Connect with us

Features

Trump’s greatest comeback the greatest setback for the USA

Published

on

by Vijaya Chandrasoma

Last Tuesday, one of the most consequential elections in the history of the United States was concluded, with the people deciding, according to the constitution of the nation, to abandon the ideological system of governance defined by that very constitution. The living ideology of democracy, in the words of President Abraham Lincoln, of a “government of the people, by the people and for the people” has been replaced by an authoritarian kleptocracy.

The archaic Constitution of the United States written over two centuries ago will be updated, replaced by a document created by the conservative Heritage Foundation, Project 2025 – Mandate for Leadership, to reflect the traditions and ideology of pre-World War II Germany. The Good Old Days of Jim Crow and Segregation.

The inexorable progress towards a diverse democracy has given way to a society dominated by Christian white supremacists, where the movement towards a Socialist Democracy, started by the introduction of a social safety net with the New Deal of President Roosevelt in the 1940s, including Social Security and Medicare, may be curtailed, even reversed.

Donald J. Trump, the 45th President of the United States, became the first convicted felon to be elected to its Presidency at last week’s contest. The election was conducted without a trace of post-election accusations of election fraud. The Democratic candidate, Vice-President Kamala Harris, conceded defeat to Trump a few hours after the result was called in Trump’s favor. A conversation that took a little longer than expected, as it was difficult to convey the meaning of a word, concede, which was not in the President-elect’s vocabulary.

There will be no attempts to interfere with the peaceful transfer of power, and Donald Trump will be duly inaugurated as the 47th and possibly the last President of the United States, on January 20, 2025. Vice-President Harris, who, in her capacity of President of the Senate, will make the final certification of Trump’s presidency on January 6, 2025. She will carry out her constitutional duty without the slightest danger of being hanged.

I wrote in an essay last month:

“Corporate greed and Christian white supremacy will not vanish into thin air with Trump’s defeat. Project 2025 will simply be renamed Project 2029.

“However, if Trump wins the presidency in November, he will be gently eased out of the White House after a couple of years, on the eminently valid grounds that he has reached full-blown lunacy. He has served his purpose. The exercise of the 25th Amendment to oust him will be a legal and medical formality. 40-year-old Vice-President Vance will take over as president. With the two-term limit of the 22nd Amendment overturned by a suppliant, corrupt Supreme Court, Vance will begin a long reign as the President of the United States of America for Life, obediently carrying out the instructions of the dark money, billionaire class”.

Vance has proved to be a worthy successor to Trump, younger, smarter and an even more facile liar.

The demise or departure of Trump will not change the movement that was started by that segment of Christian white nationalists which has always resented the existence of the descendants of African-American slaves and recent brown-skinned/colored immigrants. Racism has been an endemic feature of North American society for centuries.

White Americans “settlers” have always recognized that the free labor of two centuries of slavery, and starvation wages paid to illegal immigrants, have made the United States the economic powerhouse of the world. They also appreciate that mass deportation of illegal immigrants may cripple the greatest economy of the world.

However, they do insist that these second-class citizens cannot enjoy the same privileges the original white European settlers/marauders have been enjoying since they committed the virtual genocide of the original natives of the continent more than four centuries ago, which led to the creation of the United States of America.

The dark money billionaire class has now emerged in the open, with the richest men in the world backing Donald Trump. They were horrified when the administration of Barack Obama accelerated the path initiated by FDR in the 1930s towards a Socialist Democracy, on the lines of governance practiced in every other developed nation in the world. Nations in Northern Europe and Australasia, where there are few homeless in abject poverty, but fewer billionaires; with a social safety net available to all, even the most vulnerable. This was not the “woke”, “Commie” future envisaged by the growing breed of billionaires for the richest country in the world.

