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The Reality of the Present and Memories of the Past

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V V Ganeshananthan

The Reality of the Present? A hope inspiring change in the system of governance with two potential statesmen at the helm. They have received endorsement and kudos from those who did not vote for AKD as president and almost delirious celebration and welcome from those who did. Except opposing politicians, it looks as if all Sri Lankans are happy with Anura Kumara Dissanayake as President and Dr Harini Amarasuriya as Prime Minister. Though of almost the same ideology, they are a contrast to each other not only in the obvious but in various attributes and thus the idea that it’s all for the best: they complement each other. Hope has been kindled for the future of this wonderful land. People are willing to undergo privation till we get out of the economic quagmire the land and its people were pushed into since all undergo hardships together – no longer ‘more equal pigs’ ruling the rest.

Memories of the Past? What are they as relevant to my article? The devastating attack on Tamils first in Colombo and then in the outstations, orchestrated, they said by a Minister of JRJ’s government in 1983. The other memory is of the civil war, caused by the Tamil terrorist LTTE. And why these memories? Because I mean to write about two Tamil artistes who have made waves internationally with their creative skills.

The new president promised when he took his oaths that he would consider all Sri Lankans worthy and needy of being cared for and the condition of the less privileged and marginalized improved. He mentioned those who voted for him and those who did not; all needed governmental concern and service. That was a very encouraging and hope giving pronouncement as it was mainly the districts with larger populations of Tamils and Muslims that voted for his opponents. We sorely need to be considered as one people – Sri Lankans – and the divides promoted by former leaders erased whether racial or religious. Mercifully the NPP is not overtly Buddhistic. Homage by both Heads were paid to the Mahanayakes, as was done to other religious leaders.

The drama artist

A relative in New York wrote me a week or two back that she had seen a marvelous theatre production in New York University’s Skirball Center by an Australian Tamil playwright. It was a stunning experience, she said. Naturally I was intrigued – one of our Sri Lankans capturing theatre goers in NY where crème de la crème theatre is presented. I asked for details and she obliged: “The opening scene sets the stage for Sid to become curious about his origins. And thus his taking the audience back to the 1983 riots and its aftermath, where we were all complicit in an atrocity there was no going back from. The play of three and a half hours flew by and left us touched in a myriad ways; and brokenhearted. Our connections, our ties to a place we called home and our sense of place forever changed by thoughtless political motivations dividing the country along ethnic lines. All of us left the theater feeling diminished.” (This person, a Sinhalese, who loved Sri Lanka was forced to migrate during the 1989 JVP uprising).

I read more about the play and pass on details, principally from an article by Louise Collins Hughes in the NYT. The play Counting and Cracking is by S Shakthidharan known as Shakthi. A direct descendent of the famous C. Suntheralingam, civil servant, mathematician and controversial politician, Shakthidharan was an infant just past his first birthday when his family left Sri Lanka because of the 1983 riots and settled down in Sydney. There, his mother Anandhavalli encouraged full assimilation as an Australian but kept him culturally alive to his Tamil origins, she being a Bharathanatyam dancer. He gets interested in his ancestry and thus the play which he describes as being like ‘his soul on a plate.’ He says: “I do think of Sri Lanka as my homeland and Australia as my home.”

The autobiographical play opens in 2004 when Siddhartha or Sid, a college student, and his mother Radha scatter the ashes of a relative in the Georges River in Sydney and his mother says she has kept her grandmother’s ashes under her bed for 21 years – metaphor for her locked memories of the scars of the ethnic riots and having to uproot herself from thus far idyllic Sri Lanka to transfer to an alien country. He gets curious about his ancestry but she finds it too painful to recollect and recount their family story. Bit by bit he fills in the details.

Produced by Belvoir St Theatre and Kurinji, directed by Eamon Flack, with an international cast of 19, it took many years to premier in Sydney. The playwright’s mother, Anandavalli, was invited to the first rehearsals and she stayed on as choreographer and costume and set designer. The production’s resounding success paved the way for its presentation in New York, again garnering very positive reviews.

