Published in my column in The Nation on February 19, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Sometimes a geographical space acquires an equation of predominant association with a certain identity and when this happens it enables an alien motif to come into existence in the plane of perceptions and take the other identities under its shadow. For example; "The inhabitants of Jaffna consist of a
Published in my column in The Nation on February 04, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Being Sri Lankan means different things to different people, which I think is totally fine. The only aspect of Sri Lankanness worth insisting upon is that all persons, stories, theories and analyses should place their contexts within the actual, real Sri Lanka which exists in reality not in dimension –X. A lot of
Published in my column in The Nation on July 22, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Is religious rivalry in Sri Lanka a modern thing begotten and sustained by another modern thing; the Sinhala Buddhist consciousness? Or is it an old thing, which owes its genesis to something deeper and older? The latter of course. The former is a 1980s 90s delusion of a particular Ism; Post-orientalism. This
Published in my column in The Nation on August 19, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Why did Professor K. Indrapala write his 2005 book, ‘The Evolution of an Ethnic Identity’? Some people suggest external duress (Nalin De Silva; ‘he became a prisoner of the LTTE’) while some allege duress exerted by the subconscious. Michael Roberts, an old Peradeniya colleague of Indrapala said; “knowing
Published in my column in The Nation on December 23, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli I am in a moral quandary over what to do about Chandre Dharmawardana. Should I look askance at this professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of Montreal, shuddering with horrified wonder as if he is a mutant worm or should I use the situation to cultivate equanimity? The arguments for both courses
Published in my column in The Nation on May 27, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli “When you stare into the abyss the abyss stares back..” - Friedrich Nietzsche The testimonies of the hoards of civilians who recounted their NFZ experiences to the LLRC contradict the set of testimonies culled by Rajan Hoole and Co and included in the UTHR(J) special Report ...
Published in my column in The Nation on March 24, 2013 By Darshanie Ratnawalli We have a bit of a situation over the South Indian connection with the dawn of civilization in Lanka. The Mahavansa traces the civilization impulse to North India. While the historical revisionist school wants us to stop being fixated with this hackneyed North Indian and get in touch with our inner South Indian (
Published in my column in The Nation on May 13, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Marga in their analysis of the Darusman report says that it presents possibly the strongest case against the Government and the Army. This is wrong. The strongest case is presented by UTHR (J) special report No.34. It came before everything; Darusman’s, The Cage, Marga Seminar report and the LLRC. In 2009 December,
Published in my column in The Nation on March 03, 2013 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Waiting for Vijaya “Given that possession of a historical homeland helps solidify nationalism, it is hardly surprising that both the Sinhalese and the Tamils claim to be the island’s original settlers. The Sinhalese claim that their Aryan North Indian ancestors were the first settlers to reach Sri Lanka’s shores
And treats them like pustules in a delicate anatomical region (quietly ignores them hoping they will just go away)From 2009 to 2011 consistently, faithfully and in a variety of digital media which can be easily retrieved Niromi de Soyza has been making the same fundamental and monumental slip, which doesn’t bode at all well for the authenticity of her memoir ...
Published in my column in The Nation on September 02, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli “I will erase even the memory of Sparta from the histories…” - Antagonist dialogue line from the movie 300- Here is the storyline given in 'The Evolution of an Ethnic Identity'; “The Tamils of Sri Lanka evolved as a second ethnic group. Their evolution was parallel ...
Published in my column in The Nation on April 08, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli How did the UN Panel report on Lanka affect the local commentators? I say nothing about foreign commentators because all cultures across the world have popular tropes that depict foreigners as credulous fools (the Brooklyn bridge story, the ‘parangiya kotte giya’ story, etc.) and we can ...
Published in my column in The Nation on September 16, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Sigiri. A rock turned into a sitting lion and a secure palace complex by Kasyapa in the 5th century A.D. After his death, Sigiriya stood abandoned to the forest, the palace complex falling to ruins, desolate but not fully. During the 8th, 9th and 10th centuries A.D., the site became a visitor magnet, drawing
Published in my column in The Nation ‘The Painted Goose’ on January 29, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli Sometimes, certain sentences lodge in my head until I have to exorcise them by an act of writing. The following are from an essay titled ‘Back to Basics: The Need for an Honest Conversation About ‘Sri Lankanness’ and ‘Sri Lankan identity’ by Achcharya ...
Published in my column in The Nation on December 09, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli The Cobra hood cave in Sigiriya donated around 2nd century B.C. by someone called Naguliya I went to Sigiriya recently. At the entrance to one of the several caves, at the base of the ...
Published in my column in The Nation on March 25, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli I wonder if it behoves me to say something about THE CURRENT ISSUE instead of being so stuck in the past and its different presentations. I could, but then there is very little emotional satisfaction to be had in holding up a spotlight to mediocrity. “To ...
Published in my column in The Nation on March 11, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli In 1984, Gamini Iriyagolla accused C. R. De. Silva of suppressing something. Some evidence. Historical not litigious. Probably because Gamini Iriyagolla was a lawyer, it looked a bit convoluted. So that at first it confounded even me. (And I am quite brilliant). But finally I got it. (I always do). The charge was, on
Published in my column in The Nation on April 29, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli There is one part in the UN report on Sri Lanka that even should one have passionate crushes on one or all three members of the panel one should find hard to read without wincing. That is when they talk of the Government shelling of the 11th UN convoy. From paragraph 79 to 91, the report details the adventures of
Published in my column in The Nation on June 10, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli This is a horror story. It follows a classic plotline of the genre; the gradual emergence of the hidden revenant from under the guise of apparent goodness. At night, during a thunder storm, the hero would be necking in the car with his beautiful girlfriend (who is really the female revenant, a malignant supernatural
Published in my column in The Nation on October 14, 2012 By Darshanie Ratnawalli What does the common man want? He wants among other things to be fair; to keep up at least a semblance of fairness and fair play. When the CFA came into being in 2002, and it looked like they were finally going to wrench Sri Lanka free, from the pincer-like grip of the integrating dynamic it had been held in for