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Christmas – some reminiscences

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by Dr. V.J.M. de Silva

Introduction – As one who is celebrating his 92nd Christmas, it is with a profound sense of nostalgia that I pen these thoughts. Memories of days gone by, those near and dear, and friends long gone, come crowding in. I feel it all the more, as one who lost his wife and a daughter within a period of one. This year, one can hardly talk of Christmas as a ‘celebration’. The Covid 19 virus disease is certainly playing havoc world-wide. The USA has had 17,000,000 cases and 306,000 deaths; India 10,000,000 cases and 145,000 deaths. Sri Lanka however has had only 34,000 cases and 154 deaths

So, what is Christmas all about? Christmas is thought by most to be a wonderful time, focusing the participants on giving, family togetherness, beautiful music and decorations, feasting on special foods and singing Christmas carols. Though every generation keeps on saying it, Christmas has lost its real meaning. However, it can truly be said that:

“CHRISTmas” minus Christ = X’MAS,

the highly commercialized Christmas we are seeing these days. Secular society sees Christmas as a shopping holiday, and society is only too happy to keep it that way, and big business booming.

Who celebrates Christmas today?

As Philip Jenkins says, the typical Christian today is no longer the white man; he is brown, black or yellow. In 1900, 80% of Christians lived in Europe and North America. Even today the USA remains comparatively more Christian than Europe. Today, 60% live in the developing world. There are 480 million in South America, 360 million in Africa, and 313 in Asia. The majority in these countries are practicing Christians. He defines a Christian as anyone who self-proclaims to be one. Oddly enough, this Christian growth occurred after the period of European conquest and colonialism – (Philip Jenkins, The Next Christendom)

A century ago, less than 10% of Africa was Christian. Today, it is nearly 50%. David Aikman (former Time magazine correspondent in Beijing), observes in his book, Jesus in Beijing, there are now about 100 million Christians in China, who worship in underground evangelical and Catholic churches.

Religious significance of Christmas – One thing that is specific to Christianity is its belief in miracles. The incarnation of Jesus Christ, God appearing on earth in human form, Jesus Christ being one person but two in nature, is one of the central mysteries of the Christian faith. This, together with the Resurrection, Christian apologist C.S. Lewis (1898 – 1963), professor of English Literature at Cambridge University, a former atheist, refers to as ‘The Grand Miracle’ – (God in the Dock), a collection of Lewis’ essays. It is not surprising that finite minds cannot comprehend it. However, I do not propose to deal with theological aspects in this article.

Christmas in Colonial Ceylon

– My earliest recollections of Christmas is of the early 1930s, a few years before World War II. Living, born and bred in Moratuwa, which still has a higher percentage of Christians than the national average, Christmas was celebrated on big scale. Most Christian homes had ‘bucket’ lantern decorations; Christmas trees, cribs which children made themselves. The public holiday period extended for several days (up to New Year, if I remember right), and most of the post – Christmas holidays were spent visiting relatives. There were hardly any cars in that era. A common mode of transport then was ‘buggy cart’. Our family of five (my siblings were two younger sisters), would leave home in the morning, and after five or six visits, we would be back in the evening. By then we had a few balloons, crackers (Chinese), bon-bons, and sparklers – all presents given to us, which we lit at night. There was plenty of Christmas cake, cheese (Swiss and Cheddar), biscuits (Huntly and Palmers, Peak Freans cream crackers) – all imported, (no local Maliban then!), home-made ‘Puhuldosi’, march mellows.

Moratuwa, (apart from carpentry, is a city of musicians), was famous for its Carol parties. There were “Carol carts”, converted and decorated bullock carts, complete with angel, shepherds, and wise-men. The carols, sung by the actors (all in Sinhalese), composed by local dramatists, were haunting melodies. These have all died down with the passing years and the coming of the ÍT era.

A little girl’s letter-

Christmas is associated with Santa Claus, whose origin can be traced to St. Nicholas (AD 270 – 343), a Greek bishop of Myra, present day Turkey, patron saint of children. In 1897, Dr. Philip O’Hanlon, a coroner’s assistant in Manhattan, was asked by his eight year old daughter, Virginia (1889 – 1971) whether Santa Claus really existed. Dr. O’Hanlon suggested she write The Sun, a prominent New York City newspaper at that time, assuring her that – “If you see it in The Sun, it’s so”.

She did as her father suggested. The letter was as follows:

Dear Mr. Editor, I am eight years old. Some of my little friends say that there is no Santa Claus. Papa says, if you see it in The Sun, its so. Please tell me the truth; is there a Santa Claus?

Virginia O’Hanlon

In doing so, Dr. O’Hanlon had unwittingly given the newspaper’s editor, an opportunity to rise above the simple question and address the philosophical issues behind it. It has since become the most reprinted editorial in the English language . One can get it from the Internet. I can only give a few excerpts from the Editor’s reply:

“Virginia, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except what they see. . . . . . In this great universe of ours, man is a mere insect, an ant in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him . . . . Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! How dreary the world would be if there were no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither men nor children can see . . . . . No Santa Claus! Thank God! He lives, and he lives forever. . . . . He will continue to gladden the heart of childhood.”

