Features
Some inside stories from Anandatissa de Alwis
Alice Kotelawela persuaded Sir. John to makeup with Dudley
“The finest victory is one achieved by guile alone” – Sun Tzu
With the establishment of the Executive Presidency in 1978, JRJ while elevating himself to the post of the first President of the Second Republic had to appoint a new Prime Minister. Accordingly Premadasa was made the PM giving a strong signal that JRJ’s UNP was merit based and not kinship and caste based as it was under the Senanayakes.
He thereby broke the Goigama hold on the Premiership which had been a live issue in the case of CP de Silva who could have been PM under both the SLFP and UNP led Governments. It was this caste impasse which dogged the SLFP that helped to bring the reluctant Mrs. B into politics. She first entered politics as an independent and chose the Senate instead of the lower house to show her contempt for the fawning politicians who had abandoned her husband at a difficult time leading to his murder by SLFP stalwarts.
Caste was one of the considerations which brought the ‘weeping widow’ into national politics and her regimes had a soft spot for Goigama Kandyans. Premadasa also made use of this opportunity to build up his own coterie of supporters in Parliament which had more than a fair share of non-Goigama MPs. Though this was not made public Gamini and Lalith burnished their Goigama credentials with MPs though it was ‘sotto voce’.
From the day he sat on the PM’s chair Premadasa made it crystal clear that his upward trajectory was towards the Presidential throne. With this in mind he cultivated JRJ assiduously and also won the confidence of Mrs. Jayewardene who became his strongest supporter. It is in this reshuffle that JRJ brought Anandatissa de Alwis, his former Secretary and confidante in the struggle to resuscitate the UNP, into the Cabinet as Minister of State perhaps with the idea of counterbalancing Premadasa.
Ananda certainly thought so and was keen to play a more dynamic role. He asked me to remain as Secretary to the Ministry under the new dispensation. For Ananda it was like coming home for he had been at the helm of this Ministry from 1965 to 1970. He was an efficient and friendly person and we got on like a house on fire. This was an apt comparison for our Minister was a chain smoker and cigarette smoke would constantly emanate from his office room which was strewn with cigarette butts and match sticks.
After long meetings with him my clothes smelled of cigarette smoke and I had to hurry home to change. But that was a minor hiccup in a wonderfully exciting relationship between me and my Minister who was a generous human being. However, Ananda soon developed heart problems and had to give up his lifelong smoking habit. He told me that his cardiologist had told him not to waste his time and money in medical consultations if he was not willing to give up smoking. Without quitting, his days were numbered. Fortunately Ananda heeded his doctor’s advice and cigarette smoking was banned in the State ministry premises.
Anandatissa de Alwis
By bringing Ananda into the Cabinet JRJ was also strengthening his own hand in the light of jockeying for position among several of his ambitious ministers. Premadasa as Prime Minister lost no time in exerting his authority, though he took good care to be on the right side of the President. He began to gather more functions under the PM such as Buddhist and Cultural Affairs for which he set up his own media operations.
Ananda, as the President’s man and a party grandee, was looked upon by his supporters as a credible rival to Premadasa and a potential Prime Minister. It was Ananda as Assistant Secretary of the UNP who was JRJ’s right hand man in resuscitating the party after Dudley’s death. There was not much love lost between him and Premadasa.
At this stage there occurred an incident, not publicized before, which devastated Ananda. On leaving the Speaker’s chair he had been accommodated by the Parliament staff on the front benches of the House along with senior ministers. This arrangement went on for some time till Gamini and Lalith, who were accommodated in the second row complained to JRJ that they were senior to Ananda as Ministers and that he should be moved to a seat behind them.
The staff of Parliament had perhaps erred in trying to accommodate their affable former boss but now their decision was canvassed by two ambitious juniors. Ananda was confident that JRJ would back him and confirm his status as the ‘President’s Man’. But that was not to be. Asked to follow tradition, the parliamentary staff had to relocate the former Speaker to the second row. The embarrassment caused by this move affected Ananda deeply and he began to lose confidence and interest in his work.
He avoided going to Parliament and began to concentrate on building up his advertising company. He also began to lose hope of preferment within the UNP and started to cynically criticize his colleagues, especially the Prime minister who had his spies everywhere. The disappointed Ananda did not actively intervene in Parliamentary debates even though he was one of the best speakers in the country.
