Each coach left a mark and speaking
strictly for myself, Arjuna Parakrama, one of the strongest players in the
country in the seventies, was the greatest influence when it came to chess,
both in playing and coaching. It was not just about chess with him. It was how
to approach a particular game and most importantly about what was important,
over the board and outside it, particularly the latter. Chess was a small part
of a larger universe and what he taught about chess and in those long hours of
having to suffer his sarcasm and caustic remarks was eminently applicable to
life in general.
We teach the way our favourite
teachers taught or like to think we do. I know I tried. So did my successors,
but no one I can think of matched the standards set up Arjuna as Muditha
Hettigama, the most successful coach of this school and himself a National
Champion.
Muditha Hettigama |
I recently heard that there are
chess ‘coaches’ who earn around Rs.300, 000 a month. I know for a fact that
most of them are unqualified to coach. Forget values and attitudes, their
knowledge of the game is at best basic and are not equipped to push talent even
half way towards potential. When I heard this, I thought of both Arjuna and
Muditha, especially the latter because Arjuna coached in different times where
values were different, economic and social pressures different and therefore
the idea of ‘remuneration’ was marginal.
Muditha has coached his old school
for more than a decade now. Given his success rate (his teams have won more
national championships than any other boys’ school in the country), if he were
to translate coaching time into opportunity cost, he would earn at least as
much as a full time coach. I did a small calculation, assuming he’s been
coaching since 1998. That’s 13x12x300, 000, making Rs. 46.8 million. I am
trying to think of a single coach who has said ‘no’ to that kind of money. The
only person I can think of is Sarath Eriyagama, a man who has an equally or
even more celebratory record as coach (Girls High School, Kandy) and who was
instrumental in popularizing the game both in Kandy and in other districts of
the country.
There are people like that. Pulasthi
Ediriweera (I just heard that this colleague of mine actually is titled,
‘Kalapathi’; he is modest and it shows) is one of them. Pulasthi has designed
more than 150 stamps and that’s a fact that few would know; stamps don’t carry
name and signature of artist. Only philatelists would know. More importantly,
Pulasthi is the present President of the Society of Arts and has been so since
2008. He’s also been the Principal of the School of Art run by the Society of
Arts for more than five years.
Pulasthi Ediweera |
The School of Art, founded way back in 1887, has
been running this programme for many years now. Pulasthi, along with seven
other teachers, give all their Saturdays to this school, voluntarily. It is a
programme for those left behind and those who for whatever reason don’t have
access to the mainstream art schools. There are toddlers and there are retired
persons who have the time and the inclination to pick up and explore something they
loved but never had the opportunity to indulge in. Among the students are those
taking ‘Art’ as an O/L or A/L subject, those who are in different streams but
are interested in entering higher educational institutions offering visual arts
degrees, and undergraduates, teachers and even principals who want to further
develop their skills.
The Society organizes exhibitions
every month to showcase the best works of the students. They organize workshops
as well as educational trips. They spend the occasional Sunday visiting schools
where there are no art teachers or where the art teachers are interested in
exposing their charges to informed and more competent instruction.
Pulasthi has been doing this for six
years. That’s over 300 days and close to 3,000 hours. I don’t know how much
that would be in terms of rupees. He doesn’t count, of this I am certain. I
know that there are times when he helps out a colleague who is crunched for
time, copying the style and completing the relevant illustration, sacrificing
his own work and time. All for free. Few return the favour. He would say, I am
sure, ‘me mage vidiha, e eyaalage vidiha’ (this is my way, that’s theirs). I
don’t know anything about art, but I do know this: we are not thankful enough
to the Arjunas, Mudithas and Pulasthis of this country.
msenevira@gmail.com
2 comments:
Great work Malinda. I really enjoyed your essay. Arjuna and Muditha are two exceptional people( I am sorry that I do not know pulasthi) to whom Royal College is grateful. I have not seen Muditha for some time, and do hope that he is still our chess coach !
He still is!
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