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Dansal– prompted by generosity and mercy

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Directed an accusation at me, asking, “Why do you criticize the way Buddhism is practised by many in Sri Lanka?” I was chastised; he spoke the truth. Even in my last article on Mihintale in this column, I said most Buddhists did not follow the Buddha Word – his Dhamma – but created their own version of the philosophy of the Buddha’s advice to work towards the ending of samsaric existence. They create a religion of rites, rituals and behaviour, concentrating on worship and treating the Buddha as a deity who could and would help when seeking help.

What prompted this friend to chastise me? His journey down to Colombo from Nuwara Eliya on the day following Poson Poya when he was impressed by the very many dansal he passed on the way and was flagged down to partake of what the dansale had to offer. “There is so much mercy in people,” he said, “and the desire to give. Most of those we passed were not rich, but they seemed to share what they had like manioc or gram or whatever.” He then quoted Shakespeare from The Merchant of Venice where in Act IV, Scene 1, Portia defends Antonio against Shylock demanding his pound of flesh for failing to redeem the loan the Venetian ship owner had taken from the moneylender Jew.

The quality of mercy is not strained;
It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest;
It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.

It dawned on me the quote was relevant since most who organize and run dansales exhibit the quality of mercy. It is not merely generosity that prompts dansales but giving food and drink to those hungry and thirsty who are on a journey and thus the element of mercy coming in.

Mercy is defined as ‘compassion or forgiveness shown towards someone whom it is within one’s power to punish or harm.’ But mercy can simply mean feeling generous, exhibiting fellow-feeling; which are the major prompts for dansals.

Gathered info”

A total of 19,185 dansal have been registered across the country, in line with the Poson Poya Day celebrations, the Ministry of Health has confirmed, with 944 in Colombo, 1,792 in Gampaha, 1,264 in Kandy, 352 in Nuwara Eliya, 2,301 in Anuradhapura, 3 each in Jaffna and Kilinochchi, 17 in Mullaitivu,, …” (I have picked up numbers from a list of 26 towns). Meanwhile, a special set of guidelines had been issued by the Director General of Health Services for organisers of these outlets of food and beverages, including registration, data collection by health inspectors, supervision of preparation of food, raw material used, disposal of waste etc. It was good to know that safety and health are ensured, as far as possible, by the Health Department.

I also read an article by Kalakeerthi Dr Edwin Ariyadasa in the Daily Mirror of April 20, 2015. I quote: “The Vesak season brings in its slip stream, an enthralling spiritual joy… But, among the vast host of items that spell Vesak, there is a unique feature, which to my mind remains largely unsung and inadequately chronicled, and if celebrated at all, peripherally. This phenomenon bears the Sinhala title ‘dansala.’ I find it hard to identify an English equivalent… we can settle for the expression ‘open house.”

He goes on to write that he came across a ‘Hulan Dansala’ which inflated bicycle tyres and those of vehicles. “For all we know, some open house keepers may have borrowed a page from King Dutugemunu. They could very well have dansal where visitors would be given free shaves and haircuts. King Dutugemunu gave his people free baths, free clothes, over and above free food and drinks. The services of barbers were also free.”

Origin

The above about King Dutugemunu is one pointer to how dansal and the concept of it began. I found no definite origin in my searching of the literature. Hence my surmise that it came down from the time of the Buddha. Giving and the encouragement of charity are inherent in all religions, even in those of the time of the Buddha, like Jainism.

I like to think of pinna pata – Buddhist monks going around silently from house to house where their bowls are filled with whatever the household had to offer – as an origin of dansal. Both have the common denominators of giving, generosity, food and drink, to those walking past and needful of food.

This wonderful practice has been continuously present in our country. I remember as a kid waiting for the monk from the Katukele temple along Halloluwa Road to come on his pinna paatha round. There he stood with lowered eyes at the entrance to our open verandah and Mother with reverence and generosity, served whatever she had prepared.

This practice is observed during the three months of the Vas season by the younger monks at the Narada Bauddha Dharmayatana on Sarana Road. The young monks go on their alms round early morning. The collected food in the several bowls is mixed and all the monks resident in the Buddhist Centre partake of it for breakfast.

