Features
Keeping Traditions Alive, or Lampedusa’s Lesson: A Personal Memoir
By Pasindu Nimsara Thennakoon
“If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.”
Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, The Leopard
From the outside, a hostel seems very tight scheduled, very discipline focused, a place that makes you cry when you think about home. You are trapped with a bunch of strange faces, with horrible and ominous sounds haunting you through the night.
It was in 2014 that I entered the Hostel of Royal College. I had grown up in Rakwana and studied in Madampe, obtaining 190 marks for the Grade Five Scholarship. In my first few days at the Hostel I found it hard to adapt. But after some time, things began to change. Those strangers became best friends, the tight schedules became relaxed, and the horrible nights with ominous sounds became the best nights I lived through.
The Hostel eventually became of a student portal, a category unto itself. Students got used to a culture of helping each other out, with prefects overseeing them.
Apart from maintaining a well-disciplined institution, the Hostel Prefects also inspired the students to involve themselves in and organise many activities and events to make their life in the Hostel an incomparable one.
Indeed, at one point we all wanted to be Hostel Prefects. I nursed this wish as well. At the end of 2020 five students from our batch were appointed. These included me.
In 2022 I was appointed as Deputy Head Prefect of the Hostel. That year our Council decided to organise the Hostel Day, after a long hiatus of seven years. As hostellers, we regarded this as our biggest priority. It eventually became just that. With all the problems the country faced back then, we knew organising it would be a hefty task. From financial issues to never-ending curfews, we sensed the obstacles that lay ahead.
However, we had to make the call on this before long, as we were spending our last year as hostellers at our school. I remember how, in Grade 7, there had always been something to look forward to, some athletic event, a chess match, a drama or two to hop into and take part in. These gave us reason to be proud at being hostellers, and we didn’t think twice to say, openly and proudly, this was our home away from home.
As Hostel Prefects, we strongly felt we had to bring home what we had been privileged to witness for so many years. Yet we wanted to do so not with the intent of reviving the past, but of putting a twist to it, of updating it and making if more relevant to the present. Thus, after talking with the Hostel Warden, Mr Janaka Jayasinghe, we decided to revive the Hostel Day. Our heads brimmed with exciting ideas and plans.
During our tenure, the Prefects’ Council consisted of 12 members, five of us from Grade 13 and seven from Grade 12. Later eight new prefects were appointed from the post-O Level batch. With them we formed a team that helped us a great deal and became a strong pillar in the worst of times, giving us support to organise the event.
The Royal College Hostel has four houses. Prior to the Hostel Day, we thus organised a series of inter-house competitions, starting with cultural competitions, including essay writing, poetry, and debating, in all three languages. From these we organised an island-wide inter-Hostel competition, introducing a shield named after a key figure associated with our school and with cricket in Sri Lanka, Ashley Walker.
With these first few competitions we also organised sport events, with volleyball, football, and cricket tournaments, as well as tournaments for chess and carom, among other indoor games. While the competitions went ahead, we also put together a sumptuous dinner and various other items, including a Prize Giving. We also formed a band and put them through a series of gruelling practices, with the help of past hostellers.
Since no event of this sort would be complete without a drama item, we put together a series of humorous skits, all of which we wrote and planned with old hostellers who had been members of the Royal College Sinhala Drama Society. Everything was planned to the last minute, to ensure that it began on time and ended on time.
Despite a crippling economic crisis in the country, within four months we managed to complete all events and tournaments, readying ourselves for the final day. Yet by now people were facing two, sometimes three-hour power cuts. To manage these issues was a hefty challenge. Yet despite last minute cancellations and delays, we did our best to ensure that invitees and participants would enjoy the day.
To say this is not to understate the difficulties we faced. We had to postpone the event not once but twice. With the situation in the country the hostellers found it tough to travel. Financially, organising the Hostel Day became a nightmare, with one prospective sponsor after another backing off. But through all this we got the help of past hostellers, including ROCOHA, the Royal College Old Hostellers’ Association. We also got financial aid and help from several outside well-wishers, including from the United States.