Charles Dickens

(1812 – 1870) published A Christmas Carol in 1843, introducing to the world Ebenezer Scrooge and Tiny Tim. It remains perhaps the most popular Christmas fiction of our time. The conversion of Scrooge from the grumpy miser to a genial benefactor, tells us what Christmas is all about. Christmas time means contemplating another passing year, bringing in the New Year, and expressing hope for the future. We can count our blessings and hope for another year of relative happiness and good physical and mental health. At my age, I can’t wish for more. There are not many left anyway! Whatever one may wish, one has to remember that everything that one hopes for, is of course Deo volente (God willing)!

A few weeks ago, I received an E-mailed video from a relative in Canada. Perhaps he sent it because he knew my age. It is of Dr John Grossman who is 96 years old. He is a  world famous plastic and breast surgeon with a wide experience, though he lost two daughters due to cancer.

He spoke of his spiritual journey through life. He ended the 15 minute talk with a prayer. He was recently interviewed in Channel 2 of Denver, Colorado. Having seen the video, I can say the way he spoke is amazing. A person half his age wouldn’t have been able to speak like that! He is also a committed Christian who has done a lot to help his church (a Presbyterian).

(Some of the facts mentioned in this article are from religious journals available on the Internet).



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Political violence stalking Trump administration

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A scene that unfolded during the shooting incident at the recent White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington. (BBC)

It would not be particularly revelatory to say that the US is plagued by ‘gun violence’. It is a deeply entrenched and widespread malaise that has come in tandem with the relative ease with which firearms could be acquired and owned by sections of the US public, besides other causes.

However, a third apparent attempt on the life of US President Donald Trump in around two and a half years is both thought-provoking and unsettling for the defenders of democracy. After all, whatever its short comings the US remains the world’s most vibrant democracy and in fact the ‘mightiest’ one. And the US must remain a foremost democracy for the purpose of balancing and offsetting the growing power of authoritarian states in the global power system, who are no friends of genuine representational governance.

Therefore, the recent breaching of the security cordon surrounding the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington at which President Trump and his inner Cabinet were present, by an apparently ‘Lone Wolf’ gunman, besides raising issues relating to the reliability of the security measures deployed for the President, indicates a notable spike in anti-VVIP political violence in particular in the US. It is a pointer to a strong and widespread emergence of anti-democratic forces which seem to be gaining in virulence and destructiveness.

The issues raised by the attack are in the main for the US’ political Right and its supporters. They have smugly and complacently stood by while the extremists in their midst have taken centre stage and begun to dictate the course of Right wing politics. It is the political culture bred by them that leads to ‘Lone Wolf’ gunmen, for instance, who see themselves as being repressed or victimized, taking the law into their own hands, so to speak, and perpetrating ‘revenge attacks’ on the state and society.

A disproportionate degree of attention has been paid particularly internationally to Donald Trump’s personality and his eccentricities but such political persons cannot be divorced from the political culture in which they originate and have their being. That is, “structural” questions matter. Put simply, Donald Trump is a ‘true son’ of the Far Right, his principal support base. The issues raised are therefore for the President as well as his supporters of the Right.

We are obliged to respect the choices of the voting public but in the case of Trump’s election to the highest public position in the US, this columnist is inclined to see in those sections that voted for Trump blind followers of the latter who cared not for their candidate’s suitability, in every relevant respect, and therefore acted irrationally. It would seem that the Right in the US wanted their candidate to win by ‘hook or by crook’ and exercise power on their behalf.

By making the above observations this columnist does not intend to imply that voting publics everywhere in the world of democracy cast their vote sensibly. In the case of Sri Lanka, for example, the question could be raised whether the voters of the country used their vote sensibly when voting into office the majority of Executive Presidents and other persons holding high public office. The obvious answer is ‘no’ and this should lead to a wider public discussion on the dire need for thoroughgoing voter education. The issue is a ‘huge’ one that needs to be addressed in the appropriate forums and is beyond the scope of this column.

Looking back it could be said that the actions of Trump and his die-hard support base led to the Rule of Law in the US being undermined as perhaps never before in modern times. A shaming moment in this connection was the protest march, virtually motivated by Trump, of his supporters to the US Capitol on January 6th, 2021, with the aim of scuttling the presidential poll result of that year. Much violence and unruly behaviour, as known, was let loose. This amounted to denigrating the democratic process and encouraging the violent take over of the state.

In a public address, prior to the unruly conduct of his supporters, Trump is on record as blaring forth the following: ‘We won this election and we won by a landslide’, ‘We will stop the steal’, ‘We will never give up. We will never concede. It doesn’t happen’, ‘If you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.’

It is plain to see that such inflammatory utterances could lead impressionable minds in particular to revolt violently. Besides, they should have led the more rationally inclined to wonder whether their candidate was the most suitable person to hold the office of President.

Unfortunately, the latter process was not to be and the question could be raised whether the US is in the ‘safest pair of hands’. Needless to say, as events have revealed, Donald Trump is proving to be one of the most erratic heads of state the US has ever had.