Elon Musk funded Trump’s current campaign with tens of millions of dollars. Trump, in turn, has offered Musk a senior position in his administration, if re-elected, as a “Secretary of Cost-Cutting”, an advisory role that could give him influence over national and international policies. That such an appointment would further assist his own business ventures like Tesla, X and Space X is an anticipated bonus. Other billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Rupert Murdoch and many others have already gotten into the act, and will control most sectors of the US economy and the media during Trump’s administration. The largest tax cut in history benefiting these billionaires and corporations is imminent.

This movement of white supremacy and totalitarianism triumphed not because of Trump, rather in spite of Trump. As Trump was showing increasing signs of paranoid dementia, especially during the last few months before the election, the corporate giants, headed by Elon Musk, decided to openly show their support, finance his re-election and resuscitate the movement.

While Trump was spewing hate speech against the illegal immigrant “vermin poisoning the blood of the people”, they recognized the fact that there was just one issue that would decide the presidency: the economy. People were totally dissatisfied with their experience during the first few years of the Biden/Harris administration, of rampant inflation and high prices, of an economy when many were unable to pay their rent or put food on the table, especially when the minimum wage hadn’t seen an increase in decades.

True, there were concerns about immigration, reproductive freedom, LGBTQ rights, gun violence; but they paled by comparison with the difficulties caused by the economy, which ironically, had recovered to be the “envy of the world” by the time the election came along. Unfortunately, these improvements do not bring immediate relief, and people are still suffering under the burden of inflation.

Musk and other corporate leaders will play a leading role in the new Trump administration. Although Trump’s misstated economic policies for the future, especially on tariffs, have been denounced by economists, his supporters will rely on the most successful entrepreneurs in the world to get the country out of its current financial woes. Especially as the spadework has already been made by the Biden administration to rescue the near-recession they inherited from the criminal post-Covid management of Trump’s first term. They will also be assisted in their task by the imminent removal of regulations and controls, all the while making Trump and themselves richer than God.

Trump is determined to “keep promises made”. He will end the Russian/Ukraine war before he is inaugurated, with a total surrender of the Ukrainians; he will encourage Israel’s Netanyahu to complete the genocide of the Palestinians, once and for all. The US will withdraw from NATO and Trump will associate himself with the strongmen he admires, his mentor, Russian President Putin, Viktor Orban of Hungary, his erstwhile lover, North Korea’s Kim Jong-Un. He has promised to begin the largest mass-deportation program ever of illegal and even legal immigrants. He has also vowed to ban “sanctuary cities”. He will pardon the January 6 insurrectionists, who in his eyes are fellow patriots and “hostages”. He will instruct his Justice Department to appoint a Special Prosecutor to investigate into the greatest crime family in US history, the Bidens; he will also start the process of investigating and jailing his political opponents, the “enemy within”. He will enact a nationwide ban on women’s reproductive freedom, endangering the health of all women in the USA.

He will force the Education Department to stop the teaching of Critical Race Theory and other subjects which denigrate the lily-white history of the nation. And of course, as a direct descendant of our Saviour Jesus, the Bible (preferably his own leather-bound, God Save the USA Bible, made in China, soon to be available at the White House Gift Shop at the bargain-basement price of $59.99 per copy) will be required reading in every classroom in America.

All this, and more, will happen. And when it does, are the Democrats going to let them get away with it, or are they going to fight to save democracy?

The world has coped with such madmen before. And survived. What the planet will not survive is Trump’s policy on Climate Change. He has vowed to enhance exponentially US reliance on, and the drilling for, fossil fuels (“Drill, Baby, Drill”), again calling Climate Change a “hoax”, against virtually every scientific opinion in the world.

The United States, and the rest of the world, will be assailed with natural disasters of every type, floods, droughts, tornadoes, hurricanes, wildfires, earthquakes and all the weapons in nature’s fearful arsenal. Perhaps we have already passed the tipping point, and we will continue to be so assailed with increasing frequency that will cause irreparable destruction of the planet.

This may well be the ultimate legacy of Trump’s presidency, and conclusive evidence of the cataclysmic stupidity of the decision made by “the people” on November 5, 2024.