Thus, alms of food are a practice coming down from the Buddha’s time. Dansal extends the giving of alms to lay people.

Another national feature of long ago could be a source for dansal. In ancient times people in this country travelled distances which could not be tackled by walking, in bullock carts. Wayside ambalamas were temporary shelters for such travellers. Thus maybe, villagers along routes would look out for long distance travellers and serve them meals, if they were not equipped to cook their own. Isn’t the latter manner of being self-sufficient in food resorted to by our rural folk, even urban, who go on pilgrimage in buses and vans? They stop about an hour before meal time and while the men bathe in rivers or wewas and perchance imbibe, the cooks make hearths and cook food for the travellers.

A relative from Ratnapura used to tell us Kandy folk how they travelled to Kataragama before the motorable road from Tissa to Kataragama was opened. They would travel to Tissamaharama in their vehicles, probably stay overnights in the Tissa Rest House, and early the next morning shift themselves and their baggage to one or more bullock carts and trundle along with discomfort the nearly 12 miles to the sacred site of Kirivehera and the kovil at Kataragama. Maybe they cooked their food en route, since it took two whole days to complete the journey. Sure villagers on the way offered food and drink – a habit to be generous among people.

However, the invariable smidgeon of dung appears in some pots of curd.

Usually, money is collected for a dansal; if no sponsor is available. Most often it is a collective undertaking. Some ruthless men make Vesak and Poson opportunities for making black money. They come with lists already marked with amounts in the thousands as collected for their generous gesture. Often it’s a ferocious looking man who totes the list around. Refusal sometimes provokes abuse.

Spontaneous magnanimity

A friend of my son lived next door to where Ranjan Wijeratne resided down Maitland Place, Minister in President Premadasa’s Cabinet and also State Minister for Defense. When he was assassinated on March 2, 1991, his funeral was at his home. Thus, a long queue passed the house of my son’s friend. He and his brother spent their collected pocket money to buy bottles of aerated water. Placing a table on the roadside, they distributed drinking water and soft drinks to those in the queue – an instantaneous dansale sans all fanfare.

A video clip circulated during the Poson season was of a white woman making pancakes by the hundred and filling them with sambal or polpani. Her servants constructed a small hut and placed a table within. Her two children – aged around 7 and 5 – ran up and down in front of their dansala, persuading three wheelers particularly and pedestrians to come partake of their fare. A sight to melt the dourest heart. Generosity taught incidentally and that giving brings joy to the giver too.

Sri Lanka has an international reputation for friendliness and smiles all round. Generosity and hospitality too could be added to these attributes.



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Putting people back into ‘development’ – a challenge for South

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In need of swift empowerment; working people of Sri Lanka.

Should Sri Lanka consider an 18th IMF programme? Some academicians exploring Sri Lanka’s development prospects in depth are raising this issue. It is yet to emerge as a hot topic among policy and decision-making circles in this country but common sense would sooner rather than later dictate that it be taken up for discussion by the wider public and a decision arrived at.

The issue of an 18th IMF programme was raised with some urgency locally by none other than Dr. Ganeshan Wignaraja,Visiting Senior Fellow, ODI Global London, one of whose presentations, made at the Regional Centre for Strategic Studies (RCSS), Colombo, was highlighted in this column last week, May 7th. An IMF programme is far from the ideal way out for a bankrupt country such as Sri Lanka but a policy of economic pragmatism would indicate that there is no other way out for Sri Lanka. Such a programme is the proverbial ‘Bird in the hand’ for Sri Lanka and it may be compelled to avail of it to get itself out of the morass of economic failures it is bogged down in currently.

While local economic growth possibilities are far from encouraging at present, such prospects globally are far from bright as well. Some of the more thought-provoking data in the latter regard were disclosed by Dr. Wignaraja. For example, ‘The IMF’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook projects global growth slowing to 3.1 percent in 2026; with downside risks dominating: prolonged conflict, geopolitical fragmentation, renewed trade tensions, bearing down hardest on emergent and developing economies.’

