Midweek Review
A cycle ends:the moral-ethical fall of Mahinda

By Dr. DAYAN JAYATILLEKA
“By oneself is one defiled”-The Dhammapada
I write this with sadness as one who supported Mahinda Rajapaksa for 20 years, from 1999 to 2019, which stand I do not regret given the challenges, circumstances and choices of those times.
I did not expect to witness, as I did last night (April 11th 2022), the self-propelled collapse of the moral, ethical and historical stature of the Mahinda Rajapaksa. “By oneself is one defiled”, indeed. The lesson is clear: a man who is the best leader in the face of one type of challenge can be its opposite in the face of another.
Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s address to the nation in this time of the peaceful uprising of the youth, symbolized the moral-ethical fall of the figure who was the country’s greatest wartime leader. It represented the degeneration and political decadence of a family clan, and the trajectory of steep, accelerated descent of a great man. It is the end of the Mahinda cycle.
Mahinda and My Father
I must confess there was a personal emotional contributory factor for my initial support of Mahinda Rajapaksa. My father, Mervyn de Silva, died in 1999. Mahinda Rajapaksa wrote a sensitive, personal commemorative piece to the newspapers in which he disclosed:
“…Whenever I met him, which happened to be at least twice a month during the last 25 years, I always made it a point to have a serious chat even for a minute. I valued his ability to provide an unbiased interpretation of the current political issues and his forecast on such matters were always accurate. It is with a very heavy heart that I recollect some past meetings and I begin to feel that I have lost a very useful and genuine friend. First I came to know Mr.de Silva through my cousin the late Lakshman Rajapaksa. Both of them were regulars at the Orient Club. Being a Royalist, he was also very close to the late George Rajapaksa, his fellow alumni.
Being only a student of politics, I remained a passive participant at the meetings Mr. de Silva had with my cousin, Lakshman and George, gathering valuable points. However, I came still closer to him after I became a Member of Parliament in 1970. The frequency of meetings grew after the formation of the Sri Lanka Committee for Solidarity with Palestine, when the journalists who launched this organisation elected me as its President. Mr. Mervyn de Silva was one of the Patrons…”
(‘He Wrote What He Wanted’, Mahinda Rajapaksa, Ceylon Daily News of July 3rd, 1999)
Moral Collapse
Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s addressed to the nation, on the night of April 11th 2022, will go down as the worst speech he ever made and marks the nadir of his political career and more tragically, the manner he will be seen by history. Most seriously of all, his speech—the one he agreed to read out—may signal a round of repression that sends the country plunging into the abyss.
For a man who had a romantic political history as a dissident and rebel, Mahinda’s speech failed utterly to empathize with or even understand the sentiments and aspirations of the young protestors. A politician who always had his finger on the pulse of the people, he has now completely lost touch with their sentiments.
He has also lost his touch as a communicator. His speech was cold, stony, and slightly sinister. He was no longer the appealing rascal of many decades. No longer the exception to the Rajapaksa rule, he looked and sounded like a harshly admonitory spokesperson for the family oligarchy which is determined to rule, overriding the sentiments of a vast majority, most especially the island’s youth.
He unblinkingly defended the regime’s economic record, with the single exception of promising to restore the fertilizer subsidy. If the ongoing mass movement achieved something it was that. It took the recent mass protests to secure even a pledge of the return of that which had been snatched away cruelly by the regime.
Attempting to give himself and the regime an air of moral superiority, Mahinda Rajapaksa took the moral low road. Knowing full well that the Jayawardene regime falsely accused the JVP of the attacks of July ’83 and repressed it, thereby driving the country into civil war, Mahinda echoed that false propaganda, accusing the protestors or the alleged organisers of the protests of proceeding on the same road as the violent JVP insurrectionists of the 1980s and worse, the LTTE in the North.
He then went on to say that every second that the protests went on, obstructed the dollars that could be coming into the country. What the logical connection was, remained unexplained. How the protests could be a greater causative factor of the dollar shortage than his kid brother the President crashing food production thereby requiring imports, as well as ruining tea production which was a traditional foreign exchange earner, with his zany fertiliser policy, wasn’t explained either.
As the BBC explains to its global audience: “…the government tried to stop the outflow of foreign currency by banning all imports of chemical fertiliser, telling farmers to use organic fertilisers instead. This led to widespread crop failures. Sri Lanka had to supplement its food stocks from abroad, which made its foreign currency shortage even worse.” (Why are Sri Lankans protesting in the streets? – BBC News)
Where Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa enacted his very worst moment so far in politics and history, indelibly tarring his great historical contribution of winning the war, was in his remarks about the military.