The story of Anandatissa is a great tragedy about which I am entitled to write because for some time I was his favourite and was a preferred listener to his fascinating tales. I must say in gratitude that I have learnt much from him and have benefited from his generosity. His was a lonely battle, as he confided in me. He was a bright student at Ananda College when he lost both his parents. His father, who was a post master, and the only breadwinner of a large family, died in a most unfortunate way.
He was returning on foot after work and was swept away by a flash flood. The young Ananda had to follow his studies as well as look after a number of sisters since he was the only boy in the family. He told me that he was so poor that he had to walk barefoot up to his school, shoes in hand and wear them only in the class room since he could not spend money on another pair. Some of his sisters had to be handed over to a Catholic orphanage and they grew up into becoming good Roman Catholics.
But he struggled and became a good school leader, an orator and a school cadet. Fortunately for him he was employed by Sir John Kotelawala (JK) who became a father figure to him. He was fanatically devoted to Kotelawala and became his trouble shooter not only in his political work but also in his personal entanglements. JK’s mother Alice Kotelawala treated him like a son and Ananda became a celebrity in Colombo circles because he was a protege of JK.
He described to me so many instances of his boss’s generosity. Once when he was invited to join his boss on a foreign tour he declined. The real reason for that decision was that Ananda did not have the money to buy warm clothing. JK let the matter drop. Three days later when Ananda opened his cupboard at Kandawela there was a full suit, shirts, shoes and a winter coat hung up for him. It was an unsolicited gift from his boss who never even mentioned it. Ananda joined in the tour thanks to JK’s humanity which I was told was the big man’s real nature. Ananda was a devotee of Kotelawala till the last.
Let me recount some of the stories which I learnt from Ananda about JK which may be of interest to historians of that period. It is well known that when D.S. Senanayake died of a heart attack while out riding in Galle Face green, JK expected to succeed him. But the inner circle of the UNP, including Esmond -Wickremesinghe, had been informed earlier by DS’s doctors that `The Old Man’ had not much longer to live and this top UNP cabal had persuaded Lord Soulbury to ask DS tactfully about his successor, before the Governor-General went on leave to the UK.
DS had nominated his son Dudley because JK was a fractious character who would split the party. He had already done enough damage by fighting with S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike and pushing him out of the UNP. The inside story is that Bandaranaike had befriended Dudley who was promoting his Horagolla friend with his father. Dudley was carrying sunshine stories to his father about Banda while JK looked on it as an act of treachery against a cousin – himself.
These dealings of Dudley have not been revealed before by our historians and journalists. A fact that can now be revealed is that Dudley had a longtime love affair with Freida Corea, his cousin and JK’s sister. Freida was Gamani Corea’s mother and the latter was treated as a son by Dudley. In this tangle JRJ stood by his lifelong friend Dudley and thereby earned the wrath of JK. It was with this ‘tangled web’ in the background that Dudley was persuaded with some difficulty by JRJ to accept the post of PM in 1951 to the obvious frustration of JK, who with the able assistance of Ananda, had built up the propaganda and Youth Affairs departments of the party by spending his time and money.
At first, he refused to join Dudley’s Cabinet. Then after being pressurized to accept his old portfolio, particularly by his mother, he made his displeasure well known to Dudley as well as the general public in inimitable Kotelawala style. Sometime later there appeared a document among Colombo political circles entitled ‘Premier Stakes’ which was a frontal attack on Soulbury, Dudley, JRJ and a host of others for unfairly depriving Kotelawala of his due.
This caused a furore and Dudley was forced to sack JK while on a visit to the UK. Many years later Tissa Wijeratne told me that his father Sir Edwin, our High Commissioner in the UK, was terrified to inform Sir John of his sacking based on a cable sent by Dudley to him in London. JK decided to come back to Colombo and the local political and social elite breathlessly awaited a showdown between the two cousins.
It was at this stage that Ananda was brought into the picture to play an important role. With JK’s return expected in a day or two, Mrs. Alice Kotelawala asked Ananda to see her immediately. She told Ananda to meet JK on arrival and to bring him straight to her house before anything else. Accordingly Ananda went to Ratmalana airport and positioned himself on the tarmac so that he would be the first to greet his boss. He bundled JK into a car before he could talk to the press and took him to meet his mother.