While all this was going on, we had to focus on other work in the hostel. We were able to introduce a new structure for the hostel workflow with a projects-based working procedure for clubs and societies. We renovated the hostel Music Room with an immense contribution from Mr Chandimal Fernando and maintained a book to record who entered the room and used and took care of the instruments. We continued the Annual Prize Giving for the staff, organised an induction ceremony for captains and office bearers, and assisted ROCOHA to install a Smart Classroom and a generator in the hostel.
Finally, on August 11, 2023, the Royal College Hostel Day opened to much praise and acclaim. It was our night, to celebrate and relish. After a hiatus of seven years, we had finally revived the Hostel Day. And we had done so while breathing new life into it.
In his great novel of the passing of the Italian nobility, The Leopard, Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa reflects on the importance of changing things to keep them the way they are. In organising the Hostel Day after a long time, we had refined a tradition to keep it going, to keep it alive. In other words, we had ensured continuity through change. The Hostel Day of 2022 thus became more than an event for us: it became a baptism of fire, a lesson we will be carrying for the rest of our lives as Hostellers – and as Royalists.
Pasindu Nimsara Thennakoon is a young, aspiring researcher who is interested in medicine, history, and anthropology. He can be reached at .
Features
Ranking public services with AI — A roadmap to reviving institutions like SriLankan Airlines
Efficacy measures an organisation’s capacity to achieve its mission and intended outcomes under planned or optimal conditions. It differs from efficiency, which focuses on achieving objectives with minimal resources, and effectiveness, which evaluates results in real-world conditions. Today, modern AI tools, using publicly available data, enable objective assessment of the efficacy of Sri Lanka’s government institutions.
Among key public bodies, the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka emerges as the most efficacious, outperforming the Department of Inland Revenue, Sri Lanka Customs, the Election Commission, and Parliament. In the financial and regulatory sector, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) ranks highest, ahead of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Public Utilities Commission, the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission, the Insurance Regulatory Commission, and the Sri Lanka Standards Institution.
Among state-owned enterprises, the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) leads in efficacy, followed by Bank of Ceylon and People’s Bank. Other institutions assessed included the State Pharmaceuticals Corporation, the National Water Supply and Drainage Board, the Ceylon Electricity Board, the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, and the Sri Lanka Transport Board. At the lower end of the spectrum were Lanka Sathosa and Sri Lankan Airlines, highlighting a critical challenge for the national economy.
Sri Lankan Airlines, consistently ranked at the bottom, has long been a financial drain. Despite successive governments’ reform attempts, sustainable solutions remain elusive.
Globally, the most profitable airlines operate as highly integrated, technology-enabled ecosystems rather than as fragmented departments. Operations, finance, fleet management, route planning, engineering, marketing, and customer service are closely coordinated, sharing real-time data to maximise efficiency, safety, and profitability.
The challenge for Sri Lankan Airlines is structural. Its operations are fragmented, overly hierarchical, and poorly aligned. Simply replacing the CEO or senior leadership will not address these deep-seated weaknesses. What the airline needs is a cohesive, integrated organisational ecosystem that leverages technology for cross-functional planning and real-time decision-making.
The government must urgently consider restructuring Sri Lankan Airlines to encourage:
=Joint planning across operational divisions
=Data-driven, evidence-based decision-making
=Continuous cross-functional consultation
=Collaborative strategic decisions on route rationalisation, fleet renewal, partnerships, and cost management, rather than exclusive top-down mandates
Sustainable reform requires systemic change. Without modernised organisational structures, stronger accountability, and aligned incentives across divisions, financial recovery will remain out of reach. An integrated, performance-oriented model offers the most realistic path to operational efficiency and long-term viability.
Reforming loss-making institutions like Sri Lankan Airlines is not merely a matter of leadership change — it is a structural overhaul essential to ensuring these entities contribute productively to the national economy rather than remain perpetual burdens.
By Chula Goonasekera – Citizen Analyst
Features
Why Pi Day?
International Day of Mathematics falls tomorrow
The approximate value of Pi (π) is 3.14 in mathematics. Therefore, the day 14 March is celebrated as the Pi Day. In 2019, UNESCO proclaimed 14 March as the International Day of Mathematics.
Ancient Babylonians and Egyptians figured out that the circumference of a circle is slightly more than three times its diameter. But they could not come up with an exact value for this ratio although they knew that it is a constant. This constant was later named as π which is a letter in the Greek alphabet.
