Features
Punchihewa’s new book on King Vijayabahu, the redeemer of Lanka
Reviewed by Dr. Malini Dias
The Mahavamsa, the great chronicle devotes 10 chapters to King Dutugemunu. Parakramabahu the great is accorded 13 chapters while Vijayabahu I had received only four. The achievements of Dutugemunu like the construction of Mahathupa or the Ratnamali Cetiya after defeating the Colas and those of Parakramabahu in the construction of Parakrama Samudraya no doubt found them high in the list of royals in the annals of Sri Lankan history.
King Vijayabahu I was born in 1040 AD at a time when the island had come under the rule of the powerful Cola Empire. Known as Kitti he lived in Ruhuna with his parents and was determined to free the country from the foreign yoke.
The Colas operated from Polonnaruwa, which they made their capital. However, their control over the rest of the country was minimal. Their attempts to take control of Ruhuna was resisted by the people of Ruhuna under local leaders. When they failed, the Colas ransacked and plundered Ruhuna taking the wealth to the Cola country.
Prince Kitti, in order to unite the anti-Cola forces in Ruhuna had to eliminate the rival local feudal leadership and in his 15th year became the ruler of Ruhuna and came to be known as Vijayabahu.
Meanwhile the Colas in Polonnaruwa were making changes in the political, social and cultural life of the people. A Cola ruler became the Governor of the Island. Under his leadership Hindu temples came up in the areas under the Cola control. Buddhist temples like ancient Velgamvehera came to be known as Raja Raja Perum Palli from the time the island became a province of the Cola country. There had been many Tamil inscriptions discovered in this temple, where donations of cows, ghee, oil for the perpetual lamps being donated to the Lord Buddha by the Tamil devotees. Tamil language came more and more into prominence as well.
With these activities of the Colas, it was natural that the people of Ruhuna came to rally round Vijayabahu. He used both formal methods as well as guerilla style of warfare and it can be said that he was the first Sri Lankan guerilla leader. When the Colas from Polonnaruwa attacked him, he retreated to Palatupana. From there he attacked the Cola leader who had arrived from South India and killed him. Vijayabahu used to move swiftly from place to place when he was in danger. After losing a face to face battle with the Colas he back tracked to Vatagiri.
He then set up camp at Mahanagakula in the South and to attack Polonnaruwa sent three armies from three directions and captured Polonnaruwa after a bitter struggle. He was 35-years of age at the time of his coronation.
However, his struggle from the backwoods of Ruhuna was not an easy one. Hiding in the jungles with his family and living on yams and fruits, he was leading a very difficult period in his life and the royal family with Prince Kitti were protected by the army official Budalna.
Apart from the Colas, there were the local leaders who were against Vijayabahu and to consolidate Ruhuna he had to eliminate them and Lokanatha, Keshadhatu Kashyapa, Adimalaya are few of them. Ravideva and Chala who were once with Vijayabahu deserted him but later joined him in the final attack.
The now famous Panakaduwa Copper Plate discovered and deciphered by Prof. Senerat Paranavitana throws much light on King Vijayabahu’s life as told by him. It is a royal decree where a ruler refers to himself when he provided certain privileges to the Military Chief Budalna who protected and looked after him and his parents when he was hiding in the jungles.
Once victorious, he turned to the development and Buddhist revival, which are well documented in the Ambagamuwa rock inscription and the chronicle Mahavamsa. He invited Upasampada Bhikkhus from Burma and reestablished the Sasana. He provided facilities for the pilgrims who climbed Sri Pada. Tough and ardent Buddhist, he patronized the Hindu temples as well. After becoming the ruler of the island, he wanted to bring about economic, spiritual and social development.
Economically he concentrated more on repairs and rehabilitation of medium and small tanks, which had been neglected for years due to the war with the Colas. Probably through realizing that many males have died during the war, the widows were provided with land. Being in possession of the ability and determination to overcome immense problems and after achieving that to devote his time for the welfare of the people, if considered virtues, it may mot be wrong to say that King Vijayabahu wass the greatest ruler of Sri Lanka.
In enumerating his virtues, a recent researcher scholar said, “If there is a Sri Lankan ruler who had not received his due place in history, it is King Vijayabahu the Great. He is the ruler who could be the model to build up a United Sri Lanka”. He was endowed with patriotism, heroism, determination, humility, leadership and diplomatic acumen that are among the virtues of this Great Sri Lankan leader.
When commenting on this venture I would like to emphasize the fact that Scholar and Author, Dr. Punchihewa has undertaken the difficult task of representing the role of King Vijayabahu I from the royal decree known as the Panakaduwa Copper Plate hither to not known to the Sinhala reader.
