{"id":53995,"date":"2016-04-23T22:59:29","date_gmt":"2016-04-24T04:59:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=53995"},"modified":"2016-04-23T01:18:44","modified_gmt":"2016-04-23T08:18:44","slug":"moddely-tamby-the-father-of-vellahlas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2016\/04\/23\/moddely-tamby-the-father-of-vellahlas\/","title":{"rendered":"Moddely Tamby \u2013 the Father of Vellahlas\u00a0"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>H. L. D. Mahindapala<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>It is hindsight that throws insights to create and illuminate foresight. That is the beauty\u00a0 and value of history. It gives meaning. It also throws up warning signs for\u00a0 those with 20-20 vision to read the road map that points the way to destinations. Those who refuse to look back and gain the advantages of hindsight are like drivers on the road speeding\u00a0 without a rear vision mirror <strong>: <\/strong>they would never know what would come\u00a0 from behind and whack\u00a0 them off course.<\/p>\n<p>A critical look at the past would\u00a0 also provide ample signs of the shape of\u00a0 things to come. If, as they say, coming events cast their shadows then one\u00a0 has to go no further than Moddeley Tamby to get a glimpse of the explosive events that came down from the north in the 20th century. Moddeley Tamby, hitherto unknown Tamil Vellahla Cannecapul (a writer \/ clerk) attached to the Commander of Jaffnapatnam, is a name that was buried in the archives of the Dutch. He figures prominently in the Memoirs of the Commander of Jaffna, Hendri\u00a0 Zwaardecroon, who sacked him. All hell broke loose after\u00a0 that. Zwaardecroon had committed the big crime of sacking a Vellahla Cannecapul and appointed another from the rival Madapally caste. In typical Vellahla fashion Moddeley Tamby rounded up the powerful Vellahlas and with some extra help from the Vanni he led the first Vellahla revolt against the Dutch. This is the first time that the Vellahlas flexed their political muscle. This was also the first of the many Vellahla encounters that were to follow and end in the violence endorsed in the Vadukoddai Resolution. There is no doubt that Moddeley Tamby\u2019s revolt shook the Dutch administration.<\/p>\n<p>The Vellahla struggle for power in the administration was worrisome to the Dutch. They knew that Vellahlaism was the root cause of the problem. They kept a sharp eye on it. Zwaardecroon\u2019s report on\u00a0 Tamby\u2019s riot is an accurate characterisation of Vellahlaism that\u00a0 is valid even to this day. He presents a clear descriptive view of the prevailing caste politics, particularly the power of the Vellahlas and how well entrenched they were in the system even during the time of the Dutch. In his <em><strong>Memoirs<\/strong><\/em> Zwaardecroon says that the Vellahlas had the virtual monopoly of the jobs in the Dutch administration. The tax collectors, Majoraals, (minor village officials), Cannecapuls, Arachchies etc., came from the Vellahla caste. For instance, Don Philip Sangerapulle, from Cannengray, a native of evil repute\u201d, had obtained during the years 1689 and 1690 all the advantages he desired for\u00a0 his caste and\u00a0 for his followers. This went so far as to the appointment of even schoolboys as Majoraals and Cayals from the time they left school.\u201d The Vellahla monopoly was not welcome by Zwaardecroon. He brought it to the notice of Governor Thomas van Rhee who authorized him to make the necessary changes, that so many thousands of\u00a0 people should no longer suffer by the oppression of the Bellales, who are very proud and despise all other castes, and who had become\u00a0 so powerful that they were able not\u00a0 only to worry and harass the poor people, but also prevent them from submitting their complaints to the authorities.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He adds that it has always been a rule here not to restrict the appointment to these offices to the Bellales, but to employ the Madapallys and other castes as well, to serve as a counteracting influence; because this means the\u00a0 inhabitants were\u00a0 kept\u00a0 in peace and through the jealousy of the various\u00a0 castes the ruler\u00a0 was always in a position to know\u00a0 what was going\u00a0 on in the country.