Thursday, September 5, 2019

The pull of Sri Lanka



This is a great question. I was here in the 90s and left and came back again because the place remained in my heart and my mind. Now I am back, but need to leave again ( long story ) and I will miss:
  1. The people. Nothing can beat the Sri Lankan smile. The hospitality and sense of humour. The welcome and support you receive from them.
  2. Nature. This country is just so beautiful. The beaches, the hill country, the dry zone, the wet zone. So much diversity in such a small space.
  3. Wildlife. Sit in a garden here and be amazed by the birds, the butterflies even ….ugh…the snakes of all shapes, sizes and hues.
  4. The food. String hoppers, pol sambol, wattalapan, jack fruit curry…the list goes on. All natural and delicious.
  5. The history. Adam's peak, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura, Pollonaruwa… so much to see and learn.
  6. As a teacher and trainer, the respect and desire that people here have for education and learning.
For the moment I have to go, but given the chance, I will be back here in a shot.

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Safety matches

Please click on the web-link below:-

https://www.facebook.com/philip.veerasingam/posts/2671337149545222

A 'Tinder box'

Starting a fire using a 'Tinder box'

A  brass box of matches
Brands  of box of safety matches made in Ceylon/Sri Lanka











Saturday, August 17, 2019

Dowry for a Gypsy

My contribution to a dowry :-
Continuing my piece on the Gypsies of Sri Lanka, I had a young boy from the Gypsy tribe, who had a 'green-stick' fracture of his fore-arm, taking treatment in my surgical ward at Batticaloa, Sri Lanka. The father of the child visited me at my residence in Batticaloa, to thank me for looking after his son. I had a long chat with him on the customs of his tribe. He told me that when they marry off their daughter, the dowry was, a bottle of arrack, a chicken and a dog. I had a very intelligent dog with me which was causing a lot of mayhem by bringing body parts of slaughtered animals home from a refuse dump close to our residence. I asked him whether he wanted that dog, to be given as dowry. He joyfully accepted. I told him that the dog might find its way back to our home from his residence, about 20 miles away. He said that they have herbs to give to the dog, to erase its memory. He led the dog away. A few weeks later I met him with his son in my clinic and inquired about the dog. His face broke into a broad smile. He said that the dog had a good hunting instinct and was happy in his new home.
It has been reported by Greek historians, writing around 100 AD that good hunting dogs, exported through the sea-port in Paanama, Sri Lanka, at that time were in big demand in Greece.