This play is symbolic of a shameful period of the past when torture and deaths were inflicted on Tamils, causing thousands to migrate – a loss to Sri Lanka as in the case of this internationally recognized theatrical and musical artiste and so many others who have distinguished themselves in various spheres all over the globe.

Woman writer wins prestigious prize

Here is another example of the past coming together with the present: the past totally regrettable and caused by violence and the present having the daughter of an emigrant family achieving great success in her adopted country.

I write of American Tamil writer V V Ganeshananthan who won the 2024 Women’s Prize for Fiction on June 13 for her novel Brotherless Night. The inaugural Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction went to author-activist Naomi Klein for Doppelganger –”a personal account of her plunge into the world of online misinformation.” Each won $38,000.

Ganeshananthan’s earlier Love Marriage (2008) and this novel won her many prestigious awards. She spent 20 years collecting info for her second novel, mostly listening to stories told by Tamil migrants to the US and visitors and then cross checking them through research. Thus the story of 16-year old Sashikala, aspiring to be a doctor, undergoing painful growing up years and experiencing much trauma in Jaffna. The novel emerges as genuinely autobiographical, though imagined. Different to the play. Both creative writers did not live through the experiences they include but were intimately connected being Tamil and of affected families.

Of the protagonist’s four brothers, the eldest is killed in Dehiwala by the Sinhala rioters in 1983; the next two join the LTTE, giving up studies, assured professional success and family. Thus the emotion-evoking title Brotherless Night. She speaks not only for herself and family but youth in general – whether Tamil or the Sinhala soldiers on duty in Jaffna.

I read the book, was totally impressed, and wrote a comment in this column. What impressed me most was that though the story was fictional it detailed some of what happened during the period 1983 to 2009 – the duration of the civil war – accurately and remarkably unbiased. “…has worked to disentangle the ambivalent feelings native Sri Lankans and members of the diaspora have about the brutal conflict and the LTTE.” “Brotherless Night can feel like a hybrid, delicately balancing the requirements of fiction – plot, characterization – with those of historical documentation” and I add correct, true documentation. The author herself noted that writing historical fiction ‘carefully and thoughtfully’ about a traumatic conflict well within living memory that was true to people’s experience was ‘hard work.’

To me, Brotherless Night chronicles the dire faults, injustice and violence of the Tamil Tigers as seen and assessed by the protagonist – the medical student. She fictionalizes a true incident –the torture meted out by the LTTE on a much loved teacher for organizing a cricket match. Sashi in the novel is befriended by a Jaffna medical college woman lecturer who definitely is Rajini Thiranagama, who with colleagues started chronicling abuse of human rights of the LTTE plus of course government forces stationed there. In the story her co-HR activist is killed, but it was Thiranagama who was shot in the back by an LTTE cadre as the lecturer was cycling home.

Ganeshananthan’s parents – father physician and mother Montessori teacher – migrated to the US in the early 1970s and she was born in 1980 in Connecticut but the family moved to Maryland, Bethesda. She graduated from Harvard College in 2003, where she was managing editor of the The Harvard Crimson. Later she earned her MFA at the University of Iowa in 2005, and another master’s degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, specializing in arts and culture journalism.

To tie up knots – present and past – I conclude that the thrust of my article is that never again should racial flaring consume our island in flames. Can we hope that with the change of political culture and systems; sincere, sensible politicians in VIP positions; racial harmony will be restored and people become calmer, more so with fair play and justice restored?



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Features

Arctic link discovered: Lankan scientists trace 8,000 km seabird migration route

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By Ifham Nizam

Sri Lankan scientists have uncovered a remarkable long-distance migration route used by seabirds, linking the island’s shores with the Arctic—an achievement that is expected to reshape global understanding of bird movement and highlight Sri Lanka’s importance in the natural world.

The discovery, led by Professor Sampath S. Seneviratne of the University of Colombo, shows that Heuglin’s Gulls travel nearly 8,000 kilometres from Sri Lanka to breeding grounds in northern Russia, following a carefully chosen path that combines coastal travel with long inland journeys.