On a personal note, I had planned to publish a selection of articles I have written to the Sunday Island over the past 15 months, which was to end with a triumphant account of Trump’s ignominious defeat in last week’s election, and his subsequent conviction and imprisonment on 91 felonies, including Incitement of an Insurrection, Sedition, Espionage and Obstruction of Justice.

Alas, it was not to be. So I have decided that the final essay in my book will be an abject admission of my complete failure to understand the psyche of a country which gave me a second chance, and welcomed me with open, if long-delayed and investigatory arms. A country which has changed beyond recognition with the advent of Trumpism.

I have to thank my old friend and schoolmate, the editor of the Sunday Island, for providing me with something to do in my old age. Venting my hatred for the most evil man in living memory gave me the sort of occupational therapy which went against the wisdom of all those religions that preach hatred is an evil emotion which only causes personal harm. Hating Trump has done me a power of good.

My many Sri Lankan friends and admirers of Trump now are having the last laugh on me. Sadly, we will all be sharing the grief when we see the depths to which Trump and his Christian, white supremacist minions will drag the most beautiful country in the world. Soon.

I will take a few months off till I get over my distress as to where the home of my children is headed, with a prayer that they will continue to prosper.



Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Features

Revolt in the Temple: Poverty as Structural Control

Published

on

The underlying issue in Anuradhapura is a struggle between a few families who, for years, have waged a quiet cold war over control of the Udamaluwa. Similar situations exist in Mihintale as well. These places, among others, are treated as treasures of Buddhism but, in practice, function as tightly controlled economic centres. The same pattern repeats in Kandy around the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic and in Kataragama at the shrine of God Kataragama. Variations of it exist across religious spaces of Islam, Catholicism, and Hinduism too, where institutional authority becomes indistinguishable from localised power networks. What is presented as sacred order often operates as inherited control.

It is indeed devastating to see situations where parents have no alternative but to expose their children to predators in robes for survival. This has nothing to do with religion itself, but with human pathology in the context of survival. These are the questions that demand answers, not superficial responses that treat symptoms while ignoring the conditions that produce them. What is more shocking and disturbing is not the tragedy itself, but the reactions to it. Social media has overwhelmed us, not towards understanding, but towards a fragmented cognitive state with no exit route.

A friend of mine in Nairobi used to keep all his electronic devices at home and go into the forest once a month, spending days there before returning. He called it “detoxification”, but in reality it was an escape from a system that no longer allows uninterrupted thought. Daily life is now saturated with unnecessary content, and attention itself has become a commodity extracted, processed, and sold back to us. This is where we have become unable to understand what really drives certain tragedies we endlessly react to, while remaining blind to the systems that quietly manufacture them.

Multi-dimensional poverty

Poverty is structural, poverty is political, and poverty is functional; it is a tool and a manoeuvring force of power. The question is no longer whether poverty exists, but who benefits from its persistence, and who is forced to survive within it. From education to medicine to basic food supply chains, countries like Sri Lanka are not simply mismanaged; they are structurally captured by a small number of actors who remain stable regardless of who is formally in power. Small-scale enterprises and NGO circuits that circulate foreign funding to “solve structural issues” often operate as hollow administrative performances, producing reports rather than transformation.

Poverty is not merely the absence of money. It is the absence of bandwidth, absence of protection, absence of time, and absence of cognitive stability. As Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir state, “Scarcity captures the mind. Just as the starving subjects had food on their mind, when we experience scarcity of any kind, we become absorbed by it.” This is a description of how human cognition is structurally reorganized under constraint. Scarcity does not sit outside the person; it occupies them.

They also state, “Scarcity leads us to borrow and pushes us deeper into scarcity.” That is the mechanism that must be confronted without euphemism. Poverty is not only deprivation; it is a self-reinforcing trap in which survival decisions generate the next layer of crisis. Once a society crosses a certain threshold of scarcity, it stops producing long-term reasoning as a default condition. It produces short-term survival logic, often mistaken by outsiders for irrationality.

It is precisely here that public discourse becomes intellectually dishonest. Everything is translated into moral language because moral language is easier than structural analysis. But morality without structure becomes theatre. It produces outrage, not understanding, and repetition, not reform.