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Zwaardecroon now comes\u00a0 to the the riot of Moddeley Tamby. He says:  All these reasons induced\u00a0 His Excellency Thomas van Rhee to give me\u00a0 leave to bring about the necessary changes which have not been introduced. I appointed the Collector\u00a0 of Waddemoraatje as my Cannecapul\u00a0 in place of of Moddeley Tamby, whose place\u00a0 I filled with the new Collector of Madapally caste, while also a new Collector was appointed for Timmoraatsche in place of Don Juan Mandala Nayaga, whom the late Mr. Blom\u00a0 had discharged from office in one place. &#8230;.I have further transferred two\u00a0 Collectors in the large Province\u00a0 of Wallegamo, so as to gradually bring about the desired change in the interest of the Company and that of the other castes; but I heard that this small change created so much disturbance and canvassing that haad to leave the matter alone. The Bellales, seeing that they would be shut out from these profitable\u00a0 office and that they would lose influence they possessed so far, and being the largest in number and the wealthiest of the people, moved heaven and earth to put a stop to the carrying into effect of this\u00a0 plan\u00a0 so prejudicial to their interests. With this view they also joined the Wannias Don Philip Nellampane and Don Gaspar Illengenarene Mudliyar in their conspiracies, The latter two, also Bellales, well aware that they owe many elephants to the Company, as stated at the beginning of tis Memoir, and\u00a0 known\u00a0 that their turn would also come, organized the riots in which the said Moddely Tamby was the principal\u00a0 instrument. &#8230; They also probably understood\u00a0 that it was my intention to diminish the influence of the Bellala caste, and were thus induced to take its course to promote the welfare of their caste.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In many respects Moddeley Tamby represents the Vellahla political culture that dominated the colonial and post-colonial landscape. Understanding Moddeley Tambi is the key to understanding colonial and post-colonial history that flowed from Jaffna. It is the clear that he was fighting for one cause only : vellahlaism. He was fighting with the Dutch not because the job of Cannecapul went to a fellow-Tamil. No. He was fighting to grab a key post in the Dutch administration because the loss of\u00a0 it would\u00a0 diminish the influence\u00a0 of\u00a0 the Bellala caste.\u201d He was fighting to retain\u00a0 the\u00a0 power of the Vellahlas for the Vellahlas. Profit, power, position and prestige depended on holding key administrative positions. The Vellahlas were craving for power and getting a firm foothold in the administration\u00a0 was another way of sharing\u00a0 power with the rulers. Vellahla politics\u00a0 from the time of Moddeley Tamby was focused\u00a0 on grabbing a lion share of power in the administration. This is the factor that rose to monstrous proportions in the post-colonial\u00a0 period and dominated the national agenda.<\/p>\n<p>The Dutch colonial setting in which Moddeley Tamby and the Vellahlas came into prominence is also important to understand the rise and flow of Vellahla politics from the 17th century to the present. The Dutch period is, indeed, a watershed for the Vellahlas because they consolidated their power and position during this period. The rise of Vellahlas as a political force in the Dutch period is highlighted by R. F. Young and Bishop S. Jebanesan in their scholarly study of Jaffna society, <em><strong>The Bible Trembled, The\u00a0 Hindu-Christian Controversies of Nineteenth-Century Ceylon,<\/strong><\/em> Vienna, 1995. They wrote: The peninsula became a Vellahla domain only in the Dutch era\u00a0 when the coastal Karaiyar caste, the bulk\u00a0 of\u00a0 which had become\u00a0 Catholic in the sixteenth century, was dispossessed from positions of administrative power by Vellahlas (Protestants (nominally at least) and Hindus) of untainted loyalty. In gratitude the Dutch granted concession to Vellahla landowners, especially those who cultivated tobacco, the region\u2019s most lucrative plantation product. A steady supply of labour had been guaranteed by bonding the Nalava (the regional term for Tirunelveli toddy-tappers) and other subordinate castes to them as soil slaves\u201d. The Vellahlas were, therefore, advantageously positioned to affiliate remuneratively with the British when the Dutch were overthrown.\u201d (p. 104).