening the Strait of Hormuz and limiting China’s access to Middle Eastern oil before it can transition to alternative energy sources. Whether this objective is achievable remains uncertain.

A ground campaign would be long, costly, and politically fraught. Iran’s defences are deep, layered, and adaptive. Its drone and missile capabilities have already demonstrated their ability to impose significant costs on technologically superior adversaries. Regional allies are cautious, and global support for a prolonged conflict is limited.

The United States retains overwhelming military power, but power alone does not guarantee strategic success. Iran’s strategy is simple: survive, adapt, and continue imposing costs. In asymmetric conflicts, survival itself can constitute victory.

In Frank Herbert’s Dune, the protagonist, Paul Muad’dib says “he who can destroy a thing, controls a thing.” This is the essence of Iranian strategy – they have a stranglehold on petroleum supply, and can destroy the world economy. Trump has had to loosen sanctions on both Iran’s and Russia’s oil, simply to prevent economic collapse.

The Ramadan War has already reshaped regional dynamics. Whether it reshapes global power structures will depend on how the next phase unfolds, and whether the United States is willing to pay the price required to achieve its aims.

by Vinod Moonesinghe

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Nayanandaya:A literary autopsy of Sri Lanka’s Middle Class

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“Nayanandaya,” meaning the enchantment of indebtedness, is Surath de Mel’s latest novel. True to his reputation as a maximalist writer, de Mel traverses the labyrinth of middle-class struggles; poverty, unemployment, the quest for education, through a father’s fragile dreams. The novel unfolds around Mahela, his son, his friendships, and the fragile relationships that keep him tethered to life.

“Happiness is not a destination; it is a journey. There are no shortcuts to it. At some point, the path you thought was right will be wrong. You have to make sacrifices for it.”

These words, uttered by the protagonist Mahela to his ten-year-old son, is the silent mantra of every middle-class parent. A common urban middle-class father’s yearning for his child to climb the ladder he himself could not ascend.

A Socio-Political Mirror

Sri Lanka’s middle class remains trapped in paradox. They are educated but underemployed, salaried but indebted, socially respected yet politically invisible. Structural inequalities, economic volatility and populist politics inclusively contribute to keep them “forever middle”.

Through protagonist Mahela, who is sometimes a graphic designer, sometimes a vendor and always a failure Surath de Mel sketches the deficiencies of an education system that does not nurture skills of the students. Sri Lanka boasts about high literacy rates, yet the economy cannot absorb the thousands of graduates produced into meaningful work. Underemployment becomes the inheritance of the middle class. With political connections often the stories can be transformed. De Mel pens it in dark humour to expose these truths:

“Some notorious writer once sneered in a newspaper, ‘Give your ass to the minister, and you’ll earn the right to keep it on a bigger chair.’ Countless people waiting in ministers’ offices, pressing

their backsides to seats, carrying the weight of their own lives.”

Childhood Trauma and Its Echoes

Surath de Mel frequently weaves psychoanalysis into his fiction. In Nayanandaya, he captures the lingering shadows of childhood trauma. Mahela, scarred by a loveless and fractured youth, suffers phobic anxiety and depression, apparently with a personality disorder as an adult. His confession at the psychologist reveals it out:

“Childhood? I didn’t have one. I was fifteen when I was born.”

Here, Mahela marks his true birth not at infancy, but at the death of his parents. This statement itself reveals the childhood trauma the protagonist had gone through and the reader can attribute his subsequent psychological struggles as the cause of it.

Surath de Mel

From a Lacanian perspective, trauma is not just something that happens to a child; it is a deep break in how the child understands the world, themselves, and others. Some experiences are too painful to be put into words. Lacan calls this the Real — what cannot be fully spoken or explained. This pain does not disappear but returns later in life as anxiety, fear, or obsessive compulsive disorder.

This trauma disturbs the child’s sense of self and their place in society. When language fails to make sense of loss, the mind creates fantasies to survive. These fantasies quietly shape adult desires, relationships, and choices.

In Nayanandaya, childhood trauma of the protagonist does not stay buried — it lives on, shaping the adulthood in unseen ways. In the narrative, Mahela’s struggles are not just personal failures but the result of a past that was never given words.