He had scarcely fallen at her feet when she told her son, “Lionel, I hear you are fighting with Dudley But remember that when we were orphaned by your father’s death in prison it was the Senanayakes who looked after us. We cannot be ungrateful. Make up and help Dudley”. She prevailed and JK, `tongue in cheek’ issued a statement that he had nothing to do with ‘Premier Stakes’. Everybody who mattered knew that it was written by JK’s secretary, P Nadesan with the able assistance of Anandatissa de Alwis.
Another story about JK is that when Dudley became PM in 1965 Kotelawala sent for Ananda and asked him to go on a mission to Dudley His task was to ask Dudley to appoint JK as the Governor General. Ananda met the PM with trepidation and conveyed his master’s message. Dudley flatly refused. He said that if JK entered Queen’s House he would try to run the country from there and the PM would become a cipher. If that happened his Government would not last six months. Ananda had the unenviable job of conveying that message to his boss. JK and Dudley were not even on talking terms with each other.
It was Dudley who directed the Buddhist Commissioners to seek Bandaranaike’s support for their ten commandments’ which was the bed rock of the SLFP/MEP victory of 1956. Dudley was so angry with Ananda for hanging out with JK that he removed him from the Kotte UNP organizers post and gave it to Niyathapala. After 1977 JK decided to return permanently to Sri Lanka and Ananda helped in bringing him and the President JRJ together.
I know that a key role in this ‘rapprochement’ was played by Colonel Dharmapala who was a reliable friend of both parties. JRJ trusted Dharmapala implicitly and accepted his advice. JK who was a military man was elevated to the rank of General of the Army on his deathbed by Presidential decree. General JK announced the donation of his palatial Kandawela Walawwa with its chequered past, to the Sri Lankan army. Today it is the Kotelawala Defence University and is maintained by the army in spotless condition.
This is in contrast to the pathetic condition of ‘Braemar’ and ‘Woodlands’ which are about to collapse. JK who was a bad diabetic died soon after. I accompanied Ananda to the old Parliament where his body lay in state. Ananda broke down and started to sob uncontrollably. I have a vivid memory of him resting his head on the stockinged feet of his late boss and thanking him for making him a man. JK was given a fitting military funeral. My view is that history will be kind to this stalwart whose predictions, ridiculed then, are becoming truer by the day.
Features
The State of the Union and the Spectacle of Trump
President Donald J. Trump, as the American President often calls himself, is a global spectacle. And so are his tariffs. On Friday, February 20, the US Supreme Court led by Chief Justice John Roberts and a 6-3 majority, struck down the most ballyhooed tariff scheme of all times. Upholding the earlier decisions of the lower federal courts, the Supreme Court held that Trump’s use of ‘emergency powers’ to impose the so called Liberation Day tariffs on 2 April 2025, is not legal. The Liberation Day tariffs, which were comically announced on a poster board at the White House Rose Garden, is a system of reciprocal tariffs applied to every country that exported goods and services to America. The court ruling has pulled off the legal fig leaf with which Trump had justified his universal tariff scheme.
Trump was livid after the ruling on Friday and invectively insulted the six judges who ruled against Trump’s tariffs. There was nothing personal about it, but for Trump, the ever petulant man-boy, there isn’t anything that is not personal. On Tuesday night in Washington, Trump delivered his first State of the Union address of his second presidency. The Chief Justice, who once called the State of the Union, “a political pep rally,” attended the pomp and exchanged a grim handshake with the President.
Tuesday’s State of the Union was the longest speech ever in what is a long standing American tradition that is also a constitutional requirement. The Trump showmanship was in full display for the millions of Americans who watched him and millions of others in the rest of world, especially mandarins of foreign governments, who were waiting to parse his words to detect any sign for his next move on tariffs or his next move in Iran. There was nothing much to parse, however, only theatre for Trump’s Republican followers and taunts for opposing Democrats. He was in his usual elements as the Divider in Chief. There was truly little on offer for overseas viewers.