<\/p>\n<p>Moddeley Tamby\u2019s riot\u00a0 is the first political act of the Vellahalas to assert their right to be in commanding positions to exert power, even if it was as subordinate agents of the colonial masters. They emerged as a political force with the riot of Moddeley Tambi demanding that the privileged position of the Vellahlas as the ruling elite in the caste hierarchy should be preserved at any cost. Besides, the land grants given to them by the Dutch, the lucrative trade of tobacco, the mass importation of slaves by the Vellahlas to work their tobacco\u00a0 plantations, their privileged position\u00a0 in the Dutch administrative service and the Vellahla violence, their unofficial political tool, to maintain their supremacy were some of the factors that strengthened their power as a political force. It was also in 1707 that the Dutch enthroned the <em><strong>Tesawalamai<\/strong><\/em>, the laws and customs\u00a0 of\u00a0 the Jaffna Tamils, endorsed by the 12 Vellahla Mudliyars, as the guide to their rule. This legalised and enhanced the power of the Vellahlas to impose\u00a0 their law on the slaves and\u00a0 the other low-castes. Of course, the Dutch too was keen on learning the laws and customs of the natives. That would also help them to\u00a0 pursue\u00a0 their policy of divide and rule among the competing castes more effectively. In 1697, Zwaardecroon had suggested the need for a a concise digest\u201d of those customs which might serve for\u00a0 the instruction of\u00a0 the members of the Court of\u00a0 Justice as well as for new rulers arriving here.\u201d (p.11, <em><strong>The Administration of Justice in Ceylon under the Dutch Government 1656 \u2013 1796<\/strong><\/em>, Prof. T. Nadaraja, Journal of he Ceylon Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, New Series, Vol XII, 1968.)<\/p>\n<p>The Dutch were the first to face the wrath\u00a0 of the Vellahlas. They found it necessary to study the pervasive and pernicious caste system for them to govern Vellahla-dominated Jaffnapatnam.\u00a0 They also felt the need to balance the caste rivalries if they were to maintain law and order. Governor Thomas Van Rhee drew up the first list of castes in Jaffna. He identified 40 caste groups. He\u00a0 listed the Vellahlas as the most numerous\u00a0 of all castes\u201d.\u00a0 (p.7 \u2013 Memoirs). They were also the most\u00a0 influential and rich. Zwaardecroon who had a rather cynical view of\u00a0 the Vellahlas wrote : It is a well-known fact that the more\u00a0 influential natives always try to oppress the\u00a0 poorer\u00a0 classes, and it will be impossible to prevent their doing this\u00a0 if they allowed\u00a0 to become stronger than they already are.\u201d (p.28 \u2013 Memoirs).<\/p>\n<p>The oppression, cruelty and the injustices of the Vellahlas were exasperating to the Dutch rulers. Anthony Mooyart, a successor to Zwaardecroon, wrote : It is extremely difficult, although quite necessary, to administer even justice in this (Jaffna) Commandment, so as to maintain the reputation held\u00a0 by the Netherlanders for\u00a0 wise and\u00a0 just government, and at the same time win the hearts of the natives and secure their loyalty. I found it\u00a0 most difficult\u00a0 to\u00a0 protect the\u00a0 poor\u00a0 when they had the right on their side\u00a0 from the\u00a0 peculation of their\u00a0 own (Vellahla) countrymen. Those who have the power and held in estimation by the authorities (i.e., the Vellahlas) are like birds of\u00a0 prey, who strip their victims to the bone of everything they have and leave them hardly their lives. When a poor man brings a charge against\u00a0 an influential Malabaar (i.e., there were no Tamils those days), or\u00a0 had been injured by him, the latter uses his\u00a0 influence\u00a0 in such a way that if steps be not taken to bring the offender to justice, the offence remain undetected, or if detected, the facts are so perverted that the\u00a0 poor man does not receive the justice\u00a0 which he is entitled to; while again, many others are accused who are\u00a0 perfectly innocent. Powerful or rich Malabaars, and even ordinary Lascoreen, often bring charges against innocent people toward\u00a0 whom they have a\u00a0 grudge, or when they fail to extort from them as much as they wish it.\u201d (p.6 \u2013 <em><strong>Dutch Memoirs<\/strong><\/em>, Mooyart.)<\/p>\n<p>The Vellahla riot led by Moddeley Tamby should be placed against\u00a0 this political background. The moment I stumbled into this incident whole new vistas opened up before my eyes. A Vellahla leading a riot to get back a job in the government service rang a bell. I saw Moddeley Tambi in a different light. I saw the the primary source of all the cries of grievances and discrimination that\u00a0 plagued the colonial and post-colonial periods\u00a0 written large in neon lights in the VellahaIa face of Moddeley Tambi. I saw the seeds of violence he sowed in his riot exploding with greater devastating force in the 20th and 21st centuries.