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Three Popular American Women Novelist of yesteryears

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Asked why she wrote it, she gave several reasons depending on who asked the question and what sort of social strata they were in. The tree she immortalized is an “Ailanthus belonging to a hardy variety of Chinese sunac which she saw as a symbol of survival, a living reminder of her own struggle to escape the pain and poverty of Williamsburg.”

I wrote last Sunday in this column that of the 13 long listed for the 2022 Booker Prize, six were Americans. There is a massive upsurge of American novels but when we were young avid readers of fiction (around 1950s and 60s) it was British novelists we mostly read, having only passing interest in such greats as Scott Fitzgerald and Earnest Hemingway. However the three books I most vividly remember are by American authors.

Being house bound, this time due to lack of petrol for my vehicle and ‘empty fuel tank off days’ of my two courteous three wheeler drivers, I got down to more fiction reading. The book I am engrossed in at the moment is a yellowing paged, small print paperback of Betty Smith’s A Tree grows in Brooklyn.

It is far from starry eyed devouring of the book as I did as a late teenager but I certainly am absorbed in it, in every detail of living poor in Brooklyn at the beginning of the 20th Century. And unlike in my salad days, I am interested in the author and so researched Betty Smith’s life, which is closely parallel to the life of Francie Nolan in the novel.

Betty Smith(1896-1972) was born of first generation German American parents in Brooklyn which certainly was a very poor, tenement-living mixture of Jews, recent American citizens and migrants mostly from Italy and Ireland. Christened Elizabeth Lilian Wehner, she went to three schools but had to give up education at 14-years to help her mother bring up her brother Johnny and a sister by working in the postal service.

She spent much time from early on in the local library. In 1919 she married George Smith who, wanting to study law, moved to Ann Arbour. There Betty had two daughters and once they were schooling, she turned to educating herself. She attended courses at the University of Michigan, and though without matriculation, obtained her BA and later her MA in Fine Arts from Yale.

While in the U of Michigan, she embarked on writing plays and one being accepted and produced, she won a prize for it. Betty and her husband divorced in 1935. She started her fiction writing then. She married twice more and died of pneumonia in Connecticut on January 17, 1972.

Her first novel, titled They lived in Brooklyn was rejected by several publishers until it was accepted by Harper and Brothers whose editors advised the title be changed to A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Published in 1943, the novel became an instant bestseller. It is autobiographic since Betty is Francie Nolan of the novel.

Asked why she wrote it, she gave several reasons depending on who asked the question and what sort of social strata they were in. The tree she immortalized is an “Ailanthus belonging to a hardy variety of Chinese sunac which she saw as a symbol of survival, a living reminder of her own struggle to escape the pain and poverty of Williamsburg.”

Her first novel was followed by Tomorrow will be Better – 1948; Maggie Now – 1958 and Joy in the Morning – 1963. A Tree… was filmed in 1944 by 20th Century Fox directed by Elia Kazan and starring Dorothy McGuire and James Dunn as Francie’s parents. Dunn won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor while child actor Peggy Ann Gordon won the Oscar for Best Female Actress. It was produced as a play in 1951 and a new film version came out in 1974.

Reading Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind was a stolen tasting of forbidden fruit. Grown up books as we termed them were forbidden and thus my reading of the huge tome during study hour in my school hostel, brown paper covered to make it innocuous in the eyes of the all seeing, all knowing Matron. She actually asked me what I was reading, being unusually non-whispering during study hour. History book was my prompt answer which passed muster.

Gone with ….1936 was the only published novel of Mitchell but its success is measurable by its winning the National Award for Most Distinguished Novel in 1936 and the Pulitzer in1937. Born in 1900 Mitchell died young at age 48.

Never to be forgotten was Scarlett’s O’Hara sitting on the steps of Rhett Butler’s Atlanta mansion when he finally leaves her because of the love she seemed to have for the colourless Ashley Wilkes, self consoling herself with the determination to get him back. The optimist in her promises tomorrow’s another day when she goes back to Tara – her father’s cotton plantation with its black slaves.

The 1939 film starring Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable, Olivia de Havilland and Leslie Howard was directed by Victor Fleming and produced by David O’Selznik. It was nominated for 13 Oscars and won eight – best film; best actress and best supporting actress – the last creating history as Black American Hattie McDaniel won it for playing Scarlett’s nanny. She and the other black stars did not attend the premier since blacks were not allowed to sit alongside whites.