On tariffs, he is bulldozing ahead, he boasted, notwithstanding the Supreme Court ruling last Friday. But the short lived days of unchecked executive tariff powers are over even though Trump wouldn’t let go of his obsessive illusions. On the Middle East, Trump praised himself for getting the release of Israeli hostages, dead or alive, out of Gaza, but had no word for the Palestinians who are still being battered on that wretched strip of land. On Ukraine, he bemoaned the continuing killings in their thousands every month but had no concept or plan for ending the war while insisting that it would not have started if he were president four years ago.
He gave no indication of what he might do in Iran. He prefers diplomacy, he said, but it would be the most costly diplomatic solution given the scale of deployment of America’s fighting assets in the region under his orders. In Trump’s mind, this could be one way of paying for a Nobel Prize for peace. More seriously, Trump is also caught in the horns of a dilemma of his own making. He wanted an external diversion from his growing domestic distractions. If he were thinking using Iran as a diversion, he also cannot not ignore the warnings from his own military professionals that going into Iran would not be a walk in the park like taking over Venezuela. His state of mind may explain his reticence on Iran in the State of the Union speech.
Even on the domestic front, there was hardly anything of substance or any new idea. One lone new idea Trump touted is about asking AI businesses to develop their own energy sources for their data centres without tapping into existing grids, raising demand and causing high prices and supply shortages. That was a political announcement to quell the rising consumer alarms, especially in states such as Michigan where energy guzzling data centres are becoming hot button issue for the midterm Congress and Senate elections in November. Trump can see the writing on the wall and used much of his speech to enthuse his base and use patriotism to persuade the others.

Political Pep Rally: Chief Justice John G. Roberts sits stoically with Justices Elena Kagan, Bret Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett, as Republicans are on their feet applauding.
Although a new idea, asking AI forces to produce their own energy comes against a background of a year-long assault on established programs for expanding renewable energy sources. Fortunately, the courts have nullified Trump’s executive orders stopping renewable energy programs. But there is no indication if the AI sector will be asked to use renewable energy sources or revert to the polluting sources of coal or oil. Nor is it clear if AI will be asked to generate surplus energy to add to the community supply or limit itself to feeding its own needs. As with all of Trump’s initiatives the devil is in the details and is left to be figured out later.
The Supreme Court Ruling
The backdrop to Tuesday’s State of the Union had been rendered by Friday’s Supreme Court ruling. Chief Justice Roberts who wrote the majority ruling was both unassuming and assertive in his conclusion: “We claim no special competence in matters of economics or foreign affairs. We claim only, as we must, the limited role assigned to us by Article III of the Constitution. Fulfilling that role, we hold that IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act) does not authorize the President to impose tariffs.”
IEEPA is a 1977 federal legislation that was enacted during the Carter presidency, to both clarify and restrict presidential powers to act during national emergency situations. The immediate context for the restrictive element was the experience of the Nixon presidency. One of the implied restrictions in IEEPA is in regard to tariffs which are not specifically mentioned in the legislation. On the other hand, Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution establishes taxes and tariffs as an exclusively legislative function whether they are imposed within the country or implemented to regulate trade and commerce with other countries. In his first term, Trump tried to impose tariffs on imports through the Congress but was rebuffed even by Republicans. In the second term, he took the IEEA route, bypassing Congress and expecting the conservative majority in the Supreme Court to bail him out of legal challenges. The Court said, No. Thus far, but no farther.
The main thrust of the ruling is that it marks a victory for the separation of powers against a president’s executive overreach. Three of the Court’s conservative judges (CJ Roberts, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett) joined the three liberal judges (all women – Sonia Sotomayor, Elana Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson) to chart a majority ruling against the president’s tariffs. The three dissenters were Brett Kavanugh, who wrote the dissenting opinion, Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito. Justices Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett were appointed by Trump. Trump took out Gorsuch and Barrett for special treatment after their majority ruling, while heaping praise on Kavanaugh who ruled in favour of the tariffs. Barrett and Kavanaugh attended the State of the Union along with Roberts and Kagan, while the other five stayed away from the pep rally (see picture).
The Economics of the Ruling
In what was a splintered ruling, different judges split legal hairs between themselves while claiming no special competence in economics and ruling on a matter that was all about trade and economics. Yale university’s Stephen Roach has provided an insightful commentary on the economics of the court ruling, while “claiming no special competence in legal matters.” Roach takes out every one of Trump’s pseudo-arguments supporting tariffs and provides an economist’s take on the matter.
