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Manuka Wijesinghe’s Monsoons and Potholes Revisited

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I can write a booklet as a comment on Manuka’s 2024 publication which is a revised and extended-in-time edition of her first book Monsoons and Potholes published in 2006 by Perera Hussein Publishers. The new edition is a Vijita Yapa Publication. Mr Yapa requested Manuka to update the political comment in the book to include the recent economic downturn the county suffered. In the main text she had mentioned Ranil Wickremesinghe and told me two days ago that at that time he was the much admired Minister of Education, handsome and slim, the cynosure of calculating mothers of eligible daughters’ eyes! She writes of him as The Nephew.

The text is heavily edited by Michael Meyler, compiler of A dictionary of Sri Lankan English. The original Monsoon and Potholes had gone out of print six years ago and Meyler, realizing the literary value and astuteness of the political comment in the book, suggested he edit a revision incorporating some changes. One was the replacement of the epilogue. As Manuka says: “Then the difficult part. Adding on 40 years of political history to a book, whose story ends in 1983; the war.” This she has done bringing her political narrative right up to 2024 but stopping short of the presidential election and the change it wrought with AKD’s win. All this is compacted in her new epilogue titled A Reflection: forty years after Tinnaveli – p 354 to 367.

For those who have not read Monsoon and Potholes (M and P), it is an autobiographical tracing of the author’s birth and growing up; her family, relatives, friends and society in general in the passing decades and subtly tracing the political history of Ceylon/Sri Lanka since end 1960s. The marvel of the book is that both narratives are very irreverently presented with loads of innuendo, sarcasm, irony, hyperbole, even sacrilege, all deliciously garnished with humour.

Every sentence is imbued with one or more of these styles of writing. It is also powerful and different to an easy flowing narration. The humour is wicked with sneers in her comments. Acid drips from her pen when she writes about even her parents and political leaders. But there is genuine affection for family and loyalty to the country. Entwined with these two themes is one of Ravana and reference in short spurts to Lanka’s ancient history. Also brought in is superstition and astrology. Thus you can imagine the wide range of the product – the narratives blending and moving along stylishly.

Biography

The book is principally a comment on Sri Lankan society up to the 1990s, with the story of herself and her family, both atomic and extended. She brutally runs everyone down, especially herself as born dark and growing up ugly. “There are many interpretations to my story. Fables, fabrications, fallacies and facts” she warns us on page one. It’s a long infancy and childhood which she describes in detail but ignobly. Her father serves two ministries: Highways and Mahaweli, but to her he is engaged in building bridges, trying to hold back the erosion of a hill and measuring potholes. There lies her title. “My slim waisted, sharp nosed mother gyrated and contorted like a Raksha.” Her brother was good in studies, a musician and cricketer whom she names T M Mozart.

Much later she gets another brother, with her expectant mother an embarrassment to her. Other members are Nenda – spinster paternal aunt – grandparents and several servants; also those of the extended family and friends. These and their quirks and her contact with them is often hilariously narrated but with a definite tongue-in-cheek, malicious twist. Each of them is verbally sketched so they come alive in the reader’s mind. Though caricatured, her characters are recognizable as typical persons in typical middle class Sinhalese society, of even the present.

Political comment

Political comment is woven in seamlessly to the biography with stark truths of politics and political leaders of the country starting with Mrs Bandaranaike – “a phoenix from her husband’s funeral pyre.” Politics is introduced when Manuka is just past KG in school. She covers the periods of our history from Chapter 15, the previous being solely biographical. Commented on are Ceylon and its minimization (Mrs B), Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and the ‘red fungus’ (JVP). Then the Dharmishta period under JR – open economy, releasing the red fungus but having an equivalent gaining momentum in the North. Thirteen soldiers were killed; Sinhala mobs ran riot. “JR got angry. He proscribed the LTTE and all other organizations asking for Eelam. And subjected them to the PTA if they opposed. JR’s dharmishta-ness was no longer universal. It had become selective.”