It is indeed brutal when an individual wearing religious insignia—whether robe, symbol, or institutional identity—is accused of acts that fundamentally contradict the moral authority attached to that position. It is equally brutal when institutions that depend entirely on trust begin to function as shields rather than safeguards. But the deeper question is not shock. The deeper question is what kind of social condition produces families who see placement within such institutions not only as devotion, but as a survival strategy under constraint.

Ethical decision-making

That is where the argument collapses into its most uncomfortable form. Poverty does not produce ethical decision-making environments. It produces constrained optimization under pressure. When food insecurity, debt, and social instability converge, institutional spaces that appear stable become transactional destinations for survival rather than moral choices. To interpret this as purely cultural failure is to deliberately ignore the structural compression of options.

Mullainathan and Shafir describe this clearly: “Instead of saying that scarcity ‘focuses,’ we could just as easily say that scarcity causes us to tunnel: to focus single-mindedly on managing the scarcity at hand.” That tunnelling effect is not abstract. It is visible wherever long-term planning collapses under immediate pressure. Systems then misread this as irresponsibility, when it is in fact cognitive overload produced by structure.

What is rarely acknowledged is how deeply this extends into governance itself. Institutions increasingly operate as if they are managing rational, unconstrained individuals. In reality, they are interacting with populations whose cognitive bandwidth is already structurally taxed. The result is policy failure interpreted as public non-compliance, enforcement interpreted as moral correction, and reform interpreted as communication failure rather than design failure.

Social media has intensified this distortion. It does not merely spread information; it destroys sequencing. Structural problems require temporal depth. Social media removes that depth and replaces it with instantaneous judgment. Every event becomes a surface object, detached from causality. The outcome is a society permanently reacting and never diagnosing.

Poverty, in this environment, becomes invisible in its real form. It is not seen as a continuous structural condition but as episodic failure. A scandal appears, is consumed, and disappears. Another replaces it. Nothing accumulates into understanding because attention itself is exhausted before synthesis can occur.

Modern Condition

The modern condition reflects a reversal of earlier social organization, where human relationships are embedded within abstract systems of finance, law, and administration that often fail to recognize the lived constraints of those they govern. In this disembedded state, institutions increasingly misinterpret human behaviour as their capacity for structural understanding weakens. At the same time, attempts to resolve systemic failures through expanding administrative complexity produce diminishing returns: more regulation, oversight, and reporting generate less coherence. Over time, institutions shift from functional effectiveness to symbolic performance, maintaining the appearance of control rather than achieving it.

This is why public outrage repeatedly fails to translate into structural change. Outrage is not a tool of reconstruction. It is a signal of system fatigue. It circulates, intensifies, and dissipates without altering the underlying architecture. Meanwhile, the conditions that produce repetition remain intact.

The most persistent illusion is that these are separate problems: poverty here, institutional misuse there, media distortion elsewhere. They are not separate. They are expressions of a single condition in which scarcity, complexity, symbolic authority, and fragmented enforcement interact without coordination. The system does not fail in one place; it fails in the gaps between these layers.

Symbolic systems

What makes this condition more severe is that symbolic systems continue to operate at full strength even when structural systems degrade. Religious identity remains powerful. Political rhetoric remains strong. Cultural symbolism remains intact. But enforcement capacity, institutional coherence, and social trust degrade beneath them. That gap is where instability grows. Until that gap is addressed at the level of structure rather than sentiment, repetition remains inevitable. New scandals will emerge, new interpretations will circulate, and new cycles of outrage will follow. Nothing resolves because nothing is being reconstructed beneath the surface of reaction.

This is no longer repairable through adjustment or rhetoric. It is a form of decay that persists until it exhausts itself, because the mechanisms meant to correct it are now part of the same failure. It continues until rupture, not reform. At that point, instability ceases to be episodic and becomes structural. Pressure will accumulate into breakdown, and what follows will not be managed transition but forced reversal. The responsibility lies with those who govern these institutions to prevent that trajectory, not through language, but through change. The drama is ending; farce is over; what we are witnessing is tragedy unfolding with unprecedented consequences.

by Nilantha Ilangamuwa

Continue Reading

Features

Are threats to Buddha Sasana external or from within?