(The writer is the President of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka and former Deputy Commissioner and Director of Epigraphy and Numismatics, Department of Archaeology)
Features
How a Feminist Foreign Policy could lay the basis for a more peaceful world
Looking at foreign policy questions from a feminist viewpoint may strike many in even the world of democracy as quite a new approach to studying external policy issues but this perspective has been around for quite some time and it would be in the interest of states and publics to take profound cognizance of it. This is in view of the implications of the perspective for international peace and stability.
Given this backdrop, it was in the fitness of things for the Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies (BCIS) Colombo, a major pioneer in the teaching and researching of International Relations in Sri Lanka, to set off special time to introduce and discuss Feminist Foreign Policy (FFP) recently. The relevant symposium was the final one in a series of forums of importance to foreign and domestic policy issues the BCIS conducted in the course of November this year to celebrate the 50th anniversary of its founding.
Titled ‘Leadership for Peace and Feminist Foreign Policy’, the forum was held on December 9th at the BMICH’s ‘Mihilaka Madura’ under the aegis of the BCIS, headed by the latter’s Executive Director Priyanthi Fernando. Prominent among the members of the audience at the symposium was the Chairperson of the BCIS, former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.
The panelists at the forum were Prof. Rangita de Silva de Alwis, Associate Dean of International Affairs, University of Pennsylvania Law School, USA and an Expert Member on the CEDAW and Eva Abdullah, Chairperson, Maldives Policy Think Tank and a former Deputy Speaker of the People’s Majlis of the Maldives. The symposium was moderated by Dr. Radhika Coomaraswamy, former UN Under-Secretary General and Special Representative of the Secretary General on Children and Armed Conflict (2006-2012).
Prof. Rangita de Silva, among other things, pointed to the importance of re-imagining FFP and making it increasingly relevant in the formulation of a country’s foreign policy. She said that going forward, foreign policy will need to be increasingly based on a feminist perspective and there are some major countries of the South and North that have already given their external policies this orientation. It was pointed out that by 2025, France, for example, would be taking this policy direction; that is, the best interests of France’s women would be taken into consideration in the formulation and implementation of foreign policy.
Chile, the same speaker pointed out, a major country of the South, is in the forefront of integrating or merging its domestic and foreign policies with a view to prioritizing the legitimate interests of women in the crafting of its external policy.
Eva Abdullah pointed to the crucial contribution women make to a country’s economy. Women in the Maldives, she said, work 19 hours a day. She cogently elaborated that economic instability is a chief causative factor in the disruption of peace and stability in a country, in view of its subtle capability to undermine a country’s material wellbeing. The latter, in turn, causes social disaffection and unrest. But, generally, the factors seen as undermining a country’s peace are physical conflict and war; that is, overt violence.
However, it is important to come to grips with the less visible or more subtle destroyer of peace, which is economic instability. This form of instability, it was pointed out, has grave long term consequences. For instance, a country’s economic ruin is virtually inherited by every new born infant, since a country in debt is obliged to repay such loans and it falls to future generations to do so.
Abdullah went on to elaborate that economic austerity measures undertaken by a country in debt, for example, while disruptive of peace, exert a deleterious impact on particularly women and other vulnerable groups. After all, the contribution of women to the GDP of a country is inestimable. This is all the reason why women’s issues need to be brought to the forefront of foreign policymaking.
In other words, foreign policy, Abdullah pointed out, is essentially all about the promotion of human rights. Since such rights are insidiously undermined during times of economic austerity; debt issues, which come to the fore during economic crises in particularly the South, cannot be viewed in isolation from women’s issues and external policy.
Thus, the forum raised issues of crucial importance to foreign policy formulation which countries of the South in particular need to take into account very seriously, going forward. At the end of the symposium a Q&A followed where many an issue of relevance was taken up for discussion.
It ought to be clear to the unbiased observer and commentator that a feminist perspective in foreign policy is of crucial significance to the process referred to as democratic development. The latter signifies growth in tandem with redistributive justice. It goes without saying that foreign and domestic policies that do not help in furthering these aims serve no useful purpose. Thus, a feminist foreign policy and its underlying principles cannot be glossed over or ignored in the process of external policy formulation and implementation.
Generally, a woman’s contribution to a country’s GNP and overall wellbeing goes largely undocumented and unappreciated. For example, women work selflessly and silently in their homestead, but no official price tag is attached to such labour which is instrumental in ‘keeping the home fires burning’. Accordingly, the panelists’ observation that foreign policy in the real and feminist sense is essentially all about the promotion of human rights amounts to an insight of great worth.