Prof. Seneviratne told The Island that the finding challenges the long-standing belief that seabirds depend mainly on ocean routes.

“For a long time, we assumed seabirds would stay close to the sea throughout their migration. What we are seeing here is very different. These birds are moving across land as well, using a route that connects Sri Lanka directly with the Arctic,” he said.

Brown headed gull- migrating from Himalayas to Mannar

The birds begin their journey from the northwestern coast of Sri Lanka, especially around Mannar—an area known for its rich birdlife and coastal habitats. From there, they cross over to India and move along the western coastline before turning inland.

Their journey then takes them through Pakistan and Afghanistan, across parts of Central Asia, and onwards to the Arctic region, where they breed during the northern summer.

What has drawn particular attention from scientists is the route chosen by the birds.

Instead of attempting to cross the world’s highest mountain ranges, or taking a much longer path over the open ocean, the gulls appear to follow a middle course that allows them to avoid harsh conditions while still maintaining a steady journey.

Map 1 &2 birds moving through the continent to reach the Artctic

“They are not simply taking the shortest distance,” Prof. Seneviratne explained. “They are choosing a route that gives them the best chance of survival. Along this path, they are able to find food, rest, and avoid extreme environments.”

The birds travel long distances each day, covering hundreds of kilometres, but they do not do it all in one stretch. Their journey depends heavily on stopovers—places where they pause to rest and rebuild energy.

“These stopovers are critical,” Prof. Seneviratne said. “If the birds cannot find suitable places to feed and recover, they will not be able to complete the journey.”

Co-researcher Dr. Gayomini Panagoda said the discovery sheds light on a route that had remained largely hidden until now.

“We always knew these birds were leaving Sri Lanka during certain times of the year, but we did not fully understand where they were going or how they got there,” she said. “Now we have a much clearer picture of their journey.”

Awareness among schoolchildren

She added that the findings show how closely connected different parts of the world are through nature.

“A bird that spends part of its life in Sri Lanka ends up in the Arctic. That tells us how linked these ecosystems really are,” she said.

The findings also underline the importance of Sri Lanka’s coastal areas, which serve as vital feeding and resting grounds for migratory birds before they begin their long journey north.

Veteran ornithologist , Professor Emeritus Sarath Kotagama said these habitats are of international importance and must be protected.

“These coastal regions, especially places like Mannar, provide the food and shelter these birds need before migration. If those areas are damaged, it will affect bird populations far beyond Sri Lanka,” he said.

Professor Seneviratne with Dr. Gayomini Panagoda

Kotagama warned that increasing pressure on coastal ecosystems—from development, pollution, and climate change—could pose serious risks.

“We are already seeing changes in many of these birds. If we are not careful, we could lose habitats that are essential not just for local wildlife, but for species that travel across continents,” he said.

The discovery also draws attention to the wider network of migration routes that connect countries across Asia and beyond. Birds do not recognise national borders, and their survival depends on conditions in many different places along their journey.

Prof. Seneviratne stressed that protecting these birds will require cooperation between countries.

“These birds travel across several regions, and each of those regions plays a role in their survival. Conservation cannot be done by one country alone,” he said.

A GPS tagged Crab Plover

He added that more work is needed to understand how other species use similar routes and how changes in climate and land use may affect migration patterns in the future.

“There is still much we do not know. This is just one piece of a much larger picture,” he said.

Environmentalists say the findings should encourage stronger action to protect wetlands and coastal ecosystems in Sri Lanka, many of which are under increasing threat.

“These areas are not just important for birds,” Dr. Panagoda said. “They support fisheries, protect coastlines, and are part of our natural heritage. Protecting them benefits both people and wildlife.”

She noted that conserving these habitats will also help ensure that future generations can continue to witness the arrival and departure of migratory birds.

For Sri Lanka, the discovery is both a moment of pride and a reminder of responsibility.

It highlights the role the island plays in supporting wildlife that travels across vast distances and connects different parts of the world.

It also shows that even a small country can have a big impact when it comes to global biodiversity.