However, the latest attempt on the life of President Trump suggests that considerable damage has been done to the democratic integrity of the US and none other than the President himself has to take on himself a considerable proportion of the blame for such degeneration, besides the US’ Far Right. They could be said to be ‘reaping the whirlwind.’

It is a time for soul-searching by the US Right. The political Right has the right to exist, so the speak, in a functional democracy but it needs to take cognizance of how its political culture is affecting the democratic integrity or health of the US. Ironically, the repressive and chauvinistic politics advocated by it is having the effect of activating counter-violence of the most murderous kind, as was witnessed at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner. Continued repressive politics could only produce more such incidents that could be self-defeating for the US.

Some past US Presidents were assassinated but the present political violence in the country brings into focus as perhaps never before the role that an anti-democratic political culture could play in unraveling the gains that the US has made over the decades. A duty is cast on pro-democracy forces to work collectively towards protecting the democratic integrity and strength of the US.

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22nd Anniversary Gala …action-packed event

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The Skyliners: Shanaka Viswakula (bass), Mario Ranasuriya (lead guitar), Daryl D'Souza (keyboards) and Kushmin Balasuriya (drums)

The Editor-in-Chief of The Sri Lankan Anchorman, a Toronto-based monthly, celebrating Sri Lankan community life in Canada, is none other than veteran Sri Lankan journalist Dirk Tissera, who moved to Canada in 1997. His wife, Michelle, whom he calls his “tower of strength”, is the Design Editor.

According to reports coming my way, the paper has turned out to be extremely popular in Toronto.

In fact, The Sri Lankan Anchorman won a press award in Toronto for excellence in editorial content and visual presentation.

However, the buzz in the air in Canada, right now, is The Sri Lankan Anchorman’s 22nd Anniversary Gala, to be held on Friday, 12 June, 2026, at the J&J Swagat Banquet Convention Centre, in Toronto.

An action-packed programme has been put together for the night, featuring some of the very best artistes in the Toronto scene.

The Skylines, who are classified as ‘the local musical band in Toronto’, will headline the event.

Dirk Tissera and wife Michelle: Supporting Sri Lanka-Canada community events, in Toronto, since launching The Anchorman
in 2002

They have performed and backed many legendary Sri Lanka singers.

According to Dirk, The Skylines can belt out a rhythm with gusto … be it Western, Sinhala or Tamil hits.

Also adding sparkle to the evening will be the legendary Fahmy Nazick, who, with his smooth and velvety vocals, will have the crowd on the floor.

Fahmy who was a household name, back in Sri Lanka, will be flying down from Virginia, USA.

He has captivated audiences in Sri Lanka, the Middle East and North America, and this will be his fourth visit to Toronto – back by popular demand,

Cherry DeLuna, who is described by Dirk as a powerhouse, also makes her appearance on stage and is all set to stir up the tempo with her cool and easy delivery.

“She’s got a great voice and vocal range that has captivated audiences out here”, says Dirk.

Chamil Welikala, said to be one of the hottest DJs in town, will be spinning his magic … in English, Sinhala, Tamil and Latin.


Both Jive and Baila competitions are on the cards among many other surprises on the night of 12 June.

This is The Anchorman’s fifth annual dance in a row – starting from 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025 – and both Dirk and Michelle, and The Anchorman, have always produced elegant social events in Toronto.

“We intend to knock this one out of the park,” the duo says, adding that Western music and Sinhala and Tamil songs is something they’ve always delivered and the crowd loves it.

“We have always supported Sri Lanka-Canada community events, in Toronto, since launching The Anchorman, in 2002, and we intend to keep it that way.”

No doubt, there will be a large crowd of Sri Lankans, from all communities, turning up, on 12 June, to support Dirk, Michelle and The Anchorman.

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Features

Face Pack for Radiant Skin

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* Apple and Orange:

Blend a few apple and orange pieces together. Add to it a pinch of turmeric and one tablespoon of honey. Apply it to the face and neck and rinse off after 30 minutes. This face pack is suitable for all skin types.

According to experts, apple is one of the best fruits for your skin health with Vitamin A, B complex and Vitamin C and minerals, while, with the orange peel, excessive oil secretion can be easily balanced.

* Mango and Curd:

Ripe mango pulp, mixed with curd, can be rubbed directly onto the skin to remove dirt and cleanse clogged pores. Rinse off after a few minutes.

Yes, of course, mango is a tasty and delicious fruit and this is the mango season in our part of the world, and it has extra-ordinary benefits to skin health. Vitamins C and E in mangoes protect the skin from the UV rays of the sun and promotes cell regeneration. It also promotes skin elasticity and fights skin dullness and acne, while curd, in combination, further adds to it.

*  Grapes and Kiwi:

Take a handful of grapes and make a pulp of it. Simultaneously, take one kiwi fruit and mash it after peeling its skin. Now mix them and add some yoghurt to it. Apply it on your face for few minutes and wash it off.

Here again experts say that kiwi is the best nutrient-rich fruit with high vitamin C, minerals, Omega-3 fatty acids and vitamin E, while grapes contain flavonoids, which is an antioxidant that protects the skin from free radical damage. This homemade face pack acts as a natural cleanser and slows down the ageing process.

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