\u00a0 I also saw the rise of Sir Kanthiah Vaithianathan as Permanent Secretary to the Prime Minister D. S. Senanayake. I saw the globe-trotting Raju Coomaraswamy, the father of Radhika Cooomarswamy, sitting pretty as the\u00a0 king of the Treasury, very much like S. Paskaralingam in Ranil Wickremesinghe Treasury today. I saw Dr. S. Chellapah, the Director of Health, Lt. Col. Anton Muttukumara. the first Sri Lankan Army Commander, Rajan Kadiragamar, the Navy Commander, M. Tiruchelvam, Neelan Tiruchelvam\u2019s father, the Solicitor-general, K. C. Nithiyananda, the head of the powerful Government Clerical Service Union etc., etc.,\u2014all marching\u00a0 behind\u00a0 Moddely Tamby,\u00a0 following\u00a0 his footsteps.\u00a0 In hindsight, I saw Moddeley Tamby as the father of the Vellahla Tamils who dominated the public\u00a0 service. I saw him as the first Vellahla activist setting the example for grabbing power with violence, if\u00a0 necessary.<\/p>\n<p>The Moddeley Tamby mentality of the Vellahlas has been to capture the second\u00a0 tier of power in the administration because that is the next best option available\u00a0 to those who can\u2019t capture legislative power at the peak political\u00a0 tier. And\u00a0 they guarded this\u00a0 privileged\u00a0 position in the administration with their lives. Moddeley Tambi\u00a0 rebelled against the Dutch because the Vellahla supremacy was threatened and the Vellahlas never tolerated any threat to their\u00a0 status. He began as a betel carrier to Sangarepulle from Cannengray, a native of evil repute.\u201d (p. 24 \u2013 <em><strong>Dutch Memoirs<\/strong><\/em>, Hendri\u00a0 Zwaardecroon, the Commandeur of Jaffna.). That, however, is irrelevant. What comes to fore is that he was first and foremost a Vellahla \u2013 the\u00a0 most\u00a0 numerous\u201d and powerful of the 40 castes enumerated by the Dutch. Moddeley Tamby raised the banner of ONLY Vellahlaism and not any cause of the Tamils. Nor did he raise an anti-colonial, pro-nationalist cry. His\u00a0 main objective was to retain the\u00a0 public\u00a0 service\u00a0 job for the Vellahlas. His resistance was to prevent it going to a rival caste, who was also a Tamil, by the way. Keeping government jobs in Vellahla hands is their way of power sharing with the rulers. Power sharing at any level\u00a0 is an\u00a0 obsession with the Vellahlas.\u00a0 They would\u00a0 not hesitate\u00a0 to walk over the dead bodies of\u00a0 their fellow-Tamils to get there.<\/p>\n<p>This is why the Dutch had to face a riot. Giving an important post like a Cannecapul to the Commander of Jaffnapatnam to a non-Vellahla was an affront to Vellahla status and supremacy.\u00a0 It\u00a0 is Moddeley Tamby\u2019s role as a Vellahla political activist, defending Vellahla supremacy, that makes him standout from the rest of his contemporaries. Historically too, he should have come into the limelight because he stands out as the first representative of political Vellahlaism which became a dominant political factor in the colonial and post-colonial\u00a0 history of Sri Lanka. He\u00a0 is the archetypal figure that represents the essence of Vellahla-centric politics that streamed down from the Dutch period to contemporary times. The main strands of casteist politics that dominated Jaffna had hardly changed since he set the pattern in his riot against the Dutch.<\/p>\n<p>In the Dutch records,\u00a0 Moddely Tamby emerges as the first Vellahla political man who gave the lead to casteist politics. In time Vellahla casteism spread like cancer\u00a0 eating into the body politic\u00a0 of Jaffna and from there to\u00a0 the rest of the nation.\u00a0 Vellahlaism was injected into every move and counter-move that came\u00a0 out\u00a0 of Jaffna. The irony is that the Vellahla\u00a0 riot led by Moddeley Tambi was so insignificant it\u00a0 never even reached the footnotes of mainstream\u00a0 history, either in the north or the south. It remained buried in the records of the Dutch. As far as I know this is the first time that it has been taken out from its obscurity and examined for what it is worth. At first I was startled by the fact that the obedient and obsequious\u201d Vellahla Tamils had revolted against the Dutch. And the more I looked into it the more I was fascinated by Moddeley Tamby\u2019s\u00a0 role. It struck a\u00a0 note in me.