As Prof. Seneviratne put it, “What happens in Sri Lanka does not stay in Sri Lanka. These birds carry that connection across continents.”

The discovery is expected to encourage further research into bird migration in the region, as scientists continue to explore how different species move across landscapes and adapt to changing conditions.

It also reinforces the need to protect the natural environments that make such journeys possible.

In the end, the story of these birds is not just about distance. It is about survival, connection, and the delicate balance of nature.

From the shores of Sri Lanka to the frozen Arctic, their journey is a powerful reminder that the natural world is far more connected than we often realise—and that protecting one part of it helps protect the whole.

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Why the promotion of drone warfare is unconscionable

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A drone strike on an oil facility in the Middle East in the current war.

For the morally-conscious, the tendency among some sections in Sri Lanka to promote the production of drones for national defence purposes could be deeply worrying. Besides, this proposition flies in the face of common sense and disregards the relentlessly increasing harsh economic realities coming in the wake of the current wars that could push many a southern country into beggary. In fact even the West is facing an economic recession.

To begin with the latter issues, it is a proved reality that the majority of Southern countries are descending further into poverty at present. The FAO has the ‘bleeding statistics’ . For instance, food insecurity in Asia is of such disquieting proportions that the region accounts for ‘ approximately half of the world’s 370.7 million undernourished people’.

It is against such a bleak economic backdrop that countries of the South are being called on to pump money into the production or importing of drones. Pointed reference needs to be made here to the South because drones are peddled as cutting-edge defence systems that are comparatively economical to acquire and relatively easy to operate. It is even voiced that with time drones could enable even smaller countries of the South to acquire ‘strategic parity’ with the major powers of the North and middle level powers.

Meanwhile, no thought is spared for the poor of the South who would sink steadily into poverty and powerlessness. Because more defence spending by southern countries only entrenches the ruling classes of those countries, and in some cases their military high commands, further in the systems of governance and repression.

This has essentially been the experience of the majority of post-colonial states. As aptly phrased by economic and political analyst Susan George in the seventies, it has always been a case of ‘The Other Half Dying’.

Accordingly, it cannot be perceived as to how more defence spending by the South on drones could help alleviate the latter’s principal problem of deepening poverty. As for the perceived escalating insecurities of the South, these problems are of such complexity that drones could never be seen as offering a quick fix for them. They need patient, multi-pronged managing, mainly at the negotiating table with the powers that matter. These are long- gestation projects that need to be compulsorily undertaken in view of the fact that the alternative could be indefinite conflict and war.

Since Sri Lanka too is mentioned as one of those countries that needs to look at the drone proposition with some seriousness, it is relevant to underscore that Sri Lanka is second in a list of countries that are described as facing acute material hardships at present in the wake of the economic instability bred by the Hormuz crisis. The source of such information is no less than the respected Kiel Institute for the World Economy. The first 10 such gravely affected countries are: Zambia, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Pakistan, Equatorial Guinea, Kenya, Bangladesh, Vietnam, the Philippines and Thailand.

It is thought-provoking that among the above countries are not only those that have been traditionally seen as experiencing severe underdevelopment but also up-and-coming middle income countries that have been hitherto described as being on a fast track to development. The interesting mix proves that no country at present could consider itself immune to current economic shocks originating mainly in the Middle East that could plunge it dramatically into acute poverty virtually overnight.

We are left to conclude that ‘Bread’ or the economic well being of people could in no way be sacrificed for ‘Drones’ in democratic countries whose governments are obliged to be accountable to the people. Considering the phenomenal hardships that could be waiting to happen worldwide, the world could very well do without more ‘Guns’ or ‘Drones’.

However, if southern governments in particular opt for ‘Drones’ or an accumulation of ‘Guns’, the chances are that there could be overwhelming tides of social discontent in their countries, bred by economic want, that could then ignite indefinite war and repression. That is, a ‘No-Win’ situation for all concerned.