Features
A star in the making…
Most of us are familiar with the name Don Sherman, from Melbourne, Australia, who is also known as the ‘Singing Chef,’ but I doubt Sri Lankans here are aware that he also has a pretty daughter – Emma Shanaya.
What’s extra special about Emma is that she is following in her father’s footsteps – not as a Chef, but as a singer!
Reports coming my way indicate that Emma, born in Sri Lanka, is an emerging singer-songwriter from Melbourne…known for her soulful voice and heartfelt lyrics.
Growing up, Emma was exposed to the world of music through her father, Don Sherman, who is still a very popular personality, in Melbourne, while her brother Shenan is a pianist in a band.
At 14, they say, Emma discovered her passion for music and has been honing her craft ever since…performing at special events, parties, etc.
This extremely talented artiste released her debut original, on December 1st, 2024 – “You Made Me Feel,” a song she wrote and performed herself, with mixing and mastering by Markia Productions.
The accompanying music video, produced by Synapse Productions, is now live on YouTube and music lovers could check it out – Emma Shanaya. Her other socials are:
Instagram: @emmashanaya
Facebook: Emma Shanaya
TikTok: Emma Shanaya
Emma trains at the renowned Andrea Marr Music School, in Melbourne, and Andrea’s coaching has been appreciated by many who consider her teaching method as a boom to their career as performers.
In fact, another singer of repute in Melbourne, Derrick Junkeer, who was in Colombo last December and performed at the All-4-One concert, was very impressed with Emma’s singing and says she is poised for a promising career in the music industry.
Yes, Emma Shanaya is certainly on the right track to hit the big time in the music industry and says she has plans to create many more originals and also integrate her Sri Lankan culture into her music.
“I hope to write and make more music and be a performing artiste in Melbourne and Sri Lanka. I want to include my Sri Lankan culture and language into my music.”
In addition to singing, she loves dancing and acting and has done a few acting and model projects as well.
Emma graduated from Deakin University, in September 2024, with a Bachelor of Business and Bachelor of Arts (majoring in drama) and is currently working full time as a kindergarten teacher in a Montessori in Melbourne.
The star in the making is in Sri Lanka, at the moment, on holiday, and says she loves the scene here.
“Sri Lanka is great! Has become a lot more pricier but the tropical lifestyle and vibes are unmatched.”
Emma will be flying back to Melbourne on Christmas Day and will be joining her parents for some celebrations later during the day.
“I take this opportunity to wish The Island readers a Very Happy and a Peaceful Christmas and I also wish all of you a Wonderful New Year, filled with love and laughter.”
Features
Face Packs to Beat the Heat
I’m glad The Island readers liked my Beauty Tips last week – Beat the Heat – and requested for a few more Face Packs to Beat the Heat. Okay, here are a few more very cool homemade face packs:
* Mango Face Pack: In a bowl, add one tablespoon of fresh mango pulp. To this add one tablespoon of cold cream and one tablespoon of cold milk. Whip the ingredients well to form a thick paste. When done apply this paste on the skin, allow it to dry and then rinse it off.
* Watermelon Face Pack: In a bowl, add half a cup of watermelon pulp. To this add 01 tablespoon of curd. Combine the ingredients and apply the pack on your face. When the pack turns dry, rinse it off with cold water.
* Curd Face Pack: When curd is used on the skin, it will help to improve the skin tone. Apply cold curd on your face and neck twice in a week…when the heat is on. The curd will open your pores and help you to get a natural glow in no time.
* Cucumber Face Pack: Cucumber is the best vegetable that you can use on the skin in the heat. Make a thick juice out of one cucumber, and 03 tablespoons of sugar with 01 teaspoon of curd. When this pack is ready, massage it on to the skin and let it dry. After 15 minutes, peel the face pack from the skin and then rinse with cold milk.
* Pineapple Face Pack: Grind the flesh of one pineapple to a thick juice. Rinse your face with this juice and let it dry. After 10 minutes, rinse your face with rose water and wipe dry. Wait 15 minutes and then wash your face with cold water. This face pack will make you feel refreshed.
-
Opinion3 days ago
Degree is not a title!
-
Features6 days ago
Empowering the next generation: St. Benedict’s College brings STEM education to life
-
Features4 days ago
Spiritual Awakening of a Village
-
News2 days ago
Innovative water management techniques revolutionising paddy cultivation in Lanka
-
News5 days ago
Over 300,000 Sri Lankans leave for overseas jobs this year
-
Latest News5 days ago
India’s Gukesh beats China’s Ding to become youngest chess world champion
-
Features4 days ago
Revisiting the role of education in shaping shared futures
-
Features4 days ago
The Silence of the Speaker and other matters