\u00a0 I realised that Moddeley Tamby represent more\u00a0 than a Vellahla man fighting for his\u00a0 job in the Dutch public service. It dawned on me that he was the first of the many Jaffna Tamils who would fight tooth and nail for jobs in the public service. Looking back with all the advantages of\u00a0 hindsight, I could not help note that he was the precursor of cataclysmic events to come.<\/p>\n<p>Moddeley Tamby was driven by the internal casteist dynamics that were to determine the course of events which ended eventually in Nandikadal. He was the first to demonstrate the craze for clerkship\u201d in public service \u2013 a phrase coined by the Tamil Bishop of the Church\u00a0 of South India in Jaffna, Sabapathy Kulendra, quoted in <em><strong>S. J. V. Chelvanayakam and the Crisis of Sri Lankan Tamil Nationalism, 1947 \u2013 1977, A Political Biography<\/strong><\/em>, A. J. Wilson,\u00a0 (p. 72). This craze for clerkship\u201d has been the bane of Jaffna\u00a0 politics\u00a0 When G. G. Ponnambalam went before the Soulbury Commission and delivered his nine-hour lecture his main complaint was about discrimination in public service jobs \u2013 the only growth industry under colonialism. After examining the evidence the Commissioners dismissed it as stuff and\u00a0 nonsense. In fact, they found the Jaffna Tamils, mainly the English-educated Vellahlas, were occupying a disproportionate share of jobs in the public service.<\/p>\n<p>Government service has been a second religion to the Vellahlas, next to Saivism. To the Jaffna Tamils acquiring jobs in the public service was like power-sharing in the administration\u00a0 of the day.\u00a0 Being in the commanding heights of the ruling administration gave them an advantage in\u00a0 policy-making and decision-making at the highest level. They were able to monitor and influence in devious ways politics to serve their interests. It was the next best thing to running a state of\u00a0 their own. I remember K. C. Nythiananda, the firebrand head of the Government Clerical Service Union, telling me: You (meaning Sinhalese) govern. We (meaning Tamils) rule!\u201d. Moddely Tambi was the first Vellahla Tamil who\u00a0 had the identical ambitions of Nythiananda: others may govern but the Vellahlas always wanted to rule. In short, Jaffna, as a discrete political force, cannot be understood without taking into account the internal casteist dynamics that caused Moddeley Tambi to riot against the Dutch for a job in government service. It is the vaulting\u00a0 ambitions of\u00a0 the Vellahla supremacists\u00a0 to rule that came out of the colonial\u00a0 period\u00a0 and dominated the post-colonial period as a destructive political force.<\/p>\n<p>Vellahlaism was a politically sophisticated\u00a0 force. They gravitated towards power and\u00a0 would\u00a0 go to great lengths to go to bed\u00a0 with anyone to share power under the cover of dirty, stained sheets.The casteist mentality of Moddeley Tambi, focused particularly on capturing seats in the government, was an obsession with the Vellahla Tamils. Prof. A. J. Wilson confirmed this when he wrote :\u00a0 On the whole. the Tamil <em>vellalas<\/em> have dominated government\u00a0 service and the professions, with the occasional member from the minority caste.\u201d ( p.140 \u2013 Ibid). To the Vellahla Tamils it was more than dowry-earning, permanent, pensionable job, with railway warrants for free travel. It was, most of all, a political power base where they had the ear of the rulers of the day. Public service became a leading power base of the English-educated, Saivitie, Jaffna, Vellahla Tamils. So when Chelvanayakam decided\u00a0 to make the biggest\u00a0 proclamation of\u00a0 his career, the\u00a0 decision\u00a0 to establish a separate state for Tamils, he did not make it in Jaffna, the so-called heartland of the Tamils. He made it at the Government Clerical Service Union, (GCSU) Headquarters in Maradana. On December 14, 1949 he and his lieutenants trooped into a room, upstairs\u00a0 and announced his ambition to be the Jinnah of Sri Lanka. He had calculated quite\u00a0 correctly that for him\u00a0 to win Jaffna he had to win the English-educated, Saivite, Vellahlas public servants. On this day Chelvanyakam manifested himself as a reincarnation of Moddeley Tamby blown up into monstrous proportions. Christian Chelvanayakam is the Tamil genie that came out of the Saivite-Vellahla bottle and took Jaffna\u00a0 for a ride all the way to Nandikadal.