He said that everything the protestors said and did, including insulting his family may be excusable. What is worst is the disrespect and harassment of the military; the war heroes to whom we owe so much. He gave absolutely no evidence of such disrespect or humiliation and harassment by the protestors, failing to cite any person or place. As far as I can tell, as a keen observer of the reportage of the protests, is that there was never any disparaging by the protestors anywhere, of the military, present or past. That is of course, unless of course, a girl in dungarees giving a rose to men in uniform was such a disparaging act.
Consequences of a Crackdown
In short, Mahinda Rajapaksa was making at best,a fake insinuation; at worst, making an insidious and false accusation. It seemed and sounded to me like this falsehood was uttered for two purposes. Firstly, to rouse the ire of the armed forces towards the peaceful—if verbally impassioned— protestors. Secondly, to pre-emptively justify the deployment of the military in a crackdown on the protests.
Taking the totality of his speech, the dangerous logic of threats was clear. The protests prevent, by the second (“hama thathparaya”), the inflow of much needed dollars. The organisers of the protest are proceeding on the path of the armed insurgents of the 1970s-1980s in the South and North. The protestors are trashing the armed forces.
I have heard this kind of thing before. National Security Minister Lalith Athulathmudali made such a
speech on TV in 1984. The very next day two university students were shot dead by the Police, one in Peradeniya the other in Colombo, before my eyes.
I have also heard this type of discourse all over the world. I was in Indonesia accompanying my parents the month before the military coup that massacred 1 ½ million people. (My father was the last foreign journalist to interview DN Aidit of the PKI, the unarmed Indonesian Communist Party, murdered months later by the army). I was with my parents in 1967 when my father smuggled in a clandestine communication from the BBC London to the BBC correspondent in Athens, where the Colonels had just seized power.
Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s speech could be a curtain-raiser on a military crackdown on the
protests.
If there is such a crackdown, it will wreck the negotiations with the IMF which now cares about governance criteria. It will ruin tourism and foreign investment. It will lose Sri Lanka GSP Plus. It will shrink markets for our products in the West. It will turn international opinion totally against the Government. It will accentuate the nearly planetwide protests by the Sri Lankan Diaspora from Poland and Estonia to the USA and New Zealand. The Sri Lankan born winner of the most prestigious award in British theater, the Laurence Olivier award, Hiran Abeysekara, gave a shoutout in Sinhala to the protestors in Sri Lanka at the glittering awards ceremony in London.
It will isolate Sri Lanka. It may lead to sanctions. It will crash an already free-falling economy. A crackdown will in short, lose many times more dollars than Prime Minister Rajapaksa accuses the protestors of causing the country to lose.
A crackdown on the peaceful protestors, who are no more or less forceful than the ones Mahinda Rajapaksa was prominent in, back in the day, which include the demonstrations of 1987, will simply not restore order. Like a tsunami wave it may recede momentarily but will return with irresistible force and mass, sweeping away the Rajapaksa regime.
[Dr Dayan Jayatilleka is a former Vice-President of the United Nations Human Rights Council and a former Chairperson of the ILO. He is the author of Fidel’s Ethics of Violence: The Moral Dimension of the Political Thought of Fidel Castro, Pluto Press, London /University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 2007.]
Midweek Review
Taking time to reflect on Sri Lanka’s war against terrorism in the wake of Pahalgam massacre

The recent security alert on a flight from Chennai for a person who had been allegedly involved in the recent massacre in Indian-administered Kashmir seems to have been a sort of psychological warfare. The question that arises is as to why UL 122 hadn’t been subjected to checks there if Indian authorities were aware of the identity of the wanted person.
Authorities there couldn’t have learnt of the presence of the alleged suspect after the plane left the Indian airspace
The recent massacre of 25 Indians and one Nepali at Pahalgam in Kashmir attracted international attention. Amidst the war on Gaza, Israeli air strikes on selected targets in the region, particularly Syria, Russia-Ukraine war, and US-UK air campaign against Houthis, the execution-style killings at Pahalgam, in the Indian-administered Kashmir, caused concerns over possible direct clash between nuclear powers India and Pakistan.