However, as is known, an ‘IMF bailout’ is fraught with huge risks for the people of a developing country. ‘The Silver Bullet’ brings hardships for the people usually and they would be required by their governments to increasingly ‘tighten their belts’ and brace for perhaps indefinite material hardships and discontent. For Sri Lanka, the cost of living is unsettlingly high and 20 percent of the population is languishing below the poverty line of $ 3.65 per day.

These statistics should help put the spotlight on the people of a country, who are theoretically the subjects and beneficiaries of development, and one of the main reasons, in so far as democracies are concerned, for the existence of governments. Placing people at the centre of the development process is urgently needed in the global South and shifting the focus to other considerations would be tantamount to governments dabbling in misplaced priorities.

Technocrats are needed for the propelling of economic growth but a Southern country’s main approach to development cannot be entirely technocratic in nature. The well being of the people and how it is affected by such growth strategies need to be prime focuses in discussions on development. Accordingly, discourses on how poverty alleviation could be facilitated need urgent initiation and perpetuation. There is no getting away from people’s empowerment.

In the South over the decades, the above themes have been, more or less, allowed to lapse in discussions on development. With economic liberalization and ‘market economics’ being allowed to eclipse development, correctly understood, people’s well being could be said to have been downplayed by Southern governments.

The development issues of Southern publics could be also said to have been compounded over the years as a result of the hemisphere lacking a single and effective ‘voice’ that could consistently and forcefully take up its questions with the global powers and institutions that matter. That is, the South lacks an all-embracing, umbrella organization that could bring together and muster the collective will of the South and work towards the realization of its best interests.

This columnist has time and again brought up the need for concerned Southern sections to explore the potential within the now virtually moribund Non-Aligned Movement to reactivate itself and fill the above lacuna in the South’s organizational and mobilization capability. In its heyday NAM not only possessed this institutional capability but had ample ‘voice power’ in the form of its founding fathers, with Jawaharlal Nehru of India, for example, proving a power to reckon with in this regard. The lack of such leaders at present needs to be factored in as well as accounting for the South’s lack of power and presence in the deliberative forums of the world that have a bearing on the hemisphere’s well being.

The Executive Director of the RCSS, Ambassador (Retd) Ravinatha Aryasinha, articulated some interesting thoughts on the above and related questions at a forum a couple of months back. Speaking at the launching of the book authored by Prof. Gamini Keerewella titled, ‘Reimagining International Relations from a Global South Perspective’, at the Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies, Colombo, Amb. Aryasinha said, among other things: ‘Historically, there is a precedent that has been realized by the Non-Aligned group of countries – unfortunately, rather than being reformed and modified at the end of the Cold War, it has been tossed away.’

The inability of the nominally existent NAM to come out of its state of veritable paralysis and voice and act in the name of the South in the current international crises lends credence to the view that the organization has allowed itself to be ‘tossed away.’ The challenge before NAM is to prove that it is by no means a spent force.

As indicted, NAM needs vibrant voices that could advocate value-based advancement for the global South. Moral principles need to triumph over Realpolitik. Such transformative changes could come to pass if there is a fresh meeting of enlightened minds within the South. Pakistan by offering to mediate in the ongoing conflict between the US and Iran, for instance, proved that there are still states within the South that could look beyond narrow self-interest and work towards some collective goals. Hopefully, Pakistan’s example will be emulated.

Along with Pakistan some Gulf states have shown willingness to work towards a de-escalation of the present hostilities in West Asia. This could be a beginning for the undertaking of more ambitious, collective projects by the South that have as their goals political solutions to current international crises. These developments prove that the South is not bereft of visionary thinking that could lay the basis for a measure of world peace. That is, there are grounds to be hopeful.

NAM needs to see it as its responsibility to make good use of these hopeful signs to bring the South together once again and work towards the realization of its founding principles, such as initiating value-based international politics and laying the basis for the collective economic betterment of Southern people.

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Artificial Intelligence in Academia: Menace or Tool?

