Friday, July 12, 2019

‘Elephant Pass’, Sri Lanka.


‘There is a natural curiosity as to the origin of the name Elephant Pass, and the explanations given are plausible enough. Jaffna is a peninsula joined to the mainland by a long causeway, which at one time was a shallow ford. By this ford herds of wild elephants were in the habit of visiting Jaffna during July and August, the ripening season of the Palmyra fruit. Palmyra palms abound here, and the elephant is particularly fond of the fruit, which grows in luxuriant clusters, each of which is a good ‘cooly load’. If a sufficiency of fruit had not fallen from the mature trees the elephants would pull down the younger plants for the sake of their tender leaves. This is the theory adopted by Tennent, but it is equally reasonable to attribute the name to the use made of this ford by the natives in bringing elephants from the mainland to the fort as tribute to the Portuguese and Dutch, who shipped them to Indian markets. There is no railway station at Elephant Pass, but the train stops for passengers. There is a quaint and picturesque old building at the edge of the lagoon, facing the sea on one side and the lagoon on the other, which was once a Dutch fort. Formerly it was a rest-house in the days before the advent of the railway, but it is now closed to the public and converted to a "circuit bungalow" for the Government Agent of the Northern Province. By the courtesy of that officer it is at times lent for temporary occupation to those who desire a short residence in the vicinity and who are prepared to bring their own equipment, servants and provisions. Duck-shooting and fishing can be indulged in to any extent, and the salubrity of the place is beyond question’.
From - THE CEYLON GOVERNMENT RAILWAY  by H.W. Cave

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Memories of long ago

“The gram sellers at Galle Face Green sold their 'kadala gottu' topped with 'isso wade' for twenty-five cents .
The movie goers at Savoy cinema came out; Couples went to Aleric's for ice cream and families miserly budgeted for Chinese fried rice at Golden Gate .
Gunawardena opened batting for the Tamil Union and Sunderalingam kept wickets for the Sinhalese Sports Club .
This was once nostalgic Sri Lanka on easy street sans the raging war and the terrible turmoil; 'The way it used to be' .
The 'Yal Devi' took the Madhu pilgrims and the 'Ruhunu Kumari' carried the Kataragama clan. Marawila fishermen fished at Mullativu with the monsoon change and Lever's and Reckitt's Sales Reps sold toothpaste in Jaffna and drank 'Tal Raa' whilst bathing in the Keeramalai tank .
The Vel cart used to come down Wellawatte and the waiters worked double time at the Sarasvati Lodge .
The differences were there from the North to the South, but who cared ?
Nobody killed anyone. There was a life, simple and in peace .
Bala Tampoe took the CMU out on strike every year and the Parliament changed colours every five years with mythological promises . That was acceptable .
The queues got long at the CWE to buy 'Jumping Fish' and the bread prices leapt like high jumpers. Those were our big problems .
The smiles were there too, affordable to the all and sundry, beat shows and big matches, sports meets and school carnivals, all within a ten-rupee budget .
Fashion-wise, the pinnacle was the CR-Havies Match at Longdon Place; the Suzettes and Claudettes were there, dazzling in mini skirts, making
their best attempts to get partnered to go to the Coconut Grove and jingo and jive to the Jetliners .
Some made it to Akasa Kade too, to eat egg hoppers and hold hands and become more naughty whilst pretending to be watching the ship lights at
the Colombo harbour .
There was peace; it was a long long time ago. That was before the Morris Minor taxis changed their English alphabet number plates .
Then came the carnage. Who's to blame? Don't waste time, that's kicking the moon and corralling clouds .
We all know better. We are all to be blamed, some for cheering and others for their silence. It has always been 'our soldiers' - but it is their war .
The guns are silent now and the talks go on and hope seeps slow like a weed-clogged wave. If the Gods are kind, we'll have peace. Let it lie there .
North and East must be separate 'Don't give this', 'can't have that', 'autonomy? what nonsense?' Such passionate phrases bellow from borrowed patriotism . 'My son has to study', 'No no, not to join the Air Force', 'Army? Are you mad?' The same voices add the contradictions 'We must continue to fight at any cost'. Brave words, quite cheap too when rights and wrongs are just 'whys' sprouting out from empty opinions on even emptier forums .
Try telling all that to mothers who buried their sons or children who pray for their missing fathers .
Voice it to a legless 'Boy' from Velvettiturai or a Sightless soldier from Devundara. Or maybe to a lover who lights a candle for some forgotten fighter buried under swollen earth, too poor even for a memorial.
What does it matter to which side they belonged ?
They paid the price, we didn't. They shed the tears, we didn't .
Let us then wish, nay, that's not enough, let us pray, to all the Gods in creation for 'The way it used to be' to return .
Or ........ let us be all silent ~ we owe that much to those who died nameless”

From an email from an anonymous Nihal, long long ago. The seniors would appreciate the sentiments, expressed with poetic beauty.