Against the backdrop of India alleging a Pakistani hand in the April 22, 2025, massacre and mounting public pressure to hit back hard at Pakistan, Islamabad’s Defence Minister khawaja Muhammad Asif’s declaration that his country backed/sponsored terrorist groups over the years in line with the US-UK strategy couldn’t have been made at a better time. The Pakistani role in notorious Western intelligence operations is widely known and the killing of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in May 2011 in the Pakistani garrison city of Abbottabad, named after Major James Abbott, the first Deputy Commissioner of the Hazara District under British rule in 1853, underscored the murky world of the US/UK-Pakistan relations.
Interestingly, Asif said so during an interview with British TV channel Sky News. Having called their decision to get involved in dirty work on behalf of the West a mistake, the seasoned politician admitted the country suffered due to that decision.
Asif bluntly declared that Pakistan got involved in the terrorism projects in support of the West after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in late Dec. 1979 and Al Qaeda attacks on the US in Sept. 2001. But, bin Laden’s high profile killing in Pakistan proved that in spite of Islamabad support to the US efforts against al Qaeda at least an influential section of the Pakistan establishment all along played a double game as the wanted man lived under Pakistan protection.
Perhaps Asif’s declaration meant that Pakistan, over the years, lost control over various groups that it sponsored with the explicit understanding of the West. India pounced on Asif’s statement.
The PTI quoted India’s Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Yojna Patel, as having said: “The whole world has heard the Pakistani Defence Minister Khawaja Asif admitting and confessing Pakistan’s history of supporting, training and funding terrorist organisations in a recent television interview.” The largest news agency in India quoted Patel further: “This open confession surprises no one and exposes Pakistan as a rogue state fuelling global terrorism and destabilising the region. The world can no longer turn a blind eye. I have nothing further to add.”
Would Patel also care to comment on the US and the UK utilising Pakistan to do their dirty work? Pakistani admission that it supported, trained and funded terrorist organisations should be investigated, taking into consideration Asif’s declaration that those terror projects had been sanctioned by the West. Pakistan’s culpability in such operations cannot be examined without taking into consideration the US and British complicity and status of their role.
The US strategy/objectives in Afghanistan had been similar to their intervention in Ukraine. Western powers wanted to bleed the Soviet Union in Afghanistan and now they intended to do the same to Russia in Ukraine.
Those interested in knowing Pakistan’s role in the US war against the Soviet Union should access ‘Operation Cyclone’ the codename given to costly CIA action in the ’80s.
At the time Pakistan got involved in the CIA project meant to build up anti-Soviet groups in Afghanistan, beginning in the early ’80s, India had been busy destabilising Sri Lanka. India established a vast network of terrorist groups here to achieve what can be safely described as New Delhi’s counter strategic, political and security objectives. New Delhi feared the US-Pakistan-Israeli relations with President JRJ’s government and sought to undermine them by consolidating their presence here.
The late J.N. Dixit, who served here as India’s top envoy during the volatile 1985-1989 period, in his memoirs ‘Makers of India’s Foreign Policy: Raja Ram Mohun Roy to Yashwant Sinha,’ faulted Premier Gandhi on two key foreign policy decisions. The following is the relevant section verbatim: “…her ambiguous response to the Russian intrusion into Afghanistan and her giving active support to Sri Lankan Tamil militants. Whatever the criticism about these decisions, it cannot be denied that she took them on the basis of her assessments about India’s national interests. Her logic was that she couldn’t openly alienate the former Soviet Union when India was so dependent on that country for defence supplies and related technology transfers. Similarly, she could not afford the emergence of Tamil separatism in Tamil Nadu by refusing to support the aspirations of Sri Lankan Tamils.”
Dixit, in short, has acknowledged India’s culpability in terrorism in Sri Lanka. Dixit served as Foreign Secretary (1991-1994) and National Security Advisor (May 2004-January 2005). At the time of his death he was 68. The ugly truth is whatever the reasons and circumstances leading to Indira Gandhi giving the go ahead to the establishment to destabilise Sri Lanka, no less a person than Dixit, who had served as Foreign Secretary, admitted that India, like Pakistan, supported, trained and funded terrorist groups.
In fact, Asif’s admission must have embarrassed both the US, the UK, as well as India that now thrived on its high profile relationship with the US. India owed Sri Lanka an explanation and an apology for what it did to Sri Lanka that led to death and destruction. New Delhi had been so deeply entrenched here in late 1989/early 1990 that President Premadasa pushed for total withdrawal of the Indian Army deployed here (July 1987- March 1990) under Indo-Lanka peace accord that was forced on President JRJ. However, prior to their departure, New Delhi hastily formed the Tamil National Army (TNA) in a bid to protect Varatharaja Perumal’s puppet administration.
