A man, a pact and the earth-fragrance of Divulgane
Sometime in the year 1986 I came to an agreement with a friend,
Ananda Thilak Bandara Herath. Thilak and I were in our first year at
Dumbara Campus, Peradeniya University. We shared a ‘chummery’ with ten
others. There were six beds. The ‘chummery’ was located about a mile and
a half from the campus in Polgolla. Thilak, when he entered campus
didn’t know much English. He knew the alphabet.
We had a pact. We spoke in English all the way to campus each morning
and he sang all the way back at night. Thilak teaches Geography in a
small school in Galgamuwa. He sings. He appears on television now and
then. And he writes poetry. In English.
Thilak didn’t come to Dumbara alone. He came with his classmate, I M
Senanayake, ‘Senevi’ to everyone who knew him. Thilak was from Madadombe,
a small hamlet about 11 km from Galgamuwa. Senevi was from Divulgane a
few further away. They both attended the school in Ehetuwewa. They had
known each other from the time they were very small. They studied
together for the A/Ls. Senevi became a Social Services Officer and later
passed the SLAS exam and is now the Provincial Director, Cultural
Affairs, Central Province. Senevi was one of the 12 in our ‘chummery’.
New friends
Thanks to Senevi and Thilak I’ve roamed quite a bit in and around
their villages. Three or four of us would go there and stay for several
days, bathing in one of the many tanks, visiting temples and spending
afternoons in chenas roasting corn. It was a slow time, a time of being
and a time of making new friends. Many new friends. Of them all, there’s
one I can never forget. Yase.
Yasaratne studied for the A/L with Thilak and Senevi. He didn’t make
it to campus. He became a teacher and for many years taught at the
Vikadanegama school where Thilak’s uncle, Bandara Jayatillake, was the
Principal. Yase would accompany us and would tell us stories about
places and people. He had soft ways. He had wit. He told me one day,
‘maalinda, api nidi baddak gevanava....rupiyal dekai’ (we pay a
sleep-tax of two rupees). He added ‘maduru koyil’ (mosquito coils).
Senevi and Thilak were brothers to Yase. We were too. This was a time
when we were playing and he was working. Hard. We appreciated and were
humbled by this unassuming man who was born and lived two houses from
the little katu-meti (wattle and daub) house where Senevi was born and
grew up.
People go their ways after leaving university and this is what
happened to us as well. Still, we kept in touch, met at weddings and
funerals and the occasional ‘get-together’. Thilak, in fact, stayed for
a year and a half at our house, to escape from the bheeshanaya. Senevi
survived. Barely. I would ask them about Yase. And they would update.
Village boy
I met him again a year ago. Thilak’s Appachchi passed away last June.
At the time, they were living a kilometre from Galgamuwa. All our
friends came from all over the country. After the funeral, we all
decided to visit Senevi’s mother, who is in her mid-eighties now. She
was proud of her son; from the day he went to campus, she wanted him to
be a disaapathi (a Government Agent). Senevi is still Senevi. A village
boy with a strong sense of dignity and integrity, with feet firmly
rooted in the varied soils of our land and determined to do justice to
the education he received. He put a lot of things right when he was
Commissioner, Anuradhapura Municipal Council, things that were not
getting done because some officials thought office gave a right to
thieve, to misappropriate and to treat public property as personal
endowment.
I had one question. ‘Where is Yasaratne?’ I asked. I hadn’t seen him
in almost 20 years. I went over to his place. A little child ran out. I
asked for his father. Yase came out. Middle aged now. His face was
blank. It’s been a long time, so I didn’t mind. I smiled and said ‘you
can’t recognize me, can you?’ He murmured a name. Then another. Then I
said ‘Malinda’. He smiled and was immediately the Yasaratne who welcomed
me (and everyone else) as though he had known us all his life more than
twenty years before.
Yase came out, spoke to the others and then asked me to go back to
his place with him. I went. His wife made tea. He wanted to stay the
night. I could not. He wanted to give me a gift. He said he couldn’t
afford to give something to everyone who was there. He took out a bag of
Kurakkan, took it to a makeshift workshop at the back of the house,
turned on a switch and ground it to a fine powder.
Reunion
Something was wrong, I realized, but couldn’t put my finger on it.
Senevi told me: ‘Yasayata es penenne nehe machang’. He was blind.
Apparently it had come slowly. Or gone away slowly, rather. Even when
studying for the A/Ls, Thilak told me, Yase would hold the books two
inches from his eyes. There was no mention of any of these things. We
spoke. Hands were clasped. We parted.
In the year 1986, my friend Thilak and I made a pact. We both learned
something from each other. Around the same time, our friend Yasaratne
had made a pact. With himself. With the earth upon which he lived. That
place, Divulgane, has a fragrance about it. No, it is not
nostalgia-laced. It is a goodness thing. A Kurakkan way of life, of
being and sharing. Of encounter and reunion.
We all make covenants during our lives. Some are mandatory, some
unimportant. Some are sacred. They are fragrant. My friend Yasaratne has
vacant eyes. His heart is full though. I feel privileged.
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