However 300,000 turned out to watch the stars as they came and went in Atlanta. The premier was at Loew’s Grand Theatre, still a theatre, and the stars stayed at the Georgia Terrace Hotel, right next to the old (for the US) block of flats where my son lives. The film was as enthralling as the book, or more so, searing itself in my memory for all time. It was redone and released several times, the last being in 1989.

The book and the film are considered perennial classics, but of late criticism has been leveled against it for romaticising slavery. Nothing seemed wrong with it to my mind.And then decades later I was in the Margaret Mitchell museum down Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia, a convenient walk down from my son’s flat, with huge pictures from the film on its walls, especially Clark Gable staring at you with one eyebrow raised and flirty look. Mitchell wrote the novel in the cellar converted to an apartment, her husband not being able to afford better accommodation. Coming down with bronchial trouble they finally did move upstairs.

Margaret Mitchell had prosperous parents: father – lawyer, historian, politician and mother a suffragette, with Scottish and Irish roots. They lived down Peachtree Street and when a teenager, Margaret was rumoured to be a flirt. She graduated from Smith College, Massachusetts, and went into journalism contributing mainly to the Atlanta Journal. She gave up studies when her mother died in the flu epidemic of 1918 to keep house for her father.

In 1922 she married one of her two regular escorts – Bernien (Red) Shaw but soon divorced him due to his alcoholism and cruelty. She then married their bestman, her other favourite boyfriend – John Marsh in 1925.

To Kill a Mocking Bird’by Harper Lee (1926-2016) is an all-time favourite of mine and maybe better known than the previous two mentioned. Jean Louis Finch – Scout, her brother Jem and their father, lawyer Atticus Finch are indelible characters in my mind, and Atticus – Gregory Peck – is of course the all time heartthrob.

I have a further reminder. Along one of my walks is an almost derelict gloomy house with one window open and an old car in the portico. That is Boo Radley’s home to me with a mysterious, so far unseen Boo within!The widower lawyer, Atticus Finch, bringing up his two children in colour conscious Maycomb, Alabama, makes for a humane story, with him finally, but unsuccessfully defending a black youth – Tom Robinson – accused of molesting his daughter by white trash Bob Ewell. Also humane was the house confined Boo Radley attempting to befriend the two kids and finally rescuing Scout from the clutches of revenge seeing Ewell.

In 2015 Lee published her second novel Go Set a Watchman. In it 26-year old Scout visits her father in Maycomb against the backdrop of civil rights tension. He has changed and is now almost a supporter of the Klu Klux Klan. It was written by Lee in the mid 1950s and left unpublished until coaxed to do so; meeting mixed criticism. “The main characters may be the same, but Watchman is an entirely different book in both shape and tone from Mockingbird. Scout is not an impressionable girl but a young woman living in New York who discovers that her father, the great Atticus Finch, is a bigot.”

Nellie Harper Lee won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize, several honorary degrees and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. She assisted her close friend Truman Capote in research for his In Cold Blood and took him as the model for Dill Harris, the Finch siblings’ friend. The 1962 film of To Kill… won Oscars for Best Screen Play – Robert Mulligan and Best Actor – Gregory Peck. It was nominated to the PGA Hall of Fame.



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Ethnic-related problems need solutions now

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President Dissanayake in Jaffna

In the space of 15 months, President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has visited the North of the country more than any other president or prime minister. These were not flying visits either. The president most recent visit to Jaffna last week was on the occasion of Thai Pongal to celebrate the harvest and the dawning of a new season. During the two days he spent in Jaffna, the president launched the national housing project, announced plans to renovate Palaly Airport, to expedite operations at the Kankesanthurai Port, and pledged once again that racism would have no place in the country.

There is no doubt that the president’s consistent presence in the north has had a reassuring effect. His public rejection of racism and his willingness to engage openly with ethnic and religious minorities have helped secure his acceptance as a national leader rather than a communal one. In the fifteen months since he won the presidential election, there have been no inter community clashes of any significance. In a country with a long history of communal tension, this relative calm is not accidental. It reflects a conscious political choice to lower the racial temperature rather than inflame it.

But preventing new problems is only part of the task of governing. While the government under President Dissanayake has taken responsibility for ensuring that anti-minority actions are not permitted on its watch, it has yet to take comparable responsibility for resolving long standing ethnic and political problems inherited from previous governments. These problems may appear manageable because they have existed for years, even decades. Yet their persistence does not make them innocuous. Beneath the surface, they continue to weaken trust in the state and erode confidence in its ability to deliver justice.