A lesson from India
Sri Lankan armed forces paid a very heavy price to bring the Eelam war to an end in May 2009. The Indian-trained LTTE, having gained valuable battlefield experience at the expense of the Indian Army in the Northern and Eastern regions in Sri Lanka, nearly succeeded in their bloody endeavour, if not for the valiant team President Mahinda Rajapaksa gathered around him to meet that mortal threat to the country, ably helped by his battle hardened brother Gotabaya. The war was brought to a successful conclusion on May 19, 2009, when a soldier put a bullet through Velupillai Prabhakaran’s head during a confrontation on the banks of the Nanthikadal lagoon.
In spite of the great sacrifices the armed forces made, various interested parties, at the drop of a hat, targeted the armed forces and police. The treacherous UNP-SLFP Yahapalana administration sold out our valiant armed forces at the Geneva–based United Nations Human Rights Council, in 2015, to be on the good books of the West, not satisfied with them earlier having mocked the armed forces when they achieved victories that so-called experts claimed the Lankan armed forces were incapable of achieving, and after they were eventually proved wrong with the crushing victory over the Tigers in the battlefield, like sour grapes they questioned the professionalism of our armed forces and helped level baseless war crimes allegations. Remember, for example, when the armed forces were about to capture the LTTE bastion, Kilinochchi, one joker UNP politico claimed they were only at Medawachiya. Similarly when forces were at Alimankada (Elephant Pass) this vicious joker claimed it was Pamankada.
Many eyebrows were raised recently when President Anura Kumara Dissanayake, who also holds the Defence portfolio, too, questioned the professionalism of our war-winning armed forces.
Speaking in Parliament, in early March, during the Committee Stage debate on the 2025 Budget, President Dissanayake assured that the government would ensure the armed forces achieved professional status. It would be pertinent to mention that our armed forces defeated JVP terrorism twice, in 1971 and 1987-1990, and also separatist Tamil terrorism. Therefore, there cannot be absolutely any issue with regard to their professionalism, commitment and capabilities.
There had been many shortcomings and many lapses on the part of the armed forces, no doubt, due to short-sighted political and military strategies, as well as the absence of preparedness at crucial times of the conflict. But, overall, success that had been achieved by the armed forces and intelligence services cannot be downplayed under any circumstances. Even the 2019 Easter Sunday carnage could have been certainly averted if the then political leadership hadn’t played politics with national security. The Yahapalana Justice Minister hadn’t minced his words when he declared that President Maithripala Sirisena and Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe allowed the extremist build-up by failing to deal with the threat, for political reasons, as well as the appointment of unsuitable persons as Secretary Defence and IGP. Political party leaders, as usual, initiated investigations in a bid to cover up their failures before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) appointed in late 2019 during the tail end of Sirisena’s presidency, exposed the useless lot.
Against the backdrop of the latest Kashmir bloodshed, various interested parties pursued strategies that may have undermined the collective Indian response to the terrorist challenge. Obviously, the Indian armed forces had been targeted over their failure to thwart the attack. But, the Indian Supreme Court, as expected, thwarted one such attempt.
Amidst continuing public furore over the Pahalgam attack, the Indian Supreme Court rejected a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking a judicial inquiry by a retired Supreme Court judge into the recent incident. A bench comprising Justices Surya Kant and NK Singh dismissed the plea filed by petitioner Fatesh Sahu, warning that such actions during sensitive times could demoralise the armed forces.
Let us hope Sri Lanka learnt from that significant and far reaching Indian SC directive. The Indian media extensively quoted the bench as having said: “This is a crucial moment when every Indian stands united against terrorism. Please don’t undermine the morale of our forces. Be mindful of the sensitivity of the issue.”
Perhaps the most significant remarks made by Justice Surya Kant were comments on suitability of retired High Court and Supreme Court judges to conduct investigations.
Appointment of serving and retired judges to conduct investigations has been widely practiced by successive governments here as part of their political strategy. Regardless of constitutionality of such appointments, the Indian Supreme Court has emphasised the pivotal importance of safeguarding the interests of their armed forces.