<\/p>\n<p>The craze for clerkship\u201d in the public service began with Moddeley Tamby.\u00a0 His caste-driven riot against the Dutch contains the quintessence of Jaffna politics which informed and determined the politics of Jaffna since then. He was, in short, trying to assert the divine right of the Vellahlas to rule. The unbroken continuity in the forces of Jaffna politics that determined\u00a0 its character throughout the colonial and post-colonial period, stemmed from the casteist factors raised and pursued by Moddeley Tamby ruthlessly. He is the\u00a0 primordial source and\u00a0 force of Vellahlaism, with a craze for clerkship\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>He represents\u00a0 the most\u00a0 dominant political strand that ran through the colonial and post-colonial history : vellahlaism. This has been the most\u00a0 neglected aspect in the multitudinous volumes written on Sri Lankan history. Moddeley Tamby deserves a special place in the history of Jaffna because he\u00a0 is the first pioneering political activist to the raise the Vellahla banner and fight for the Vellahlas. The rest who followed him were mere imitators who ran, carrying his violent Vellahla banner, all the way to Nandikadal. It is Moddeley Tamby\u2019s Vellahla spirit and essence that was infused into the laws and customs\u00a0 written down in Tesawalamai confirming the supremacy of the Vellahlas. In fact, the Dutch drafted and instituted the <em><strong>Tesawalamai <\/strong><\/em>because they felt the need understand the violent Vellahlaism unleashed by Moddeley Tamby. It is the revised version of Moddeley Tamby\u2019s casteist ideology, seeking supremacy and legitimacy in every realm, that subsequently led to the anointment of the Vellahlas as the divinely ordained elite over all other castes by Arumuka Navalar \u2013 the caste fanatic. It was to retain the supremacy of the Moddeley Tamby\u2019s casteism that Sir. Ponnambalam Ramanathan went all the way to London to pressure the Colonial Office to legalise it. It was Moddeley Tamby who reincarnated as Prof. C. Suntheralingam and\u00a0 stood flailing\u00a0 his walking stick to keep the low-castes out of the inner\u00a0 courts of Maviddipuram Temple. It was Moddeley Tamby who came\u00a0 out of the casteist bottle at the GCSU Hall in Maradana and\u00a0 spoke through Chelvanayakam whose ambition\u00a0 was to rule as the leader\u00a0 of the Vellahlas.<\/p>\n<p>None of these leaders ever stood genuinely for the\u00a0 oppressed Tamils who were kicked around as subhuman pariahs during the feudal and\u00a0 colonial centuries. They were all cut-outs of Moddeley Tamby imitating him, sometimes in\u00a0 refined ways and sometimes in crude violence. In the end, it was Moddeley Tamby\u2019s Vellahla violence\u00a0 that was honed and unleashed by Velupillai Prabhakaran \u2013 the Vellahla proxy who became the unwitting tool of the Vellahla politics wrapped crudely in the distorted\u00a0 history outlined in the Vadukoddai Resolution.<\/p>\n<p>It is the Moddley Tamby mentality that created Jaffna jingoism and its latest avatar, C. V. Wigneswaran.<\/p>\n<p>On the available historical evidence it is fair to conclude\u00a0 this essay by saying\u00a0 that all violent and\u00a0 non-violent Tamil leaders who had fought only for the Vellahlas and\u00a0 their divisive\u00a0 politics are nothing but perverted doppelgangers of Moddeley Tamby \u2013 the Father of Vellahlas.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>H. L. D. Mahindapala It is hindsight that throws insights to create and illuminate foresight. That is the beauty\u00a0 and value of history. It gives meaning. It also throws up warning signs for\u00a0 those with 20-20 vision to read the road map that points the way to destinations. Those who refuse to look back and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[18],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-53995","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-h-l-d-mahindapala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/53995","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=53995"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/53995\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=53995"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=53995"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=53995"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}