Tears of Fathers – Forgotten in Sri Lankan Literature

Sri Lankan literature has long been attentive to suffering — especially rural poverty, social injustice, and the silent endurance of women and single mothers. Countless novels, poems, and songs have given voice to maternal sacrifice, female resilience, and women’s oppression.

Yet, within this rich narratives, the quiet grief of the urban middle-class father remains mostly unseen. Rarely does fiction pause to examine the emotional lives of men who shoulder responsibility without language for their pain. These masculine tears are private, swallowed by routinely and masked by humour or silence. Definitely never granted literary space.

In Nayanandaya, Surath de Mel breaks this silence. Through Mahela, he lends voice to these overlooked men — fathers whose love is expressed through sacrifice rather than speech. However, de Mel does not romanticise the tears. Rather he humanises them. He allows their vulnerabilities, anxieties, and quiet despair to surface with honesty and compassion. In doing so, Nayanandaya fills a striking gap in Sri Lankan literature, reminding us that fathers, too, carry invisible wounds.

Literary value

With Nayanandaya, Surath de Mel reaches a new pinnacle in his literary craft. His language is dense yet lyrical, enriched with similes, metaphors, irony, and a full range of literary tools deployed with confidence and control.

One of the novel’s most touching narrative choices is the personification of Mahela’s son’s soft toy, Wonie. Through personified Wonie, de Mel captures the two most touching incidents in the entire novel . This simply reveals the author’s artistic maturity, transforming a simple object into a powerful emotional conduit that anchors the novel’s tenderness amidst its despair.

At a deeper symbolic level, Mahela himself can be read as more than an individual character, but a metaphor for Sri Lanka — a nation struggling under economic hardship, clinging to impractical dreams, witnessing the migration of its people, and drifting towards a slow, painful exhaustion. His personal failures could mirror the broader decay of social and economic structures. This symbolic reading lends Nayanandaya a haunting national resonance.

Today, many write and many publish, but only a few transform language into literature that lingers in the reader’s mind long after the final page. Surath de Mel belongs to that rare few. In a literary landscape crowded with voices, he remains devoted to art rather than popularity or trend. As a scholar of Sinhala language and literature, de Mel writes with intellectual depth, dark humour, and deep human empathy.

In conclusion, Nayanandaya is not merely a story; it is social commentary, psychoanalytic reflection, and tragic poetry woven into richly textured prose. With this novel — a masterful interlacing of love, debt, and fragile dreams — Surath de Mel engraves a distinctly Dostoevskian signature into Sinhala literature.

Reviewed by Dr. Charuni Kohombange

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Domestic Energy Saving

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Around 40 percent of the annual energy we use is consumed in domestic activities. Energy is costly, and supply is not unlimited. Unfortunately, we realize the importance of energy – saving only during the time of a crisis.

If you adopt readily affordable energy-saving strategies, you will cut down your living expenditure substantially, relieving the energy burden of the nation. Here are some tips.

Cooking:

Cooking consumes a good portion of domestic energy demand and common practices, and negligence leads to 30 – 40 percent wastage. A simple experiment revealed that the energy expenditure in boiling an egg with the usual unnecessary excess water in an open pan is nearly 50 percent higher than boiling in a closed lid pan with the minimal amount of water. In an open pan, a large quantity of heat is lost via convection currents and expulsion of water vapor, carrying excessive amounts of heat energy (latent heat of vaporisation). Still, most of us boil potatoes for prolonged intervals of time in open receptacles, failing to realise that it is faster and more efficient to boil potatoes or any other food material in a closed pan. About 30 – 40 percent of domestic cooking energy requirements can be cut down by cooking in closed-lid pans. Furthermore, food cooked in closed pans is healthier because of less mixing with air that causes food oxidation. Fat oxidation generates toxic substances. In a closed- lid utensil (not tightly closed), food is covered with a blanket of water vapor at a positive pressure, preventing entry of air and therefore food oxidation.

Overcooking is another bad habit that not only wastes energy but also degrades the nutritional value of food.

Electric kettle:

For making morning or evening tea or preparing tea to serve a visitor. Do not pour an unnecessarily large quantity of water into the electric kettle. Note that the energy needed to make 10 cups of tea is ten times that of one cup.