First, he debunks Trump’s claim that trade deficits are an American emergency. The real emergency, Roach notes, is the low level of American savings, falling to 0.2% of the national income in 2025, even as trade deficit in goods reached a new record $1.2 trillion. America’s need for foreign capital to compensate for its low savings, and its thirst for cheap imported goods keep the balance of payments and trade deficits at high levels.
Second, by imposing tariffs Trump is not helping but burdening US consumers. The Americans are the ones who are paying tariffs contrary to Trump’s own false beliefs and claims that foreign countries are paying them. 90% of the tariffs have been paid by American consumers, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Small businesses have paid the rest. Foreign countries pay nothing but they have been making deals with Trump to keep their exports flowing.
According to published statistics, the average U.S. applied tariff rate increased from 1.6% before Trump’s tariff’s to 17%, the highest level since World War II. The removal of reciprocal tariffs after the ruling would have lowered it to 9.1%, but it will rise to 13% after Trump’s 15% tariffs. The registered tariff revenue is about $175 billion, 0.6% of U.S. gross domestic product. The tariff monies collected are legally refundable. The Supreme Court did not get into the modalities for repayment and there would be multiple lawsuits before the lower courts if the Administration does not set up a refunding mechanism.
Lastly, in railing against globalization and the loss of American industries, Trump is cutting off America’s traditional allies and trading partners in Europe, Canada and Mexico who account for 54% of all US trade flows in manufactured goods. Cutting them off has only led these countries to look for other alternatives, especially China and India. All of this is not helping the US or its trade deficit. The American manufacturers (except for sectoral beneficiaries in steel, aluminum and auto industries), workers and consumers are paying the price for Trump’s economic idiosyncrasies. As Roach notes, the Court stayed away from the economic considerations, but by declaring Trump’s IEEPA tariffs unconstitutional, the Court has sent an important message to the American people and the rest of the world that “US policies may not be personalized by the whims of a vindictive and uninformed wannabe autocrat.”
by Rajan Philips
Features
The Victor Melder odyssey: from engine driver CGR to Melbourne library founder
He celebrated his 90th birthday recently, never returned to his homeland because he’s a bad traveler
(Continued from last week)
THE GARRAT LOCOS, were monstrous machines that were able to haul trains on the incline, that normally two locos did. Whilst a normal loco hauled five carriages on its own, a Garrat loco could haul nine. When passenger traffic warranted it and trains had over nine carriages or had a large number of freight wagons, then a Garret loco hauled the train assisted by a loco from behind.
When a train was worked by two normal locos (one pulling, the other pushing) and they reached the summit level at Pattipola (in either direction), the loco pushing (piloting) would travel around to the front the train and be coupled in front of the loco already in front and the two locos took the train down the incline. With a Garraat loco this could not be done as the bridges could not take the combined weight. The pilot loco therefore ran down single, following THE TRAIN.
My father was stationed at Nawalapitiya as a senior driver at the time, and it wasn’t a picnic working with him. He believed in the practical side of things and always had the apprentices carrying out some extra duties or the other to acquaint themselves with the loco. I had more than my fair share.
After the four months upcountry, we were back at Dematagoda on the K. V. steam locos. From the sublime to the ridiculous, I would say after the Garret locos upcountry. Here the work was much easier and at a slower pace, as the trains did not run at speed like their mainline counterparts. The last two months of the third year saw us on the two types of diesel locos on the K.V. line, the Hunslett and Krupp diesels, which worked the passenger trains. For once this was a ‘cushy, sit-down’ job, doing nothing exciting, but keeping a sharp lookout and exchanging tablets on the run. The third year had come to an end and ‘the light at the end of tunnel was getting closer’.
The fourth year saw us all at the Diesel loco shed at Maradana, which was cheek by jowl with the Maradana railway station. The first three months we worked with the diesel mechanical fitters and the following three months with the electrical fitters. Heavy emphasis was placed on a working knowledge of the electrical circuits of the different diesel locos in service, to ensure the drivers were able to attend to electrical faults en-route and bring the train home. This was again a period of lectures and demonstrations
We also spent three months at the Ratmalana workshops, where the diesels were stripped down to the core and refitted after major repairs, to ensure we had a look at what went on inside the many closed and sealed working parts. This was again a 7.00am to 4.00pm day job. Back again at the Diesel shed, Maradana, saw us riding as assistants for the next three months on all the diesel locos in service – The Brush Bragnal (M1), General Electrical (M2), Hunslett locos (G2) and Diesel Rail Cars.