Core Principle

A core principle of governance is responsibility for outcomes, not just intentions. Governments do not begin with a clean slate. Governments do not get to choose only the problems they like. They inherit the state in full, with all its unresolved disputes, injustices and problemmatic legacies. To argue that these are someone else’s past mistakes is politically convenient but institutionally dangerous. Unresolved problems have a habit of resurfacing at the most inconvenient moments, often when a government is trying to push through reforms or stabilise the economy.

This reality was underlined in Geneva last week when concerns were raised once again about allegations of sexual abuse that occurred during the war, affecting both men and women who were taken into government custody. Any sense that this issue had faded from international attention was dispelled by the release of a report by the Office of the Human Rights High Commissioner titled “Sri Lanka: Report on conflict related sexual violence”, dated 13.01.26. Such reports do not emerge in a vacuum. They are shaped by the absence of credible domestic processes that investigate allegations, establish accountability and offer redress. They also shape international perceptions, influence diplomatic relationships and affect access to cooperation and support.

Other unresolved problems from the past continue to fester. These include the continued detention of Tamil prisoners under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, in some cases for many years without conclusion, the failure to return civilian owned land taken over by the military during the war, and the fate of thousands of missing persons whose families still seek answers. These are not marginal issues even when they are not at the centre stage. They affect real lives and entire communities. Their cumulative effect is corrosive, undermining efforts to restore normalcy and rebuild confidence in public institutions.

Equal Rights

Another area where delay will prove costly is the resettlement of Malaiyaha Tamil communities affected by the recent cyclone in the central hills, which was the worst affected region in the country. Even as President Dissanayake celebrated Thai Pongal in Jaffna to the appreciation of the people there, Malaiyaha Tamils engaged in peaceful campaigns to bring attention to their unresolved problems. In Colombo at the Liberty Roundabout, a number of them gathered to symbolically celebrate Thai Pongal while also bringing national attention to the issues of their community, in particular the problem of displacement after the cyclone.

The impact of the cyclone, and the likelihood of future ones under conditions of climate change, make it necessary for the displaced Malaiyaha Tamils to be found new places of residence. This is also an opportunity to tackle the problem of their landlessness in a comprehensive manner and make up for decades if not two centuries of inequity.

Planning for relocation and secure housing is good governance. This needs to be done soon. Climate related disasters do not respect political timetables. They punish delay and indecision. A government that prides itself on system change cannot respond to such challenges with temporary fixes.

The government appears concerned that finding new places for the Malaiyaha Tamil people to be resettled will lead to land being taken away from plantation companies which are said to be already struggling for survival. Due to the economic crisis the country has faced since it went bankrupt in 2022, the government has been deferential to the needs of company owners who are receiving most favoured treatment. As a result, the government is contemplating solutions such as high rise apartments and townhouse style housing to minimise the use of land.

Such solutions cannot substitute for a comprehensive strategy that includes consultations with the affected population and addresses their safety, livelihoods and community stability.

Lose Trust

Most of those who voted for the government at the last elections did so in the hope that it would bring about system change. They did not vote for the government to reinforce the same patterns that the old system represented. At its core, system change means rebalancing priorities. It means recognising that economic efficiency without social justice is a short-term gain with long-term costs. It means understanding that unresolved ethnic grievances, unaddressed wartime abuses and unequal responses to disaster will eventually undermine any development programme, no matter how well designed. Governance that postpones difficult decisions may buy time, but lose trust.

The coming year will therefore be decisive. The government must show that its commitment to non racism and inclusion extends beyond conflict prevention to conflict resolution. Addressing conflict related abuses, concluding long standing detentions, returning land, accounting for the missing and securing dignified resettlement for displaced communities are not distractions from the government programme. They are central to it. A government committed to genuine change must address the problems it inherited, or run the risk of being overwhelmed when those problems finally demand settlement.

by Jehan Perera

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Education. Reform. Disaster: A Critical Pedagogical Approach

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PM Amarasuriya

This Kuppi writing aims to engage critically with the current discussion on the reform initiative “Transforming General Education in Sri Lanka 2025,” focusing on institutional and structural changes, including the integration of a digitally driven model alongside curriculum development, teacher training, and assessment reforms. By engaging with these proposed institutional and structural changes through the parameters of the division and recognition of labour, welfare and distribution systems, and lived ground realities, the article develops a critical perspective on the current reform discourse. By examining both the historical context and the present moment, the article argues that these institutional and structural changes attempt to align education with a neoliberal agenda aimed at enhancing the global corporate sector by producing “skilled” labour. This agenda is further evaluated through the pedagogical approach of socialist feminist scholarship. While the reforms aim to produce a ‘skilled workforce with financial literacy,’ this writing raises a critical question: whose labour will be exploited to achieve this goal? Why and What Reform to Education