Ukraine has been spiritedly and admirably taking the fight back to the invading Russian forces over the past few years but its skillful use of sophisticated drones of its own making has in no way decreased the human costs the war has been incurring for itself. Ukraine has no choice but to continue with all the weaponry at its command to beat back the Russian invader but sooner rather than later it would need to take into account the immense suffering the war has been inflicting on its people and focus on the fact that the Russians are not backing down but using equally lethal weaponry against it.

The above are some of the dilemmas of the present wars that call for urgent resolution. Warring countries are obliged to address on a priority basis the misery and destruction their actions incur for their publics and consider deploying diplomacy, preferably under the aegis of the UN, to work out peaceful solutions to their enmities and differences. Considering the futility of their war Russia and Ukraine are obliged to think on these lines.

No less a power than the US should be considering deeply right now the advisability of continuing with its military interventions in the South in particular to achieve its self interests. The rising loss of American lives and the economic costs of war in the Middle East will be weighing heavily with the Trump administration and it shouldn’t come as a surprise if negotiations are given a serious try, going ahead. Ground realities in the region moreover indicate that the US ‘has bitten off more than it could chew’ and that Iran is remaining hostile and unyielding despite being bloodied.

For both sides to the war what should be inescapable is the harsh reality of continuing human suffering on a chilling scale. Sophisticated and increasingly destructive weaponry such as drones and missiles are being used but they have not brought either side any closer to victory. Instead human misery is being perpetrated mindlessly with a steady deadening of consciences and a flagrant abandoning of reason.

Accordingly, what perceived legitimate aims could drone warfare, for instance, help achieve? It is quite some time since sections of the world community came to realize the futility of violence and war. There is no choice but for humans to recognize and revere the principle of the sacredness of life. A return to fundamentals is imperative.

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Unforgettable experience …

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The committee members of the Ananda Balika Vidyalaya OGA – UK, who made Funky ’70s Bash Dinner Dance a total success (Photographs by: Praneeth Hettiarachchi)

Singer Rajiv Sebastian has the unique ability to woo an audience and he did just that on his recent trip to London, performing at the Funky ’70s Bash Dinner Dance.

This particular event of music, nostalgia, and celebration, was organised by the Ananda Balika Vidyalaya Old Girls’ Association – UK, and held at the DoubleTree by Hilton London Elstree, in Borehamwood, on 28th February.

They say the success of the evening was made possible through the dedication and hard work of President Devika Arrawwalage and the committed committee members of the Ananda Balika Vidyalaya OGA – UK.

Rajiv Sebastian was in top form, delivering an engaging performance that took the audience on a nostalgic musical journey through the iconic sounds of the’70s.

Doing the first set in full suit, with a fan joining in the action

He did three sets, appearing in three different outfits – suit, the normal shirt and trouser, and the sarong – and the crowd loved it.

Adding to the energy of the event, I’m told, was the music provided by the band Hasthi, made up of Sri Lankan musicians based in the UK.

At the end of a truly enjoyable and memorable event, the organisers had this to say about Rajiv Sebastian’s performance:

“On behalf of the entire team, I want to extend our heartfelt thanks to you for travelling all the way from Sri Lanka to perform at our first ever ABV dinner dance in the UK.

“Your performance was truly the highlight of the night. You have a superb talent for captivating an audience; from the moment you took the stage, your vibrant energy and incredible vocal range completely transformed the atmosphere.

“It was wonderful to see how effortlessly you engaged the crowd, keeping the dance floor packed and everyone in high spirits throughout the evening. You have graced the stage as a guest artiste on three separate occasions, delivering exceptional performances that set you apart from your peers.

“We feel incredibly privileged to have had an artiste of your calibre and charisma join us. You didn’t just provide music; you created an unforgettable experience that people are still talking about.

Surprises for his fans in Sri Lanka, as well

“Thank you for sharing your immense gift with us. Hope to see you back on a UK stage very soon!”

Yes, and it’s happening soon; Rajiv says he is off to London again, in mid-April, and will be performing at four different venues.

He also mentioned that he has some surprises for his fans in Sri Lanka, when he and his band, The Clan, present their 35th Anniversary concert … in June, this year.

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