After the final written test on Diesel locos, we began our fifth and final year, which was that of shunting engine driver. The first six months were spent at Maligawatte Yard on steam shunting locos and the next three months shunting drivers on the diesel shunting locos at Colombo goods yard. The final three months were spent as assistants on the M1 and M2 locos working all the fast passenger and mail trains.
I was finally appointed Engine Driver Class III on July 6, 1962, as mentioned earlier I lost eight months of my apprenticeship due to being ill and had to make up the time. This appointment was on three years’ probation, on the initial salary of the scale Rs 1,680 – 72 – Rs 2,184, per annum.
Little did the general traveling public realize that they had well trained and qualified engine drivers working their trains to time Victor was stationed in Galle until December 1967, when he resigned from the railway to migrate to Melbourne, Australia to join the rest of his family. He was the last of 11 siblings to leave Ceylon. Their two elder children were born in Galle. Victor and Esther had three more children in Australia. The children, three boys and two girls) were brought up with love and devotion. They have seven grandchildren and two great grandchildren. They meet often as a family.
He worked for the Victorian State Public Service and retired in 1993 after 25 years’ service. At the time of retirement, he worked for the Ministry for Conservation & Environment. He held the position of Project Officer in charge of the Ministry’s Procedural Documents.
He worked part-time for the Victorian Electoral Office and the Australian Electoral Office, covering State and Federal Elections, from 1972 to 2010. From 1972 to 1982 and was a Clerical Officer and then in 1983 was appointed Officer-in-Charge, Lychfield Avenue Polling Booth, Jacana which is my (the writer’s) electorate.
As part of serving the community Victor participated in a number of ways, quite often unremunerated. He worked part-time for the Department of Census & Statistics, and worked as a Census Collector for the Census of 1972, 1976, 1980 and then Group Leader of 16 Collectors in his area for the 1984, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012.
In 1970, Victor began this library, now known as the ‘Victor Melder Sri Lanka Library’, for the purpose of making Sri Lanka better known in Australia. On looking back he has this to say: “Forty-five years later, I can say that it is serving its purpose. In 1993 President Ranasinghe Premadasa of Sri Lanka bestowed on me a national honor – ‘Sri Lanka Ranjana’ for my then 25 years’ service to Sri Lanka in Australia. I feel very privileged to be honored by my motherland, which I feel is the highest accolade one can ever get.”
There were many more accolades over the years:
15.10. 2004, Serendib News, 2004 Business and Community Award.
4.2.2008, Award for Services to the SL Community by The Consulate of Sri Lanka in Victoria (by R. Arambewela)
2024 – SL Consul General’s Award
In 2025 , Victor was one of the ten outstanding Sri Lankans in Australia at the Lankan Fest.
An annual Victor Melder Appreciation award was established to honour an outstanding member by the SriLankan Consulate.
The following appreciation by the late Gamini Dissanayake is very appropriate.
Comment by the late Minister Gamini Dissanayake, in the comment book of the VMSL library.
A man is attached to many things. Attachments though leading to sorrow in the end
are the living reality of life. Amongst these many attachments, the most noble are the attachments to one’s family and to one’s country. You have left Sri Lanka long ago but “she” is within you yet and every nerve and sinew of your body, mind and soul seem to belong there. In your love for the country of your birth you seem to have no racial or religious connotations – you simply love “HER” – the pure, clear, simple, abstract and glowing Sri Lanka of our imagination and vision. You are an example of what all Sri Lankan’s should be. May you live long with your vision and may Sri Lanka evolve to deserve sons like you.
With my best Wishes.
Gamini Dissanayake, Minister from Sri Lanka.
15 February 1987.
The Victor Melder Lecture
The Monash council established the Victor Melder Lecture which is presented every February. It is now an annual event looked forward to by Melbournians. A guest lecturer is carefully chosen each year for this special event.
Victor and his library has featured on many publications such as the Sunday Times in 2008 and LMD International in 2026.