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(The author is on X as @sasmester)

I have often been told by university colleagues how soulless and dangerous ‘artificial intelligence’ (AI) is to academia and humanity. They lament that students no longer read anything as they can now get various AI programmes to summarise what is recommended which is mostly in the English language to Sinhala or Tamil or get easier versions in English itself. They get their assignments and even dissertations fully or partially written by AI. And I am led to believe that universities do not have reliable detection software to assess plagiarism and academic fraud that have been committed using AI beyond the software freely available on the internet with their own limitations. This is due to financial restrictions in these institutions. Even these common malpractices have been done mostly with the aid of free AI programmes which are readily available, which means cheating in this sense is free and mostly safe. For teachers, this is a ‘menace’ in the same way ‘copying’ once was. But its implications are far worse.

But given the global investments made over AI, it cannot be wished away despite the enormous negative impact its use has on the environment, particularly due to its massive demand for energy. So, AI is with us to stay, and it has a considerable role to play in human civilisation even though like most innovations and inventions, this too carries its own burden of negativity. In this context, instead of demonising AI and lamenting its replacement of human agency and ingenuity, one needs to think seriously about how to deal with and engage with it reflectively and pragmatically as there is much it can offer if people are intelligent enough to make rational and sensible choices.

When I am making these observations, I am restricting myself to a handful of practices involving only writing both in university-based examination processes and in the fields of creative writing.

My initial introduction to AI was through the Research Methods class I used to teach in New Delhi. In 2022, this class was supposed to go to Dharmshala in Uttar Pradesh for fieldwork training, and we needed to write a funding proposal quickly. One of the students in the class, already familiar with ChatGPT introduced by OpenAI as a free programme in 2022, did the proposal with its help before the two-hour class was over. I edited it soon after and sent it off to the university administration for funding which we received. That stint of field work was completed in five days and was the most detailed work undertaken as a training programme up to that time in the university which had considerable output ranging from a documentary film to a detailed ethnography based on the findings.

While the technical details, the format of the proposal and its basic writing were done by AI due to the time constraints the class faced, its fine-tuning was done by me and a few students. AI could not then and even now cannot undertake that level of specificity without close human intervention. But the film, the ethnography and the actual process of research had nothing to do with AI. It was the result of human labour, thinking, planning and at times creativity and ingenuity. This was an early example of how AI could coexist in an academic environment if its technical usefulness was clearly understood and potential for excesses was also understood. But this was a time, easily accessible AI was just emerging, and we did not know much about it. But I was fortunate enough to have intelligent students in my class who gave me a crash course into this kind of AI use, which I followed up with my own reading and experimentation later on. As a result, I am keener now to see how it can be used for the betterment of academic practice rather than taking an uncritically demonising position, which I know will not lead anywhere.

But how is this possible? The lamentations of my colleagues about the abuse of AI in academic practice is not unfounded. It is a serious threat that remains mostly unaddressed not only in our country but almost everywhere else in the world too. This is mostly because the advancements of AI even in day-to-day free usage have far exceeded any thoughts for actionable codes of ethics to ensure its practice is sensible and ethical. At the same time, I cannot see why a student should not use AI to correct his spelling and grammar in assignments. I also cannot see why a student cannot seek AI’s help to secure research material from secondary sources available online which I have been doing for years. For instance, the originals of specific books and rare manuscripts might not be available in any repositories in our part of the world. In such situations, what AI might find us is all we have access to in a world where we are restricted in our mobility due to semi-racist visa regimes of failed empires and former superpowers as well as our own lack of ability to travel due to our own unenviable economic conditions. But unfortunately, the materials we need are often only available in research centers and libraries in those nations.

Similarly, when it comes to academic prose, it makes no sense now to take years to translate works from multiple languages to Sinhala and Tamil. This has always been a time-consuming, cumbersome and expensive process. Non-availability of Sinhala and English translations of core originals in languages such as English, French, German and so on has been a long-term problem for our country. But this can now be done well – at least from English to our languages – quite quickly and with a very low margin for error by using specific AI programmes which are meant to do precisely this. What this means is a quick expansion of knowledge in local languages which would have ordinarily taken years to achieve or might not have been possible at all. But still, this needs significant human intervention and time towards perfection. However, I do not think AI-based translations work as well for fiction and poetry or creative works more generally. But the ability for AI to emulate nuance and feeling in language is fast emerging. These are two clear examples of improving technical abilities in research and writing in which AI can be of help.