The new Epilogue

The country’s history after JRJ and 1983 is in the substituted Epilogue, now titled A Reflection: forty years after Tinnaveli. “JR was followed by Premadasa who was followed by Mrs Bandaranaike’s daughter. Another party, another road, not left. Not right, Not centre, or diagonal.” “Then came MR. Karma was gracious to MR. It sent us a tsunami. The tsunami sent a greater tsunami of foreign funds. Foreign funds gave MR the means to buy a presidential election. With the purchase, a new political family was born. A defected soldier, US citizen and MR’s younger brother, became defense secretary …” And so to 2009. The General is mentioned. “Then MR and Brothers began indebting our country.” “Mr Nobody won the presidential election and The Nephew was appointed Prime Minister.”

Manuka deals in fair detail with the Easter bombing. She highlights Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith. In a note to me she wrote thus: “I realized the war was not accidental, there had been a plan. I also touched upon the Easter bombing and the Aragalaya for I felt I had to pay my due respect to the Cardinal, for had he not been there and instead a goon of JR, RW or any other, the Easter bomb would have triggered another 1983. The Cardinal alone succeeded in preventing SL from going up in flames again. In Reflection, I ask my readers the question, ‘Did we ever mourn the 13 soldiers who were killed? NO, instead of doing so, we killed more. But the Cardinal, he alone gave us the respite to mourn.’ He did not ignite our sorrow with flames of hate but joined hands with all our religious leaders and pleaded for peace.”

As Manuka admits, it was a heavy task adding later politics and politicians. “What I wrote was too long. Secondly, my voice (the narrator’s) had changed, I was older, become sceptic, jaded, saddened, disappointed and life’s esprit gone. I knew I was no longer able to do justice to the book I had written 20 years ago. That girl was no more. I could not give the book the same voice.” However, she succeeded in extending the historical narrative, though much more shortened.

She concludes her written comment to me: “I wrote the last word shortly before the elections. So there is no AKD. It ends with the eve of the 2024 election and maybe good to have ended there since Monsoons and Potholes is a literary representation of the open economy era which brought distrust, ethnic hatred, war and strife. With the NPP victory (or more likely Ranil’s loss) that era, god willing, has ended.”

Her political comment ends with: “The Nephew ended the ‘Aragalaya’ and had no qualms about making my country ‘Batalanda’ revisited. The family saga ends with Nenda’s funeral when her grandnephew Jovi asks questions. She dedicates the book to him. “I like including children. They have an honest simplicity which adults do not have. I like using them as characters for I write books with primordial questions and I feel children are better at answering them.”

As commentator on the new edition, my only negative observation is that I did not favour the imbalance of chapters devoted to her birth and infancy (36 pages up to age four) juxtaposed to the comment on the politics of the country of 40 years in the epilogue A Reflection of 17 pages. However it would have been near criminal to delete the riot of the first years of her life. Solution would be for Manuka to write a complete book on the country since 1983 in her inimitable style. Her last book – Like Moths to a Flame – was principally about the rise and fall of the LTTE, absorbingly interesting with a couple of sub-plots, and most assuredly basically true, also distinctive in style.

My strong positive comment is that Manuka is a very clever writer with a unique style. Additionally, I particularly admire her being a right thinking Sri Lankan who believes in the might and correctness of taking pride in the fact that we are multi-racial, multi-religious and she advocates equality and the ability to live in harmony. She states outright what many of us believe: politicians cause division and abuse and thus conflict. She condemns in no uncertain terms her scorn for Sinhala Buddhist majoritarianism, this majority claiming eliteness and power.

A Reflection

as epilogue is a brilliant summarized comment on the years since the end of our civil war and right up to the change we see in systems, with corruption stemmed. Some pertinent sharp questions are asked in this section and comments made in typical Manuka style. “Where had we gone wrong?” “’Kill, kill. And kill the brutes’ JR had said in a speech in Hambantota in 1987. The brutes were my country’s children.” “Democracy in my country had, yet again, proved to be an Executive President’s plaything.”