Electric Ovens:

Avoid the use of electric ovens as far as possible. Remember that foods cooked at higher temperatures are generally unhealthy, and even carcinogens are formed when food is fried at higher temperatures in an oven. If ever you need to bake something in an oven, limit the number of times you open the door. Use smaller ovens adequate for the purpose and not larger ones just for fashion.

Refrigerators:

Refrigerators consume lots of energy. Do not use over-capacity refrigerators just for fashion. Every time you open the fridge, more electricity is used to reset the cooling temperature. Plan your access to the appliance accordingly. Check whether the doors are properly secured and there are no leakages. Keep the fridge in a cooler location, not hit by direct sunlight and away from warmer places in the kitchen. Remember that turning off the fridge frequently will not save energy, instead it draws more energy.

Use of gas burners:

Do not use oversized utensils. Keep the lid closed as far as possible to prevent the escape of heat. Remember that excessive amounts of heat energy are carried away by a large surface-area conducting utensil. Do not open the gas vent to allow the flame to flash outside the vessel. A flame not impinging on the pan would not heat it, and gas is wasted. Ensure that the flame is blue. Frequently check whether gas vents are clogged with rust and carbon. Frequently, cooking material in the pan drops into the gas vents, and salt there corrodes the gas vents. Cleaning and washing would be necessary. Do not prolong cooking, taking time to prepare ingredients and adding them to the pan intermittently. Add ingredients at once and before switching the burner. If the preparation of a dish is prolonged to slow the cooking, use earthenware pots rather than metallic ones. An earthenware pot, being thermally less conducting retain heat.

Firewood for cooking:

Do not attempt to eliminate the use of firewood in cooking. If you are living in a village area, the exclusive use of LPG gas is an unnecessary expenditure. Large smoke-free, efficient oven designs are now available. If you are compelled to use gas, keep the option of firewood ovens, especially for prolonged cooking. Admittedly, there are locations, especially in cities, where the use of firewood is unsuited.

Hot water showers:

Before installing hot water showers, reconsider whether they are really necessary in a hot tropical climate. Go for solar water heaters, although the installation cost is high. Instant water heaters consume much less electricity compared to geysers with water tanks. Now, cheap and safe instant water heaters are available.

Lighting:

Arrange and design your residence to optimise daytime illumination until late evening. If you are constructing a new house, take this issue into account. Use LED lamps, which provide the same illumination for 85 percent less energy. In study rooms and areas that require prolonged illumination, paint the walls white. Angle – poised LED lamps with very low voltage are available. Use them for reading and studies. Routinely clean the surfaces of all lamps. Dust deposition cuts off light.

Air conditioning and ventilation:

Air conditioning consumes prohibitively large quantities of electrical energy. You can avoid air conditioning by optimising ventilation. The principle is to have air entry points (windows) in the house near the ground level and exit points (vents or windows) near the roof. Ground level is cooler, and the region near the roof is warmer. Thus, a cool air current enters the house near the ground level and hot air is drawn by the vents near the roof. The region near the ground can be rendered cooler by planting trees. Architectural designs are available to optimise this effect. You can sense the direction of air motion by holding a thin strip of paper near the windows at the ground and near the roof level. In addition to ceiling fan, install exhaust fans in the upper points of the house to remove hot air and draw cooler air through windows near the ground. Reduce the amount of sunlight hitting the roof by shading with trees. There are techniques for increasing the reflectance of the roof with paints and other designs.

Transportation:

A good portion of your budget is drained by transportation. Irrespective of who you are, use public transport if convenient and available. As much as possible, use the telephone and email to get your things done. If the officers do not comply for no valid reason, complain. Plan your trips to the town to do several things at the same time. Whenever possible, plan to share transport. Buy energy – efficient small vehicles. Routinely examine your vehicle for energy efficiency, i.e. correct tire pressure etc.

Charge electric vehicles off peak hours. Slow charging reduces heat generation in the circuit, reducing energy loss.

Energy is costly and limited in supply. Everything you do consumes energy. Be energy conscious in all your deeds. That attitude will reduce your expenditure, lessen the environmental degradation and financial burden of the nation in importing fuel.

Educating the general public is the most effective way of implementing energy-saving strategies.

By Prof. Kirthi Tennakone
(kenna@yahoo.co.uk)

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