But looking for sources of information with help the help of AI or using it as a tool to undertake essential translations from one language to another is quite different from simply using it without ascertaining the accuracy of collected information, getting AI to do all your work without any reflection or without any hard work at all, including engaging AI to do the final product in a writing assignment — be that a term paper or a work of fiction. If one proceeds in this direction, as many unfortunately do nowadays, then, our ability to think and be creative as a species will become diminished over time and our sense of humanity itself will take a toll. This is what my colleagues worry about when they say AI is making younger generations soulless.

It is here that ethical practices on how to use AI responsibly without compromising our sense of humanity must play a central role. But these ethical practices must be formally written and taught, followed by viable programmes for detection and publication if unethical practices are followed. This needs to be the case particularly in teaching institutions as well as the broader domain of creative writing. After all, what is the fun in reading a novel or a collection of poetry written by AI?

It is time people began to think about what AI can do in their own fields without falling prey to its power and their own laziness. This brings to my mind Geoffrey Hinton’s words: “There is no chance of stopping AI’s development. But we need to ensure alignment; to ensure it is beneficial to us …” Similarly, as Yann LeCun observed, “AI is not just about replicating human intelligence; it’s about creating intelligent systems that can surpass human limitations.” In this sense, it is up to us to find our edge in creativity and common sense to find the most sensible way forward in using AI.

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Engelbert’s 90th birthday bash

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The legendary Engelbert Humperdinck, who is known for his hit songs such as ‘A Man Without Love’, ‘Release Me’, ‘Spanish Eyes’, ‘The Last Waltz’, ‘Am I That Easy To Forget’, ‘Ten Guitars’ and ‘I Can’t Stop Loving You’, turned 90 on 02 May, 2026, and there were some lovely Hollywood-related celebrations.

Before his birthday, Engelbert’s new single ‘I’ve Got You’ was released – on 23 April – and Engelbert had this to say: “‘I’ve Got You’ is especially close to my heart. It speaks to love, loyalty, and the quiet strength we find in one another”.

The main birthday event was held at The Starlight Cabaret, in Los Angeles, California, and Sri Lankan Raju Rasiah, now based in the States, and his wife Renuka, who are personal friends of Engelbert, were invited to participate in the celebrations, along with Ingrid Melicon – also a Sri Lankan, now domiciled in America.

The invitation said “An evening of music, memories and celebration. Let’s make it a night to remember!” And it certainly turned out to be a night never ever to be forgotten!

Invitees experienced a “magical entrance” with Engelbert’s name lighting up the screen and showing him performing his hit songs.

The invitees were also presented with a unique gift – a necklace with Engelbert’s face, engraved with the words “Remember, I Love You.”

Engelbert’s son, Bradley Dorsey, sang a tribute song ‘Only You’ for his dad, while Eddy Fisher’s daughters, Tricia and Joely, also got on stage to entertaining the distinguish gathering.

Engelbert didn’t perform but got on stage for the cutting of the birthday cake.

There was also a video compilation of birthday wishes from fellow celebrities, and the lineup included Gloria Gaynor, Micky Dolenz, Wayne Newton, Pat Boone, Lulu, Judy Collins, Deana Martin, Angélica María, Rupert Everett, Matt Goss, and more.

Birthday boy Engelbert Humperdinck

At 90, Engelbert is still performing. He’s on THE CELEBRATION TOUR for his 90th year, with over 50 international dates in 2026, including Australia, Germany, the US, and Canada. He’ll be at Massey Hall in, Toronto, on 06 October, 2026. He said: “The stage is my home… Canada has always been a highlight”.

He performed 60+ concerts, worldwide, in 2025, and says karaoke keeps his songs fresh: “Most of my songs are on karaoke because people love to sing them”.

 

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