The treacherous Yahapalana government betrayed our armed forces by accepting a US proposal to subject them to a hybrid judicial mechanism with the participation of foreign judges. The tripartite agreement among Sri Lanka, the US and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) that had been worked out in the run-up to the acceptance of an accountability resolution at the UNHRC in Oct. 2015, revealed the level of treachery Have you ever heard of a government betraying its own armed forces for political expediency.
There is absolutely no ambiguity in the Indian Supreme Court declaration. Whatever the circumstances and situations, the armed forces shouldn’t be undermined, demoralised.
JD on accountability
In line with its overall response to the Pahalgam massacre, India announced a series of sweeping punitive measures against Pakistan, halting all imports and suspending mail services. These actions were in addition to diplomatic measures taken by Narendra Modi’s government earlier on the basis Islamabad engineered the terrorist attack in southern Kashmir.
A notification issued by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade on May 2, 2025 banned “direct or indirect import or transit of all goods originating in or exported from Pakistan, whether or not freely importable or otherwise permitted” with immediate effect.
India downgraded trade ties between the two countries in February 2019 when the Modi government imposed a staggering 200% duty on Pakistani goods. Pakistan responded by formally suspending a large part of its trade relations with India. India responded angrily following a vehicle borne suicide attack in Pulwama, Kashmir, that claimed the lives of 40 members of the Central Reserve Police Force (CPRF).
In response to the latest Kashmir attack, India also barred ships carrying the Pakistani flag from docking at Indian ports and prohibited Indian-flagged vessels from visiting Pakistani ports.
But when India terrorised hapless Sri Lanka, the then administration lacked the wherewithal to protest and oppose aggressive Indian moves.
Having set up a terrorist project here, India prevented the government from taking measures to neutralise that threat. The Indian Air Force flew in secret missions to Jaffna and invaded Sri Lanka airspace to force President JRJ to stop military action before the signing of the so-called peace accord that was meant to pave the way for the deployment of its Army here.
Even during the time the Indian Army battled the LTTE terrorists here, Tamil Nadu allowed wounded LTTE cadres to receive medical treatment there. India refrained from interfering in that despicable politically motivated practice. India allowed terrorists to carry weapons in India. The killing of 12 EPRLF terrorists, including its leader K. Padmanabha in June 1990, on Indian soil, in Madras, three months after India pulled out its Army from Sri Lanka, is a glaring example of Indian duplicity.
Had India acted at least after Padmanabha’s killing, the suicide attack on Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991 could have been thwarted.
One of Sri Lanka’s celebrated career diplomats, the late Jayantha Dhanapala, discussed the issue of accountability when he addressed the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), headed by one-time Attorney General, the late C. R. de Silva, on 25 August, 2010.
Dhanapala, in his submissions, said: “Now I think it is important for us to expand that concept to bring in the culpability of those members of the international community who have subscribed to the situation that has caused injury to the civilians of a nation. I talk about the way in which terrorist groups are given sanctuary; harbored; and supplied with arms and training by some countries with regard to their neighbours or with regard to other countries. We know that in our case this has happened, and I don’t want to name countries, but even countries which have allowed their financial procedures and systems to be abused in such a way that money can flow from their countries in order to buy arms and ammunition that cause deaths, maiming and destruction of property in Sri Lanka are to blame and there is, therefore, a responsibility to protect our civilians and the civilians of other nations from that kind of behaviour on the part of members of the international community. And I think this is something that will echo within many countries in the Non-Aligned Movement, where Sri Lanka has a much respected position and where I hope we will be able to raise this issue.”
Dhanapala also stressed on the accountability on the part of Western governments, which conveniently turned a blind eye to massive fundraising operations in their countries, in support of the LTTE operations. It is no secret that the LTTE would never have been able to emerge as a conventional fighting force without having the wherewithal abroad, mainly in the Western countries, to procure arms, ammunition and equipment. But, the government never acted on Dhanapala’s advice.
By Shamindra Ferdinando
Midweek Review
Masters, not just graduates: Reclaiming purpose in university education

A Critique of the Sri Lankan Education System: The Crisis of Producing Masters
For decades, the Sri Lankan education system has been subject to criticism for its failure to nurture true masters within each academic and professional discipline. At the heart of this issue lies a rigid, prescriptive structure that compels students to strictly adhere to pre-designed course modules, leaving little room for creativity, independent inquiry, or the pursuit of personal intellectual passions.