Published

on

As Sri Lanka celebrates the birth, Enlightenment and the Parinibbana of the Buddha, almost a month after the rest of the Buddhist-world did so, there is widespread discussion about threats to Buddha Sasana provoked by some recent incidents. Regarding the views expressed about postponing Vesak celebrations in my article ‘May Day and postponement Vesak 2026’ (The Island, 25 May), my very good friend Dr Upali Abeysiri has sent me the following comments: “The Mahanayakas have a good reason to postpone Vesak. The dawning of the full moon has to be on the same constellation (nekatha) as when the Buddha was born and attained enlightenment. Although Adhi Poya is reckoned as the second full moon arising in the same calendar month, this is supposed to be an odd exception.” Though it would have been ideal if a consensus could have been reached prior to the split of celebrations, perhaps, it does not matter very much as celebrations occur on a symbolic rather than an actual date, there being no historical or archaeological evidence confirming exact dates.

Whilst there are no direct threats to Buddha Dhamma, as the expanding horizons of science continue to confirm the fundamentals of Buddha Dhamma, there is no doubt whatsoever that there are threats to Buddha Sasana. However, these threats become important as the Buddha Sasana performs the pivotal role in protecting and propagating the Dhamma and, hence, become an indirect threat to Dhamma itself. Therefore, it should be the concern of all Buddhists and it is in this spirit I am making some comments which some may interpret as disrespectful to the Maha Sangha. I can reassure that my intentions are entirely directed towards the preservation of the Buddha Dhamma and Sasana. Though the Buddha proclaimed that the Sasana consists of Bhikkhu, Bhikkhuni, Upasaka and Upasika, for all practical purposes Sasana had been led by Bhikkhus, often at the expense of others.

There is hardly any doubt that there are external forces at play in Sri Lanka and even some Buddhists seem to object to Sri Lanka being called a Buddhist country. Interestingly, no one seems to object to countries like the UK and the USA being called Christian counties. I

There is no registration or baptism in Buddhism and there are no rewards for Buddhists for conversions. As I pointed out in a previous article, ‘How does the Buddha differ’ (The Island, 1 May) unlike most other religions, Buddhism is not a ‘high-demand’ religion, nor ‘law-based’ religion and is not exclusivist. Perhaps, it is this liberalism, pacifism and gentleness, which are the real strengths, that are being exploited as weaknesses by others.

There will always be external threats and the Buddha too faced many during his lifetime. Before addressing those, is it not more important to address the threats within? One of the most important problems seems to be the breakdown of discipline. Bhikkhus are bound by Vinaya rules, laid down by the Buddha and some recent incidents highlight total deviations. Though there were many previous incidents like unsubstantiated claims of Arahanthood, Bhikkhus attacking each other on YouTube and Bhikkhus conducting YouTube channels, not for the propagation of the Dhamma but for the accumulation of rupees, attention was focused after the detection of 22 young monks carrying narcotic drugs.

Though many commentators were quick to condemn the Sangha on this account, we need to go deeper. Narcotic menace has become a huge problem in Sri Lanka and it looks as if the drug lords would resort to anything to achieve their objectives. Though it looks as if some gullible young monks had been duped by drug lords, we need to question why it was possible. Is it due to the lack of supervision of these novices by their seniors that allowed them to accept a request in a WhatsApp group? Should there be checks and balances on foreign travel by Bhikkhus?

What shocked Buddhists was what followed next; the arrest of the Nayaka of Atamasthana for allegedly having sex with a minor. Anuradhapura was our first capital and Sri Maha Bodhi is the longest surviving authenticated tree in the world. Ruwanweliseya and Jetawanaramaya were among the ten tallest man-made structures in the ancient world, Jetawanaramaya still holding the Guiness record for the largest stupa in the world. Cyberspace is full of theories. Whilst some have condemned the Nayaka Thero even before the conclusion of inquiries whilst others claim that this was a coup by another Nayaka Thera in an attempt of succession.