It was the Greek mathematician Archimedes (250 BC) who was able to find an upper bound and a lower bound for this constant. He drew a circle of diameter one unit and drew hexagons inside and outside the circle such that the sides of each hexagon touch the sides of the circle. In mathematics the circle passing through all vertices of a polygon is called a ‘circumcircle’ and the largest circle that fits inside a polygon tangent to all its sides is called an ‘incircle’. The total length of the smaller hexagon then becomes the lower bound of π and the length of the hexagon outside the circle is the upper bound. He realised that by increasing the number of sides of the polygon can make the bounds get closer to the value of Pi and increased the number of sides to 12,24,48 and 60. He argued that by increasing the number of sides will ultimately result in obtaining the original circle, thereby laying the foundation for the theory of limits. He ended up with the lower bound as 22/7 and the upper bound 223/71. He could not continue his research as his hometown Syracuse was invaded by Romans and was killed by one of the soldiers. His last words were ‘do not disturb my circles’, perhaps a reference to his continuing efforts to find the value of π to a greater accuracy.
Archimedes can be considered as the father of geometry. His contributions revolutionised geometry and his methods anticipated integral calculus. He invented the pulley and the hydraulic screw for drawing water from a well. He also discovered the law of hydrostatics. He formulated the law of levers which states that a smaller weight placed farther from a pivot can balance a much heavier weight closer to it. He famously said “Give me a lever long enough and a place to stand and I will move the earth”.
Mathematicians have found many expressions for π as a sum of infinite series that converge to its value. One such famous series is the Leibniz Series found in 1674 by the German mathematician Gottfried Leibniz, which is given below.
π = 4 ( 1 – 1/3 + 1/5 – 1/7 + 1/9 – ………….)
The Indian mathematical genius Ramanujan came up with a magnificent formula in 1910. The short form of the formula is as follows.
π = 9801/(1103 √8)
For practical applications an approximation is sufficient. Even NASA uses only the approximation 3.141592653589793 for its interplanetary navigation calculations.
It is not just an interesting and curious number. It is used for calculations in navigation, encryption, space exploration, video game development and even in medicine. As π is fundamental to spherical geometry, it is at the heart of positioning systems in GPS navigations. It also contributes significantly to cybersecurity. As it is an irrational number it is an excellent foundation for generating randomness required in encryption and securing communications. In the medical field, it helps to calculate blood flow rates and pressure differentials. In diagnostic tools such as CT scans and MRI, pi is an important component in mathematical algorithms and signal processing techniques.
This elegant, never-ending number demonstrates how mathematics transforms into practical applications that shape our world. The possibilities of what it can do are infinite as the number itself. It has become a symbol of beauty and complexity in mathematics. “It matters little who first arrives at an idea, rather what is significant is how far that idea can go.” said Sophie Germain.
Mathematics fans are intrigued by this irrational number and attempt to calculate it as far as they can. In March 2022, Emma Haruka Iwao of Japan calculated it to 100 trillion decimal places in Google Cloud. It had taken 157 days. The Guinness World Record for reciting the number from memory is held by Rajveer Meena of India for 70000 decimal places over 10 hours.
Happy Pi Day!
The author is a senior examiner of the International Baccalaureate in the UK and an educational consultant at the Overseas School of Colombo.
by R N A de Silva
Features
Sheer rise of Realpolitik making the world see the brink
The recent humanly costly torpedoing of an Iranian naval vessel in Sri Lanka’s Exclusive Economic Zone by a US submarine has raised a number of issues of great importance to international political discourse and law that call for elucidation. It is best that enlightened commentary is brought to bear in such discussions because at present misleading and uninformed speculation on questions arising from the incident are being aired by particularly jingoistic politicians of Sri Lanka’s South which could prove deleterious.
As matters stand, there seems to be no credible evidence that the Indian state was aware of the impending torpedoing of the Iranian vessel but these acerbic-tongued politicians of Sri Lanka’s South would have the local public believe that the tragedy was triggered with India’s connivance. Likewise, India is accused of ‘embroiling’ Sri Lanka in the incident on account of seemingly having prior knowledge of it and not warning Sri Lanka about the impending disaster.