Although modern curricular frameworks may appear to allocate space for creativity and personal exploration, in practice, these opportunities remain superficial and ineffective. The modules that are meant to encourage innovation and critical thinking often fall short because students are still bound by rigid assessment criteria and narrowly defined outcomes. As a result, students are rarely encouraged—or even permitted—to question, reinterpret, or expand upon the knowledge presented to them.
This tightly controlled learning environment causes students to lose touch with their individual intellectual identity. The system does not provide sufficient opportunities, time, or structured programmes for students to reflect upon, explore, and rediscover their own sense of self, interests, and aspirations within their chosen disciplines. Instead of fostering thinkers, innovators, and creators, the system molds students into passive recipients of knowledge, trained to conform rather than lead or challenge.
This process ultimately produces what can be described as intellectual laborers or academic slaves—individuals who possess qualifications but lack the mastery, confidence, and creative agency required to meaningfully contribute to the evolution of their fields.
Lessons from history: How true masters emerged
Throughout history, true Masters in various fields have always been exceptional for reasons beyond the traditional boundaries of formal education. These individuals achieved greatness not because they followed prescribed curricula or sought the approval of educational institutions, but because they followed their inner callings with discipline, passion, and unwavering commitment.
What made these individuals exceptional wasn’t their adherence to rigid academic structures, but their pursuit of something much more profound: their innate talents and passions. They were able to innovate and push boundaries because they were free to follow what truly excited them, and their journeys were characterized by a level of self-driven discipline that the conventional education system often overlooks.
The inner call: Rediscovering lost pathways
Every person is born with a unique genetic and psychological blueprint — a natural inclination towards certain interests, talents, and callings. Recognising and following this ‘inner call’ gives meaning, strength, and resilience to individuals, enabling them to endure hardships, face failures, and persist through challenges.
However, when this call is lost or ignored, frustration and dissatisfaction take hold. Many young undergraduates today are victims of this disconnection. They follow paths chosen by parents, teachers, or society, without ever discovering their own. This is a tragedy we must urgently address.
According to my experience, a significant portion of students in almost every degree programme lack genuine interest in the field they have been placed in. Many of them quietly carry the sense that somewhere along the way, they have lost their direction—not because of a lack of ability, but because the educational journey they embarked on was shaped more by examination results, societal expectations, and external pressures than by their own inner desires.
Without real, personal interest in what they are studying, can we expect them to learn passionately, innovate boldly, or commit themselves fully? The answer is no. True mastery, creativity, and excellence can only emerge when learning is driven by genuine curiosity and an inner calling.
A new paradigm: Recognizing potential from the start
I envision a transformative educational approach where each student is recognized as a potential Master in their own right. From the very beginning of their journey, every new student should undergo a comprehensive interview process designed to uncover their true interests and passions.
This initiative will not only identify but nurture these passions. Students should be guided and mentored to develop into Masters in their chosen fields—be it entrepreneurship, sports, the arts, or any other domain. By aligning education with their innate talents, we empower students to excel and innovate, becoming leaders and pioneers in their respective areas.
Rather than a standardised intake or mere placement based on test scores or academic history, this new model would involve a holistic process, assessing academic abilities, personal passions, experiences, and the driving forces that define them as individuals.
Fostering Mastery through Mentorship and Guidance
Once students’ passions are identified, the next step is to help them develop these areas into true expertise. This is where mentorship becomes central. Students will work closely with professors, industry leaders, and experts in their chosen fields, ensuring their academic journey is as much about guidance and personal development as it is about gaining knowledge.
Mentors will play an instrumental role in refining students’ ideas, pushing the boundaries of their creativity, and fostering a mindset of continuous improvement. Through personalized guidance and structured support, students will take ownership of their learning, receiving real-world exposure, practical opportunities, and building the resilience and entrepreneurial spirit that drives Masters to the top of their fields.
Revolutionising the role of universities
This initiative will redefine the role of universities, transforming them from institutions of rote learning to dynamic incubators of creativity and mastery. Universities will no longer simply be places where students learn facts and figures—they will become vibrant ecosystems where students are nurtured and empowered to become experts and pioneers.
Rather than focusing solely on academic metrics, universities will measure success by real-world impact: startups launched, innovative works produced, research leading to social change. These will be the true indicators of success for a university dedicated to fostering Masters.