“Although having been a railway man, I am a poor traveler and get travel sickness, hence I have not travelled much. I have never been back to Sri Lanka, never travelled in Australia, not even to Geelong. I am happiest doing what I like best, either at Church or in this library. My younger daughter has finally given up after months of trying to coax, cajole and coerce me into a trip to Sri Lanka to celebrate this (90th) birthday.
I am most fortunate that over the years I have made good friends, some from my school days. It is also a great privilege to grow old in the company of friends — like-minded individuals who have spent their childhood and youth in the same environment as oneself and shared similar life experiences.”
Victor’s love of books started from childhood. Since his young years he has been interested in reading. At St Mary’s College, Nawalapitiya, the library had over 300 books on Greek and Roman history and mythology and he read every one of them.
He read the newspapers daily, which his parents subscribed to, including the ‘Readers Digest’.His mother was an avid fan of Crossword Puzzles and encouraged all the children to follow her, a trait which he continues to this day.
At his workplace in Melbourne, Victor encountered many who asked questions about Ceylon. Often, he could not find an answer to these queries. This was long before the internet existed. He then started getting books on Ceylon/SriLanka and reading them. Very soon his collection expanded and he thought of the Vicor Melder SriLanka Library as source of reference. It is now a vast collection of over 7,000 books, magazines and periodicals.
Another driver of his service to fellow men is his deep Catholic faith in which he follows the footsteps of the Master.
Victor was baptized at St Anthony’s Cathedral, Kandy by Fr Galassi, OSB. Since the age of 10 he have been involved with Church activities both in Sri Lanka and Australia. He remains a devout Catholic and this underlies his spirit of service to fellowmen.
He began as an Altar Server at St Mary’s Church, Nawalapitiya, and continued even in his adult life. In Australia, Esther and Victor have been Parishioners at St Dominic’s Church, Broadmeadows, since 1970.He started as an Adult Server and have been an Altar Server Trainer, Reader and Special Minister He was a member of the ‘Counting Team’ for monies collected at Sunday Masses, for 35 years.
He has actively retired from this work since 2010, but is still ‘on call’, to help when required. To add in his own words
“My Catholic faith has always been important to me, and I can never imagine my having spent a day away from God. Faith is all that matters to Esther too. We attend daily Mass and busy ourselves with many activities in our Parish Church.
For nearly 25 years, we have also been members of a religious order ‘The Community of the Sons & Daughters of God’, it is contemplative and monastic in nature, we are veritable monks in the world. We do no good works, other than show Christ to the world, by our actions. Both Esther and I, after much prayer and discernment have become more deeply involved, taking vows of poverty, obedience and chastity, within the Community. Our spirituality gives us much peace, solace and comfort.”
“This is not my CV for beatification and canonization. My faith is in fact an antidote for overcoming evil, I too struggle like everyone else. I have to exorcise the demons within me by myself. I am a perfect candidate for “being a street angel and home devil” by my constant impatience, lack of tolerance and wanting instant perfection from everyone. “
The above exemplifies the humility of the man who admits to his foibles.
More than 25 years ago The Ceylon Society of Australia was formed in Sydney by a group of Ceylon lovers led by Hugh Karunanayake. Very soon the Melbourne chapter of the organization was formed, and Victor was a crucial part of this. At every Talk, Victor displayed books relevant to the topic. For many years he continued to do so carrying a big box of books and driving a fair distance to the meeting place. Eventually when he could no longer drive his car, he made certain that the books reached the venue through his close friend, Hemal Gurusinghe.
He also was the guest speaker at one of the meetings and he regaled the audience with railway stories.
Victor has dedicated his life on this mission, and we can be proud of his achievements. His vision is to find a permanent home for his library where future generations can use it and continue the service that he commenced. The plea is to get like-minded individuals in the quest to find a suitable and permanent home for the Victor Melder Srilankan Library.
by Dr. Srilal Fernando
Features
Sri Lanka to Host First-Ever World Congress on Snakes in Landmark Scientific Milestone
Sri Lanka is set to make scientific history by hosting the world’s first global conference dedicated entirely to snake research, conservation and public health, with the World Congress on Snakes (WCS) 2026 scheduled to take place from October 1–4 at The Grand Kandyan Hotel in Kandy World Congress on Snakes.