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High govt. revenue and low foreign exchange reserves High foreign exchange reserves and low govt. revenue!

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First shipment of vehicles imported to Sir Lank after the lifting the ban on automobile imports

Government has permitted, after several years, the import of motor cars. Imports, including cars, were cut off because the government then wisely prioritised importing other commodities vital to the everyday life of the general public. It is fair to expect that some pent-up demand for motor vehicles has developed. But at what prices? Government seems to have expected that consumers would pay much higher prices than had prevailed earlier.

The rupee price of foreign exchange had risen by about half from Rs.200 per US$ to Rs.300. In those years, the cost of production of cars also had risen. The government dearly wanted more revenue to meet increasing government expenditure. Usually, motor cars are bought by those with higher incomes or larger amounts of wealth. Taxes on the purchase of cars probably promote equity in the distribution of incomes. The collection of tax on motor cars is convenient. What better commodity to tax?

The announced price of a Toyota Camry is about Rs.34 million. Among us, a Camry is usually bought by those with a substantially higher income than the average middle-income earner. It is not a luxury car like a Mercedes Benz 500/ BMW 700i. Yes, there are some Ferrari drivers. When converted into US dollars, the market price of a Camry 2025 in Sri Lankan amounts to about $110,000. The market price of a Camry in US is about $34,000, where it is usually bought by income earners in the middle-middle class: typically assistant professors in state universities or young executives. Who in Lanka will buy a Camry at Rs.34 million or $110,000 a piece?

How did Treasury experts expect high revenue from the import of motor cars? The price of a Toyota Camry in US markets is about $34,000. GDP per person, a rough measure of income per person in US, was about $ 88,000 in 2024. That mythical ‘average person’ in US in 2024, could spend about 2.5 month’s income and buy a Toyota Camry. Income per person, in Lanka in 2024, was about $ 4,000. The market price of a Camry in Lanka is about $ 133,000. A person in Lanka must pay 33 years of annual income to buy a Toyota Camry in 2025.

Whoever imagined that with those incomes and prices, there would be any sales of Camry in Lanka? After making necessary adjustments (mutatis mutandis), Toyota Camry’s example applies to all import dues increases. Higher import duties will yield some additional revenue to government. How much they will yield cannot be answered without much more work. High import duties will deter people from buying imported goods. There will be no large drawdown of foreign exchange; nor will there be additional government revenue: result, high government foreign exchange reserves and low government revenue.

For people to buy cars at such higher prices in 2025, their incomes must rise substantially (unlikely) or they must shift their preferences for motor cars and drop their demand for other goods and services. There is no reason to believe that any of those changes have taken place. In the 2025 budget, government has an ambitious programme of expenditure. For government to implement that programme, they need high government revenue. If the high rates of duties on imports do not yield higher government revenue as hypothesised earlier, government must borrow in the domestic market. The economy is not worthy of raising funds in international capital markets yet.

If government sells large amounts of bonds, the price of all bonds will fall, i.e. interest rates will rise, with two consequences. First, expenditure on interest payments by government will rise for which they would need more revenue. Second, high interest rates may send money to banks rather than to industry. Finding out how these complexities will work out needs careful, methodically satisfactory work. It is probable that if government borrows heavily to pay for budgetary allocations, the fundamental problem arising out of heavy public debt will not be solved.

The congratulatory comments made by the Manager of IMF applied to the recent limited exercise of handling the severity of balance of payments and public debt problems. The fundamental problem of paying back debt can be solved only when the economy grows fast enough (perhaps 7.5 % annually) for several years. Of that growth, perhaps, half (say 4 % points) need to be paid back for many years to reduce the burden of external debt.

Domestic use of additional resources can increase annually by no more than 3.5 percent, even if the economy grows at 7.5 percent per year. Leaders in society, including scholars in the JJB government, university teachers and others must highlight the problems and seek solutions therefor, rather than repeat over and over again accounts of the problem itself.