Empowering a generation of leaders and innovators
The result would be a generation of empowered individuals—leaders, thinkers, and doers ready to make a lasting impact. With mastery and passion-driven learning, these students will be prepared not just to fit into the world, but to change it. They will possess the skills, mindset, and confidence to innovate, disrupt, and lead across fields.
By aligning education with unique talents, we help students realize their potential and give them the tools to make their visions a reality. This is not about creating mere graduates—it’s about fostering true Masters.
Concluding remarks: A new path forward
The time has come to build a new kind of education—one that sees the potential for mastery in every undergraduate and actively nurtures that potential from the start. By prioritizing the passions and talents of students, we can create a future where individuals are not just educated, but truly empowered to become Masters of their craft.
In the crucial first weeks of university life, it is essential to create a supportive environment that recognizes the individuality of each student. To achieve this, we propose a structured process where students are individually interviewed by trained academic and counseling staff. These interviews will aim to uncover each student’s inner inclination, personal interests, and natural talents — what might be described as their “inner calling.”
Understanding a student’s deeper motivations and aspirations early in their academic journey can play a decisive role in shaping not only their academic choices but also their personal and professional development. This process will allow us to go beyond surface-level academic placement and engage students in disciplines and activities that resonate with their authentic selves.
At present, while many universities assign mentors to students, this system often remains underutilized and lacks proper structure. One of the main shortcomings is that lecturers and assigned mentors typically have not received specialized training in career guidance, psychological counseling, or interest-based mentoring. As a result, mentorship programs fail to provide personalized and meaningful guidance.
To address the disconnect between academic achievement and personal fulfillment in our universities, we propose a comprehensive, personalized guidance program for every student, starting with in-depth interviews and assessments to uncover their interests, strengths, and aspirations. Trained and certified mentors would then work closely with students to design personalized academic and personal development plans, aligning study paths, extracurricular activities, internships, and community engagements with each student’s inner calling.
Through continuous mentoring, regular feedback, and integration with university services such as career guidance, research groups, and industry collaborations, this program would foster a culture where students actively shape their futures. Regular evaluations and data-driven improvements would ensure the program’s relevance and effectiveness, ultimately producing well-rounded, fulfilled graduates equipped to lead meaningful, socially impactful lives.
by Senior Prof. E.P.S. Chandana
(Former Deputy Vice Chancellor/University of Ruhuna)
Faculty of Technology, University of Ruhuna
Midweek Review
Life of the Buddha

A Review of Rajendra Alwis’s book ‘Siddhartha Gauthama’
Gautama Buddha has been such a towering figure for over twenty six centuries of human history that there is no shortage of authors attempting to put together his life story cast as that of a supernatural being. Asvaghosa’s “Buddhacharita” appeared in the 1st century in Sanskrit. It is the story as narrated in the Lalitavisture Sutra that became translated into Chinese during the Jin and Tang dynasties, and inspired the art and sculpture of Gandhara and Barobudur. Tenzin Chogyel’s 18th century work Life of the Lord Victor Shakyamuni, Ornament of One Thousand Lamps for the Fortunate Eon is still a Penguin classic (as translated by R. Schaeffer from Tibetan).
Interestingly, there is no “Life of the Buddha” in Pali itself (if we discount Buddhagosha’s Kathavatthu), and the “thus have I heard” sutta’s of Bhikku Ananada, the personal assistant to the Buddha, contain only a minimal emphasis on the life of the Buddha directly. This was entirely in keeping with the Buddha’s exhortation to each one to minimize one’s sense of “self ” to the point of extinction.
However, it is inescapable that the life of a great teacher will be chronicled by his followers. Today, there is even a collective effort by a group of scholars who work within the “Buddha Sutra project”, aimed at presenting the Buddha’s life and teachings in English from a perspective grounded in the original Pali texts. The project, involving various international scholars of several traditions contribute different viewpoints and interpretations.
In contrast, there are the well-known individual scholarly studies, varying from the classic work of E. J. Thomas entitled “The Life of the Buddha according to the Pali Canon”, the very comprehensive accounts by Bhikku Nanamoli, or the scholarly work of John Strong that attempts to balance the historical narrative with the supernatural, canonical with the vernacular [1]. Furthermore, a vast variety of books in English cover even the sociological and cultural background related to the Buddha’s life within fictionalised approaches and via fact-seeking narratives. The classic work “Siddhartha” by Hermann Hesse, or the very recent “Mansions of the Moon”, by Shyam Selvadurai attempts to depict the daily life of Siddartha in the fifth century BCE in fictional settings. Interpretive narratives such as “The man who understood suffering” by Pankaj Misra provide another perspective on the Buddha and his times. In fact, a cursory search in a public library in Ontario, Canada came up with more than a dozen different books, and as many video presentations, in response to the search for the key-word “Life of the Buddha”.
