An account of what
happened during the school holiday period in August 2011, this column was
written and published in September that year. Unfortunately, the theatre group
that was formed remain inactive. Children are forced to go for tuition classes
and are driven towards the examination culture, where most parents in this
village think of the exam
as the ultimate goal in education. ‘Wena boru wada walta welawak naha’, is how
most of them think and place such learning in their scheme of things. In the
city, like it was for learning English in the post 1956 era, most families,
send their children for music lessons, elocution classes, sports activities, dance
and theatre workshops. Yet in the villages, it is unfortunately a home- school-
tuition class-home – school routine. There are only a few Ray Forbes’ from whom
these kids can get draw inspiration.
With the majority
of our children being in our villages and the future of our nation resting on
how they shape up, this perhaps is an aspect of shaping our future, policy
makers ought to look at.
In the village of Kiula
in the Deep South , 21 kids and one adult
formed a new theatre group called ‘Kiula Warna Ranga Players’ this week. That
was the culmination of a six weeks free theatre workshop they had during the
school holidays. Turning part of the Kiula
Junior School
ground into their stage or karaliya their performance was much better
than any of us expected, proving how skills and talent combined with rigorous
practice and rehearsal can do wonders for children in learning. Manjula
Ranasinghe of Janakaraliya of whom I wrote about in an earlier column,
gave his know-how and skills to make the workshop an educational experience for
the kids. They went through physical exercises, breathing exercises, meditation
sessions, drama exercises and games, voice training, team building efforts and
the like during the workshop sessions.
Dealing with adversity
The play they chose to perform ‘Andara Mal’
was a story of a dance teacher in a remote village school who effectively
mobilizes the children and creatively uses the broken guru putuwa (teacher’s
chair) and tit-bits like bottles, pieces of metal, tin plates, wooden sticks
etc. to make harmonized music and to teach dance-steps to it. The school is
given two drums (daula and tammattama) with a request from educational
authorities to prepare a dance item to welcome a minister who is to come for a
function in the village. Immediately after the completion of that event the
drums are taken away from them and the children are left in sadness and dismay.
The children respond this time with a message even for the teachers on how to cope
with the situation and demonstrate that adversity can be dealt with using what
little one has, without being ineffective in hope for things to be perfect.
For me personally the workshop, the
interaction we had and the learning we did were of immense value and it was a
wonderful experience. It brought back memories of my own childhood and the many
encounters I had from individuals and groups that influenced our lives at the
time.
Guru and friend
One such was Mr. Ray Forbes who lived about
a quarter of a mile away from by home at Waidya Road , Dehiwela. Ray was a
government servant and a foreign services (FS) officer who later worked at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs for a long period of time. In the early sixties, I got
to know this gentleman when he once spoke with me on the road, when I was on my
way to school. He was dressed in immaculate white, soft-spoken, carried a long
umbrella, a leather bag and each weekday morning walked from his home in front
of what was then the ‘People’s Park, Dehiwela’ through Park Street onto Waidya
Road and then on to the bus stop at the Dehiwela junction.
Simple man
On that first encounter he asked me which
school I went to and in return told me that he was also a past student of St.
Peter’s College. I later learnt that he was an accomplished pianist and the
then famous singer Bill Forbs of the humorous Oh! To be in England and
the more serious Believe in me fame, was Ray’s first cousin.
He was a simple man without any airs and we
struck accord immediately. I, a student in my senior (OL) form and Ray, a
cub-diplomat who went on to become Deputy High Commissioner for Sri Lanka in
India and Chief of Protocol at the Foreign Affairs Ministry as we both moved on
in later years.
English on the move
I remember vividly how I asked him if I
could walk with him to the bus stop. Each
week day thereafter I would wait for him at the T-junction where Park Street met Waidya Road . Some
mornings when I was late, I found him standing out there for me to arrive. Such
humility and desire to help out a student, for I had told him I wanted speak
with him in English. I explained that I was weak in my English, coming from a
household where no English was spoken. I picked up most of the mumble I had
then of the spoken language, on the Peoples
Park ’s cricket field playing
with Burgher boys in the neighborhood. He nodded approval and we were student and
teacher in a daily free English class on the move.
Besides our spoken English lessons, I
learnt of the eventful life in the University from him. He had read English there
and shared with me his excitement of writers, dramatists and poets. Our encounters
continued even when I was in the Advanced Level class and coupled with the
influence of some great teachers we had and my father, Ray was the other
critical external factor that made my interest in entering university to read
English in my G.A.Q year.
Decades later recently, on inquiry as to
where this gentleman is, I was told that he had retired from the FS and was
living in Anuradhpura teaching English at the Rajarata University. I made a
visit to his simple abode in the outskirts of the Atamasthana area to
see Ray. In his usual simple style he welcomed us with much warmth and
affection. His quarters had something striking and that was the piano that
stood right next to his bed in a modest living environment. With a cup of tea,
we spoke of my old school days, of my daughters whom he later met, of tourism,
English writing and of Buddhism on which he had profound knowledge.
It was several months ago and I owe him another
visit, to take some books he wanted me to bring him. In the meantime, I
remember him for he was inspiration, motivation and role-model all in one.
Pix Credit: Google Image, Hanthana.org
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