I was intrigued, reading in a Sri Lankan newspaper about the 80th birthday celebrations of a Nayaka priest, who was convicted in London in 2012 of historical child sex abuse and sentenced to seven years in prison. I remember the case very well as he was the head of the Vihara, we had our first contact on relocating to the UK. I also remember his devotees, who believed that he was wrongly accused, collecting over £50,000 for an appeal. In spite of being represented by one of the top Barristers in the UK, the conviction was upheld but the jail-term was reduced by a year. His name is still on the sex-offenders register in the UK and he is permanently prevented from association with children. One can argue that as he has served the sentence and not reoffended, this should not be held against him but what baffled me is that he is still being referred to as the Chief Sangha Nayaka. Should a person on the sex-offenders register be the Chief Sangha Nayaka?

It is high time we put our own house in order before fighting the external enemies. It is reported that the former president CBK has written to the Mahanayakas requesting urgent reform and we should be obliged to her for taking the lead.

There are many aspects that need urgent reform, the first being removal of caste barriers practiced by some Nikayas, which is the greatest insult to the Buddha who promoted equality. The second is the active encouragement of Bhikkhuni Sasana which has not happened in spite of the landmark ruling by the supreme court. The third is the establishment of proper disciplinary processes under a single Adhikarana Sangha Nayaka with powers and support than allowing the government to take over the control of even non-criminal Vinaya matters.

There are many other issues that need settlement like the controversy of the land of Buddha’s birth which seems to linger on. An expert committee should hear all evidence and settle this issue once and for all.

As I have pointed out on many occasions in these columns, it is high time a Dhamma Sangayana was held, as the last one was 70 years ago. Ideally, it should be different with active participation of lay experts as well. It is the duty of us Buddhists to ensure that the words of wisdom of the Buddha continue to enlighten generations to come.

By Dr Upul Wijayawardhana

Continue Reading

Features

Vijaya Kumar: Academic, Activist & Genial Fellow-Traveller

Published

on

Professor Vijaya Kumar

The University of Ceylon, Peradeniya, was in our time, a less-crowded residential university, where everybody knew everybody else or at least knew of everybody else.

I knew of Emeritus Professor Vijaya Kumar of the Department of Chemistry at Peradeniya, or Kumar, as we referred to him fondly, before I got to know him. His dear wife Savitri, also a member of the academic staff of the Department of Chemistry, was nicknamed Kumee, by some of their students (of which vintage is unknown to me) and the duo were thereafter referred to affectionately as Kumar and Kumee.

The Faculty of Science became a regular haunt of mine as I would go there in the company of my batchmates to attend lectures on Basic Mathematics given by Professor Maheswaran, as it was a requirement for our General Arts Qualifying Examinations. I would also go there to listen to some excellent talks under a programme that was held in the auditorium of the Science Faculty referred to as “Popular Science Gossip”. The “gossip” at these talks were not confined solely to science but were broad enough to include Literature, History and other branches of knowledge as well. I would often spot Kumar in the audience at these talks or bump into him in the corridors of the Science Faculty. But I got to know him personally only after he became the Warden of Arunachalam, my hall of residence, during my undergraduate years initially, and later, as a member of the academic staff of the Department of English.

Our Science Faculty undergraduate contemporaries, especially those at Arunachalam Hall and its immediate neighbour, Jayatilaka Hall, both within a stone’s throw away from the Science Faculty, shared many an anecdote about Kumar and their other lecturers. One of these anecdotes, had to do with a spectacular (motor car) driving feat of Kumar’s. Legend has it that he drove from his university bungalow-home to the Faculty of Science deploying only the reverse gear of his car! Kumar, on hearing of this, had told certain of his student friends, including some who became his colleagues later on, that this story is one of the biggest yarns he had heard in his life!