The congress marks a major milestone not only for Sri Lanka’s biodiversity research community but also for global collaboration in herpetology, conservation science and snakebite management.
Congress Chairperson Dr. Anslem de Silva described the event as “a long-overdue global scientific platform that recognises the ecological, medical and cultural importance of snakes.”
“This will be the first international congress fully devoted to snakes — from their evolution and taxonomy to venom research and snakebite epidemiology,” Dr. de Silva said. “Sri Lanka, with its exceptional biodiversity and deep ecological relationship with snakes, is a fitting host for such a historic gathering.”
Global Scientific Collaboration
The congress has been established through an international scientific partnership, bringing together leading experts from Sri Lanka, India and Australia. It is expected to attract herpetologists, wildlife conservationists, toxinologists, veterinarians, genomic researchers, policymakers and environmental organisations from around the world.
The International Scientific Committee includes globally respected experts such as Prof. Aaron Bauer, Prof. Rick Shine, Prof. Indraneil Das and several other authorities in reptile research and conservation biology.
Dr. de Silva emphasised that the congress is designed to bridge biodiversity science, medicine and society.
“Our aim is not merely to present academic findings. We want to translate science into practical conservation action, improved public health strategies and informed policy decisions,” he explained.
Addressing a Neglected Public Health Crisis
A key pillar of the congress will be snakebite envenoming — widely recognised as a neglected tropical health problem affecting rural communities across Asia, Africa and Latin America.
“Snakebite is not just a medical issue; it is a socio-economic issue that disproportionately impacts farming communities,” Dr. de Silva noted. “By bringing clinicians, toxinologists and conservation scientists together, we can strengthen prevention strategies, improve treatment protocols and promote community education.”
Scientific sessions will explore venom biochemistry, clinical toxinology, antivenom sustainability and advances in genomic research, alongside broader themes such as ecological behaviour, species classification, conservation biology and environmental governance.
Dr. de Silva stressed that fear-driven persecution of snakes, habitat destruction and illegal wildlife trade continue to threaten snake populations globally.
“Snakes play an essential ecological role, particularly in controlling rodent populations and maintaining agricultural balance,” he said. “Conservation and public safety are not opposing goals — they are interconnected. Scientific understanding is the foundation for coexistence.”
The congress will also examine cultural perceptions of snakes, veterinary care, captive management, digital monitoring technologies and integrated conservation approaches linking biodiversity protection with human wellbeing.
Strategic Importance for Sri Lanka
Hosting the global event in the historic city of Kandy — a UNESCO World Heritage site — is expected to significantly enhance Sri Lanka’s standing as a hub for scientific and environmental collaboration.
Dr. de Silva pointed out that the benefits extend beyond the four-day meeting.
“This congress will open doors for Sri Lankan researchers and students to access world-class expertise, training and international partnerships,” he said. “It will strengthen our national research capacity in biodiversity and environmental health.”
He added that the event would also generate economic activity and position Sri Lanka as a destination for high-level scientific conferences, expanding the country’s international image beyond traditional tourism promotion.
The congress has received support from major international conservation bodies including the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Save the Snakes, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and the Amphibian and Reptile Research Organization of Sri Lanka (ARROS).
As preparations gather momentum, Dr. de Silva expressed optimism that the World Congress on Snakes 2026 would leave a lasting legacy.
“This is more than a conference,” he said. “It is the beginning of a global movement to promote science-based conservation, improve snakebite management and inspire the next generation of researchers. Sri Lanka is proud to lead that conversation.”
By Ifham Nizam
-
Features7 days agoLOVEABLE BUT LETHAL: When four-legged stars remind us of a silent killer
-
Business7 days agoBathiya & Santhush make a strategic bet on Colombo
-
Business7 days agoSeeing is believing – the silent scale behind SriLankan’s ground operation
-
Features7 days agoProtection of Occupants Bill: Good, Bad and Ugly
-
News6 days agoPrime Minister Attends the 40th Anniversary of the Sri Lanka Nippon Educational and Cultural Centre
-
News7 days agoCoal ash surge at N’cholai power plant raises fresh environmental concerns
-
Opinion3 days agoJamming and re-setting the world: What is the role of Donald Trump?
-
Business7 days agoHuawei unveils Top 10 Smart PV & ESS Trends for 2026