In exploring why, the government of Sri Lanka seeks to introduce reforms to the current education system, the Prime Minister and Minister of Education, Higher Education, and Vocational Education, Dr. Harini Amarasuriya, revealed in a recent interview on 15 January 2026 on News First Sri Lanka that such reforms are a pressing necessity. According to the philosophical tradition of education reform, curriculum revision and prevailing learning and teaching structures are expected every eight years; however, Sri Lanka has not undertaken such revisions for the past ten years. The renewal of education is therefore necessary, as the current system produces structural issues, including inequality in access to quality education and the need to create labour suited to the modern world. Citing her words, the reforms aim to create “intelligent, civil-minded citizens” in order to build a country where people live in a civilised manner, work happily, uphold democratic principles, and live dignified lives.

Interpreting her narrative, I claim that the reform is intended to produce, shape, and develop a workforce for the neoliberal economy, now centralised around artificial intelligence and machine learning. My socialist feminist perspective explains this further, referring to Rosa Luxemburg’s reading on reforms for social transformation. As Luxemburg notes, although the final goal of reform is to transform the existing order into a better and more advanced system: The question remains: does this new order truly serve the working class? In the case of education, the reform aims to transform children into “intelligent, civil-minded citizens.” Yet, will the neoliberal economy they enter, and the advanced technological industries that shape it, truly provide them a better life, when these industries primarily seek surplus profit?

History suggests otherwise. Sri Lanka has repeatedly remained at the primary manufacturing level within neoliberal industries. The ready-made garment industry, part of the global corporate fashion system, provides evidence: it exploited both manufacturing labourers and brand representatives during structural economic changes in the 1980s. The same pattern now threatens to repeat in the artificial intelligence sector, raising concerns about who truly benefits from these education reforms

That historical material supports the claim that the primary manufacturing labour for the artificial intelligence industry will similarly come from these workers, who are now being trained as skilled employees who follow the system rather than question it. This context can be theorised through Luxemburg’s claim that critical thinking training becomes a privileged instrument, alienating the working class from such training, an approach that neoliberalism prefers to adopt in the global South.

Institutional and Structural Gaps

Though the government aims to address the institutional and structural gaps, I claim that these gaps will instead widen due to the deeply rooted system of uneven distribution in the country. While agreeing to establish smart classrooms, the critical query is the absence of a wide technological welfare system across the country. From electricity to smart equipment, resources remain inadequate, and the government lags behind in taking prompt initiative to meet these requirements.

This issue is not only about the unavailability of human and material infrastructure, but also about the absence of a plan to restore smart normalcy after natural disasters, particularly the resumption of smart network connections. Access to smart learning platforms, such as the internet, for schoolchildren is a high-risk factor that requires not only the monitoring of classroom teachers but also the involvement of the state. The state needs to be vigilant of abuses and disinformation present in the smart-learning space, an area in which Sri Lanka is still lagging. This concern is not only about the safety of children but also about the safety of women. For example, the recent case of abusive image production via Elon Musk’s AI chatbox, X, highlights the urgent need for a legal framework in Sri Lanka.

Considering its geographical location, Sri Lanka is highly vulnerable to natural disasters, the frequency in which they occur, increasing, owing to climate change. Ditwah is a recent example, where villages were buried alive by landslides, rivers overflowed, and families were displaced, losing homes that they had built over their lifetimes. The critical question, then, is: despite the government’s promise to integrate climate change into the curriculum, how can something still ‘in the air ‘with climate adaptation plans yet to be fully established, be effectively incorporated into schools?

Looking at the demographic map of the country, the expansion of the elderly population, the dependent category, requires attention. Considering the physical and psychological conditions of this group, fostering “intelligent, civic-minded” citizens necessitates understanding the elderly not as a charity case but as a human group deserving dignity. This reflects a critical reading of the reform content: what, indeed, is to be taught? This critical aspect further links with the next section of reflective of ground reality.

Reflective Narrative of Ground Reality

Despite the government asserting that the “teacher” is central to this reform, critical engagement requires examining how their labour is recognised. In Sri Lanka, teachers’ work has long been tied to social recognition, both utilised and exploited, Teachers receive low salaries while handling multiple roles: teaching, class management, sectional duties, and disciplinary responsibilities.