Some of his one-time younger colleagues, now in retirement like Kumar, tell me that Kumar exuded warmth and friendliness in all of his professional and administrative interactions with others in the wider university community. But there was no warmth or mercy for those who indulged in the unsavoury pastime of student ‘ragging’. He was a very strong proponent of the need to ensure to all freshers an environment free of the menace of ‘ragging’. He remained ever-vigilant during the ‘ragging’ season. There are stories of his chasing ‘raggers’ and catching them. Professor Maheswaran, who later became an intimate friend and remains so after more than half a century, was another who was fiercely opposed to ‘ragging’. I was a personal witness to Mahes chasing a ‘ragger’ up and down the stairs of the main library to nab him. Yet another of his students has noted that Kumar’s office room in the Faculty was a total mess at all times. It had tables, piled so high with books and documents that one could not easily spot Kumar at his desk. He, however, had the knack of pulling out from amidst the clutter, any document that he needed at any given time. If anybody were to volunteer to help tidy his desk, Kumar would respond firmly with “Don’t you touch my desk!”.

Kumar, like several of his colleagues in the other faculties as well, had his own eccentricities. According to information received from reliable sources, Kumar who taught Organic Chemistry used to carry his lecture notes in his shirt or trouser pocket with ‘the entire lecture condensed in point form on a half-sheet or half of a half-sheet of paper’. The way he rummaged through his sling bag filled to the brim with stuff to find an item that he needed was another ritual that amused onlookers.

Kumar, interestingly enough is a Royal-cum-Thomian product, in that he had his primary education at S.Thomas’ Prep School, Kollupitiya and the entirety of his secondary education at Royal College, which he entered in 1953. In a note written by Kumar himself, he notes that despite having had excellent teachers at Royal, his was not a notable school career. He goes on to say that “the only achievement I could boast of was my being the joint-winner of the school General Knowledge Prize”. However, he had been active in a Scout Group outside of school (1st Port of Colombo, Sea Scouts) where he “was Queen’s Scout, Patrol leader, and later, Assistant Scout Master”.

Kumar entered the Faculty of Science of the University of Ceylon in 1961 and secured from it an honours degree in Chemistry in 1965. He joined the academic staff of the Department of Chemistry in the Faculty of Science, University of Ceylon, Peradeniya in 1965 and left the following year for Magdalen College at Oxford University, from which institution he obtained his doctorate in Chemistry. His entire teaching career was at Peradeniya, where in the period 2003-2006 he served as the Dean of the Faculty of Science, a position that his late father-in-law had held a few decades earlier.

Among the other highlights of his career are: Chairman of the Industrial Technology Institute (formerly the Ceylon Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research, CISIR); Member (representing Sri Lanka) of the Geneva-based UN Commission on Science and Technology from 1999 to 2007 and its President from 2001-2003; President of the Sri Lanka Estate Workers Union from 1989 onwards; Member of the Politburo of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party from 1988 to 2014 and currently, a member of the Executive Committee of the National People’s Power (NPP).

Vijaya and Savitri Kumar are parents of daughters Shamala and Ramya, who are following in the footsteps of their parents: with the former teaching in the Department of Agricultural Economics in the Faculty of Agriculture, University of Peradeniya and the latter, in the Department of Community Medicine at the University of Jaffna.

(I wish to thank the following who assisted me in the writing of this brief essay: Mr. Bandula Warnakulasuriya, Emeritus Professor Ratnayake Bandara, Professor Mahinda Wickramaratne, Professor Swarna Wimalasiri and Mr. Manik de Silva).

*Editor’s note: Prof. Vijaya Kumar, a member of the NPP’s National Executive Committee and is still active in politics turns 84 today. This article by Tissa Jayatilaka, former Executive Director of the United States – Sri Lanka Fulbright Commission for Mutual Academic Exchange, was written for an upcoming collection of essays on Kumar’s life by his friends.

(Colombo Telegraph)

By Tissa Jayatilaka

Continue Reading

Trending