Interestingly, a simple non-exhaustive search for books in Sinhala on “The Life of the Buddha” brings out some 39 books, but most of the content is restricted to a narrow re-rendering of the usual story that we learn from the well-known books by Bhikku Narada, or Ven. Kotagama Vachissra, while others are hagiographic and cover even the legendary life of Deepankara Buddha who, according to traditional belief, lived some hundred thousand eons (“kalpa”) ago!
However, as far as I know, there are hardly any books in Sinhala that attempt to discuss the sociological and cultural characteristics of the life and times of the Buddha, or discuss how an age of inquisitiveness and search for answers to fundamental philosophic questions developed in north Indian city states of the Magadha, Anga and Vajji regions that bracketed the River Ganges. In fact, Prof. Price, writing a preface to K. N. Jayatilleke’ s book on the Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge states that the intellectual ambiance and the epistemological stance of the Buddha’s times could have been that of 1920s Cambridge when Bertrand Russell, Wittgenstein and others set the pace! A similar intellectual ambiance of open-minded inquiry regarding existential questions existed in the golden age of Greece, with philosophers like Heraclitus, Socrates and others who were surely influenced by the ebb and flow of ideas from India to the West, via the silk route that passed through Varanasi (Baranes Nuvara of Sinhalese Buddhist texts). The Buddha had strategically chosen Varanasi, le carrefour of the East-West and North-South silk routes, to deliver his first sermon to his earliest disciples.
This usual narrowness found in the books on the “Life of the Buddha” available in Sinhala is to some extent bridged by the appearance of the book “Siddhartha Gauthama- Shakya Muneendrayano” (Sarasavi Publishers, 2024) [2] written by Rajendra Alwis, an educationist and linguist holding post-graduate degrees from Universities in the UK and Canada. The book comes with an introduction by Dharmasena Hettiarchchi. well known for his writings on Buddhist Economic thought. Rajendra Alwis devotes the first four chapters of his book to a discussion of the socio-cultural and agricultural background that prevailed in ancient India. He attempts to frame the rise of Buddhist thought in the Southern Bihar region of India with the rise of a “rice-eating” civilisation that had the leisure and prosperity for intellectual discourse on existentialist matters.
The chapter on Brahminic traditions and the type of education received by upper caste children of the era is of some interest since some Indian and Western writers have even made the mistake of stating that the Buddha had no formal education. Rajendra Alwis occasionally weaves into his text quotations from the Sinhala Sandesha Kavya, etc., to buttress his arguments, and nicely blends Sinhalese literature into the narrative.
However, this discussion, or possibly an additional chapter, could have branched into a critical discussion of the teachings of the leading Indian thinkers of the era, both within the Jain and the Vedic traditions of the period. The systematisation of Parkrit languages into a synthetic linguistic form, viz., Sanskrit, in the hands of Panini and other Scholars took place during and overarching this same era. So, a lot of mind-boggling achievements took place during the Buddha’s time, and I for one would have liked to see these mentioned and juxtaposed within the context of what one might call the Enlightenment of the Ancient world that took place in the 6th Century BCE in India. Another lacuna in the book, hopefully to be rectified in a future edition, is the lack of a map, showing the cities and kingdoms that hosted the rise of this enlightenment during the times of Gautama Buddha and Mahaveera.
The treatment of the Buddha’s life is always a delicate task, especially when writing in Sinhala, in a context where the Buddha is traditionally presented as a superhuman person – Lord Buddha – even above and beyond all the devas. Rajendra Alwis has managed the tight-rope walk and discussed delicate issues and controversial events in the Buddha’s life, without the slightest sign of disrespect, or without introducing too much speculation of his own into events where nothing is accurately known. We need more books of this genre for the the Sinhala-reading public.
[1] See review by McGill University scholar Jessica Main: https://networks.h-net.org/node/6060/reviews/15976/main-strong-buddha-short-biography
[2] https://www.sarasavi.lk/product/siddhartha-gauthama-shakyamunidrayano-9553131948
By Chandre Dharmawardana
chandre.dharma@yahoo.ca
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