At present, a total teaching load is around 35 periods a week, with 28 periods spent in classroom teaching. The reform adds continuous assessments, portfolio work, projects, curriculum preparation, peer coordination, and e-knowledge, to the teacher’s responsibilities. These are undeclared forms of labour, meaning that the government assigns no economic value to them; yet teachers perform these tasks as part of a long-standing culture. When this culture is unpacked, the gendered nature of this undeclared labour becomes clear. It is gendered because the majority of schoolteachers are women, and their unpaid roles remain unrecognised. It is worth citing some empirical narratives to illustrate this point:

When there was an extra-school event, like walks, prize-giving, or new openings, I stayed after school to design some dancing and practice with the students. I would never get paid for that extra time,” a female dance teacher in the Western Province shared.

I cite this single empirical account, and I am certain that many teachers have similar stories to share.

Where the curriculum is concerned, schoolteachers struggle to complete each lesson as planned due to time constraints and poor infrastructure. As explained by a teacher in the Central Province:

It is difficult to have a reliable internet connection. Therefore, I use the hotspot on my phone so the children can access the learning material.”

Using their own phones and data for classroom activities is not part of a teacher’s official duties, but a culture has developed around the teaching role that makes such decisions necessary. Such activities related to labour risks further exploitation under the reform if the state remains silent in providing the necessary infrastructure.

Considering that women form the majority of the teaching profession, none of the reforms so far have taken women’s health issues seriously. These issues could be exacerbated by the extra stress arising from multiple job roles. Many female teachers particularly those with young children, those in peri- or post-menopause stages of their life, or those with conditions like endometriosis may experience aggravated health problems due to work-related stress intensified by the reform. This raises a critical question: what role does the state play in addressing these issues?

In Conclusion

The following suggestions are put forward:

First and foremost, the government should clearly declare the fundamental plan of the reform, highlighting why, what, when, and how it will be implemented. This plan should be grounded in the realities of the classroom, focusing on being child-centred and teacher-focused.

Technological welfare interventions are necessary, alongside a legal framework to ensure the safety and security of accessing the smart, information-centred world. Furthermore, teachers’ labour should be formally recognised and assigned economic value. Currently, under neoliberal logic, teachers are often left to navigate these challenges on their own, as if the choice is between survival or collapse.

Aruni Samarakoon teaches at the Department of Public Policy, University of Ruhuna

Kuppi is a politics and pedagogy happening on the margins of the lecture hall that parodies, subverts, and simultaneously reaffirms social hierarchies.

By Aruni Samarakoon

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Smartphones and lyrics stands…

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Diliup Gabadamudalige: Artistes can stay at home and hire their avatar for concerts, movies, etc.

Diliup Gabadamudalige is, indeed, a maestro where music is concerned, and this is what he had to say, referring to our Seen ‘N’ Heard in The Island of 6th January, 2026, and I totally agree with his comments.

Diliup: “AI avatars will take over these concerts. It will take some time, but it surely will happen in the near future. Artistes can stay at home and hire their avatar for concerts, movies, etc. Lyrics and dance moves, even gymnastics can be pre-trained”.

Yes, and that would certainly be unsettling as those without talent will make use of AI to deceive the public.

Right now at most events you get the stage crowded with lyrics stands and, to make matters even worse, some of the artistes depend on the smartphone to put over a song – checking out the lyrics, on the smartphone, every few seconds!

In the good ole days, artistes relied on their talent, stage presence, and memorisation skills to dominate the stage.

They would rehearse till they knew the lyrics by heart and focus on connecting with the audience.

Smartphones and lyrics stands: A common sight these days

The ability of the artiste to keep the audience entertained, from start to finish, makes a live performance unforgettable That’s the magic of a great show!

When an artiste’s energy is contagious, and they’re clearly having a blast, the audience feeds off it and gets taken on an exciting ride. It’s like the whole crowd is vibing on the same frequency.

Singing with feeling, on stage, creates this electric connection with the audience, but it can’t be done with a smartphone in one hand and lyrics stands lined up on the stage.

AI’s gonna shake things up in the music scene, for sure – might replace some roles, like session musicians or sound designers – but human talent will still shine!

AI can assist, but it’s tough to replicate human emotion, experience, and soul in music.

In the modern world, I guess artistes will need to blend old-school vibes with new tech but certainly not with smartphones and lyrics stands!

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