Growth must not only be fast and sustained but also exports heavy. The reasoning is as follows. This economy is highly import-dependent. One percent growth in the economy required 0.31% percent increase in imports in 2012 and 0. 21 percent increase in 2024. The scarcity of imports cut down the rate of growth of the economy in 2024. Total GDP will not catch up with what it was in (say) 2017, until the ratio of imports to GDP rises above 30 percent.

The availability of imports is a binding constraint on the rate of growth of the economy. An economy that is free to grow will require much more imports (not only cement and structural steel but also intermediate imports of many kinds). I guess that the required ratio will exceed 35 percent. Import capacity is determined by the value of exports reduced by debt repayments to the rest of the world. The most important structural change in the economy is producing exports to provide adequate import capacity. (The constant chatter by IMF and the Treasury officials about another kind of structural change confuses the issue.) An annual 7.5 percent growth in the economy requires import capacity to grow by about 2.6 percent annually.

This economy needs, besides, resources to pay back accumulated foreign debt. If servicing that accumulation requires, takes 4% points of GDP, import capacity needs to grow by (about) 6.6 percent per year, for many years. Import capacity is created when the economy exports to earn foreign exchange and when persons working overseas remit substantial parts of their earnings to persons in Lanka. Both tourism and remittances from overseas have begun to grow robustly. They must continue to flow in persistently.

There are darkening clouds raised by fires in prominent markets for exports from all countries including those poor. This is a form of race to the bottom, which a prominent economist once called ‘a policy to beggar thy neighbour (even across the wide Pacific)’. Unlike the thirty years from 1995, the next 30 years now seem fraught with much danger to processes of growth aided by open international trade. East Asian economies grew phenomenally by selling in booming rich markets, using technology developed in rich countries.

Lanka weighed down with 2,500 years of high culture ignored that reality. The United States of America now is swinging with might and main a wrecking ball to destroy that structure which they had put up, one thought foolishly, with conviction. Among those storms, many container ships would rather be put to port than brave choppy seas. High rates of growth in export earnings seem a bleak prospect. There yet may be some room in the massive economies of China and India.

Consequently, it is fanciful to expect that living conditions will improve rapidly, beginning with the implementation of the 2025 budget. It will be a major achievement if the 2025 budget is fully implemented, as I have argued earlier. Remarkable efforts to cut down on extravagance, waste and the plunder of public funds will help, somewhat; but not enough. IMF or not, there is no way of paying back accumulated debt without running an export surplus sufficient to service debt obligations.

Exports are necessary to permit the economy to pay off accumulated debt and permit some increase in the standard of living. Austerity will be the order of the day for many years to come. It is most unlikely that the next five years will usher in prosperity.

By Usvatte-aratchi

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BLOSSOMS OF HOPE 2025

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An Ikebana exhibition in aid of pediatric cancer patients

This Ikebana exhibition by the members of Ikebana International Sri Lanka Chapter #262, brings this ancient art form to life in support of a deeply meaningful cause: aiding the Pediatric Cancer ward of the Apeksha Cancer Hospital, Maharagama and offering hope to young warriors in their fight against illness.

Graceful, delicate, and filled with meaning—Ikebana, the Japanese art of floral arrangement, is more than just an expression of beauty; it is a reflection of life’s resilience and harmony. “Blossoms of Hope”, is a special Ikebana exhibition, on 29th March from 11a.m. to 7p.m. and 30th March from 10a.m. to 6p.m. at the Ivy Room, Cinnamon Grand Hotel and demonstrations will be from 4p.m. to 5p.m. on both days.

Each floral arrangement in this exhibition is a tribute to strength, renewal, and love. Carefully crafted by skilled Ikebana artists, who are members of the Chapter. These breathtaking displays symbolize the courage of children battling cancer, reminding us that even in adversity, beauty can bloom. The graceful lines, vibrant hues, and thoughtful compositions of Ikebana echo the journey of resilience, inspiring both reflection and compassion.