It is plain that a process is once again afoot to raise anti-India hysteria in Sri Lanka. An obligation is cast on the Sri Lankan government to ensure that incendiary speculation of the above kind is defeated and India-Sri Lanka relations are prevented from being in any way harmed. Proactive measures are needed by the Sri Lankan government and well meaning quarters to ensure that public discourse in such matters have a factual and rational basis. ‘Knowledge gaps’ could prove hazardous.
Meanwhile, there could be no doubt that Sri Lanka’s sovereignty was violated by the US because the sinking of the Iranian vessel took place in Sri Lanka’s Exclusive Economic Zone. While there is no international decrying of the incident, and this is to be regretted, Sri Lanka’s helplessness and small player status would enable the US to ‘get away with it’.
Could anything be done by the international community to hold the US to account over the act of lawlessness in question? None is the answer at present. This is because in the current ‘Global Disorder’ major powers could commit the gravest international irregularities with impunity. As the threadbare cliché declares, ‘Might is Right’….. or so it seems.
Unfortunately, the UN could only merely verbally denounce any violations of International Law by the world’s foremost powers. It cannot use countervailing force against violators of the law, for example, on account of the divided nature of the UN Security Council, whose permanent members have shown incapability of seeing eye-to-eye on grave matters relating to International Law and order over the decades.
The foregoing considerations could force the conclusion on uncritical sections that Political Realism or Realpolitik has won out in the end. A basic premise of the school of thought known as Political Realism is that power or force wielded by states and international actors determine the shape, direction and substance of international relations. This school stands in marked contrast to political idealists who essentially proclaim that moral norms and values determine the nature of local and international politics.
While, British political scientist Thomas Hobbes, for instance, was a proponent of Political Realism, political idealism has its roots in the teachings of Socrates, Plato and latterly Friedrich Hegel of Germany, to name just few such notables.
On the face of it, therefore, there is no getting way from the conclusion that coercive force is the deciding factor in international politics. If this were not so, US President Donald Trump in collaboration with Israeli Rightist Premier Benjamin Natanyahu could not have wielded the ‘big stick’, so to speak, on Iran, killed its Supreme Head of State, terrorized the Iranian public and gone ‘scot-free’. That is, currently, the US’ impunity seems to be limitless.
Moreover, the evidence is that the Western bloc is reuniting in the face of Iran’s threats to stymie the flow of oil from West Asia to the rest of the world. The recent G7 summit witnessed a coming together of the foremost powers of the global North to ensure that the West does not suffer grave negative consequences from any future blocking of western oil supplies.
Meanwhile, Israel is having a ‘free run’ of the Middle East, so to speak, picking out perceived adversarial powers, such as Lebanon, and militarily neutralizing them; once again with impunity. On the other hand, Iran has been bringing under assault, with no questions asked, Gulf states that are seen as allying with the US and Israel. West Asia is facing a compounded crisis and International Law seems to be helplessly silent.
Wittingly or unwittingly, matters at the heart of International Law and peace are being obfuscated by some pro-Trump administration commentators meanwhile. For example, retired US Navy Captain Brent Sadler has cited Article 51 of the UN Charter, which provides for the right to self or collective self-defence of UN member states in the face of armed attacks, as justifying the US sinking of the Iranian vessel (See page 2 of The Island of March 10, 2026). But the Article makes it clear that such measures could be resorted to by UN members only ‘ if an armed attack occurs’ against them and under no other circumstances. But no such thing happened in the incident in question and the US acted under a sheer threat perception.
Clearly, the US has violated the Article through its action and has once again demonstrated its tendency to arbitrarily use military might. The general drift of Sadler’s thinking is that in the face of pressing national priorities, obligations of a state under International Law could be side-stepped. This is a sure recipe for international anarchy because in such a policy environment states could pursue their national interests, irrespective of their merits, disregarding in the process their obligations towards the international community.
Moreover, Article 51 repeatedly reiterates the authority of the UN Security Council and the obligation of those states that act in self-defence to report to the Council and be guided by it. Sadler, therefore, could be said to have cited the Article very selectively, whereas, right along member states’ commitments to the UNSC are stressed.
However, it is beyond doubt that international anarchy has strengthened its grip over the world. While the US set destabilizing precedents after the crumbling of the Cold War that paved the way for the current anarchic situation, Russia further aggravated these degenerative trends through its invasion of Ukraine. Stepping back from anarchy has thus emerged as the prime challenge for the world community.
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