Visitors will not only experience the tranquility and elegance of Japanese floral art but will also have the opportunity to make a difference. Proceeds from “Blossoms of Hope” will go towards enhancing medical care, providing essential resources, and creating a more comforting environment for young patients and their families.

This exhibition is more than an artistic showcase—it is a gesture of kindness, a symbol of solidarity, and a reminder that hope, like a flower, can grow even in the most unexpected places. By attending and supporting “Blossoms of Hope”, you become a part of this journey, helping to bring light and joy into the lives of children who need it most.

Join in celebrating art, compassion, and the Power of Hope—one flower at a time.

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St. Anthony’s Church feast at Kachchativu island

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Fort Hammenhiel

The famous St. Anthony’s Church feast this year was held on 14 and 15 March. St. Anthony, as per Catholic belief, gives protection and looks after fishermen and seafarers like me. Many Buddhist seafarers are believers in St. Anthony and they usually keep a statue of the saint in their cabins in the ship or craft.

St. Anthony died on 13th June 1231 at age of 35 years, at Padua in Holy Roman Empire and was canonized on 30 May 1232 by Pope Gregory IX.

I was unable to attend last year’s feast as I was away in Pakistan as Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner. I was more than happy to learn that Indians were also attending the feast this year and there would be 4,000 devotees.

I decided to travel to Kankesanturai (KKS) Jaffna by train and stay at my usual resting place, Fort Hammenhiel Resort, a Navy-run boutique hotel, which was once a prison, where JVP leaders, including Rohana Wijeweera were held during the 1971 insurrection. I was fortunate to turn this fort on a tiny islet in Kytes lagoon into a four-star boutique hotel and preserve Wijeweera’s handwriting in 2012, when I was the Commander Northern Naval Area.

I invite you to visit Fort Hammenhiel during your next trip to Jaffna and see Wijeweera’s handwriting.

The train left Colombo Fort Railway Station on time (0530 hrs/14th) and reached KKS at 1410 hrs. I was highly impressed with the cleanliness and quality of railway compartments and toilets. When I sent a photograph of my railway compartment to my son, he texted me asking “Dad, are you in an aircraft or in a train compartment? “

Well done Sri Lanka Railways! Please keep up your good work. No wonder foreign tourists love train rides, including the famous Ella Odyssey.

Travelling on board a train is comfortable, relaxed and stress free! As a frequent traveller on A 9 road to Jaffna, which is stressful due to oncoming heavy vehicles on. This was a new experience and I enjoyed the ride, sitting comfortably and reading a book received from my friend in New York- Senaka Senaviratne—’Hillbilly Elegy’ by US Vice President JD Vance. The book is an international best seller.

My buddy, Commodore (E) Dissanayake (Dissa), a brilliant engineer who built Reverse Osmosis Water Purification Plants for North, North Central and North Western provinces to help prevent chronic kidney disease is the Commodore Superintendent Engineering in the Northern Naval Area. He was waiting at the KKS railway station to receive me.

I enjoyed a cup of tea at Dissa’s chalet at our Northern Naval Command Headquarters in KKS and proceeded to Fort Hammenhiel at Karainagar, a 35-minute drive from KKS.

The acting Commanding Officer of Karainagar Naval Base (SLNS ELARA) Commander Jayawardena (Jaye) was there at Fort Hammenhiel Restaurant to have late lunch with me.

Jaye was a cadet at Naval and Maritime Academy, (NMA) Trincomalee, when I was Commandant in 2006, NMA was under artillery fire from LTTE twice, when those officers were cadets and until we destroyed enemy gun positions, and the army occupied Sampoor south of the Trincomalee harbour. I feel very proud of Jaye, who is a Commander now (equal to Army rank Lieutenant Colonel) and Commanding a very important Naval Base in Jaffna.

The present Navy Commander Vice Admiral Kanchana Banagoda had been in SLNS ELARA a few hours before me and he had left for the Delft Island on an inspection tour.

Commander Jaye was very happy because his Divisional Officer, when he was a cadet, was Vice Admiral Kanchana (then Lieutenant Commander). I had lunch and rested for a few hours before leaving Karainagar in an Inshore Patrol Craft heading to Kachchativu Island by1730 hrs.

The sea was very calm due to inter-monsoon weather and we reached Kachchativu Island by 1845 hrs. Devotees from both Sri Lanka and India had already reached the island. The Catholic Bishop of Sivagangai Diocese, Tamil Nadu India His Eminence Lourdu Anandam and Vicar General of Jaffna Diocese Very Rev Fr. PJ Jabaratnam were already there in Kachchativu together with more than 100 priests and nuns from Sri Lanka and India. It was a solid display of brotherhood of two neighbouring nations united together at this tiny island to worship God. They were joined by 8,000 devotees, with 4,000 from each country).

The church

All logistics—food, fresh water, medical facilities—were provided by the Sri Lanka Navy. Now, this festival has become a major annual amphibious operation for Navy’s Landing Craft fleet, led by SLNS Shakthi (Landing Ship tanks). The Navy establishes a temporary base in a remote island which does not have a drop of drinking water, and provides food and water to 8,000 persons. The event is planned and executed commendably well under Commander Northern Naval Area, Rear Admiral Thusara Karunathilake. The Sri Lankan government allocates Rs 30 million from the annual national budget for this festival, which is now considered a national religious festival.

The Indian devotees enjoy food provided by SLN. They have the highest regard for our Navy. The local devotees are from the Jaffna Diocese, mainly from the Delft Island and helped SLN. Delft Pradeshiya Sabha and AGA Delft Island. A very efficient lady supervised all administrative functions on the Island. Sri Lanka Police established a temporary police station with both male and female officers.

As usual, the Sinhalese devotees came from Negombo, Chilaw, Kurunegala and other areas, bringing food enough for them and their Catholic brothers and sisters from India! Children brought biscuits, milk toffee, kalu dodol and cakes to share with Indian and Jaffna devotees.

In his sermon on 22nd December 2016, when he declared open the new Church built by SLN from financial contributions from Navy officers and sailors, Jaffna Bishop Rt Rev Dr Justin Bernard Ganapragasam said that day “the new Church would be the Church of Reconciliation”.

The church was magnificent at night. Sitting on the beach and looking at the beautiful moon-lit sea, light breeze coming from the North East direction and listening to beautiful hymns sung by devotees praising Saint Anthony, I thanked God and remembered all my friends who patrolled those seas and were no more with us. Their dedication, and bravery out at sea brought lasting peace to our beloved country. But today WHO REMEMBERS THEM?

The rituals continued until midnight. Navy Commander and the Indian Consul General in Jaffna Sai Murali attended the Main Mass.

The following morning (15) the Main Mass was attended by Vice Admiral Kanchana Banagoda and his family. It was a great gesture by the Navy Commander to attend the feast with his family. I had a long discussion with Indian Consul General Jaffna Sai Mulari about frequent incidents of Indian trawlers engaging in bottom trawling in Sri Lankan waters and what we should do as diplomats to bring a lasting solution to this issue, as I was highly impressed with this young Indian diplomat.

The Vicar General of the Jaffna Diocese, my dear friend, Very Rev Father P J Jabarathnam also made an open appeal to all Indian and Sri Lankan fishermen to protect the environment. I was fortunate to attend yet another St. Anthony’s Church feast in Kachchativu.

By Admiral Ravindra C Wijegunaratne WV,

RWP& Bar, RSP, VSV, USP, NI (M) (Pakistan), ndc, psn,
Bsc (Hons) (War Studies) (Karachi) MPhil (Madras)
Former Navy Commander and Former Chief of Defense Staff
Former Chairman, Trincomalee Petroleum Terminals Ltd
Former Managing Director Ceylon Petroleum Corporation
Former High Commissioner to Pakistan

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