15 July 2020

The flights of the brothers Piyasiri and Jayasiri


Pic courtesy www.secretlanka.com

About six months ago, I drove along one of the most scenic roads in the country — Palapathwala to Ibbagamuwa through Yatawatte. It was a desire to avoid Katugastota on my way from Elkaduwa to Kurunegala that took me down that road. I wondered several times if I had taken a wrong turn. Even if I had, there were no regrets. It was that beautiful!

On Monday, July 13, 2020, I took the same route. This time I was driving from Oruthota to Ibbagamuwa and had offered to drop off a friend in Matale. He advised me on the shortest route to Ibbagamuwa and it sounded familiar. I asked him if it went through Yatawatte.

‘That’s my village and yes, it does!’

After dropping him off at his place in Aluwihara, another friend and I proceeded towards Ibbagamuwa. It turned out that it wasn’t the first time he was taking this route and told me of a good place to have a cup of tea.

And so, not too far along the road after passing the Yatawatte Police Station, just before a sharp bend, we stopped. The view was just as I remembered it. It was around the same time of day too. Back in December 2019 this is how I described what I saw and did:

‘The sun was chasing the far off mountains. Mountain-blue grappling with sky-blue. Clouds, white and grey, in intercourse with the last rays of the sun. Gaze swept from mountain top to mountain top and down to the valley below, catching innumerable shades of grey.’

This time my thoughts went back to the year 1993 and a conversation with a friend. That’s probably because I had spoken with him at length a few days previously, recalling times spent together as colleagues at the Agrarian Research and Training Institute.

I remembered a trip to Bandarawela in 1993. It was a ‘faculty retreat’ for the research and training staff of the institute. As the editor, I was tasked to function as rapporteur. We were all traveling in a bus. There was merriment. I noticed Piyasiri Pelenda gazing into the distance as we approached Beragala. Piyasiri has a good sense of humor. I feigned intoxication and addressed him as ‘Jayasiri.’

He didn’t laugh. He didn’t seem annoyed either. He said softly, ‘machang, mama piyasiri…jayasiri kiyanne mage malli (I am Piyasiri — Jayasiri is my younger brother).’ And then he told me about his brother.

A few years earlier, while Piyasiri was reading for a doctorate in Russia, his brother had been abducted by one of the pro-government vigilante groups that roamed around the country. He was never seen again.

Piyasiri wasn’t a JVP sympathizer. He was ideologically closer to what was known then as ‘The Old Left’ (the JVP is now too old to be a ‘young’ counterpart of ‘The Left’) but he understood why young people like his brother were drawn to that movement.  

It was mid-morning. Below us the land fell off into different shades of green before rising into green-grey blur conjured by mists thin and thick and eventually met an unblemished blue. The geography was very much like that which I would  encounter in Yatawatte almost three decades later.

Piyasiri said something about all of this which I can’t recall exactly. He was moved by the landscape and saw it as layered metaphors, this I remember.

'Un monavahari deyak dakinna athi machang…(they must have seen something)’ he said softly.  

There was silence.  ‘Saw something’ could be read in so many ways, but he was speaking of a kid brother who was ‘disappeared’ during the most violent and brutal period in post-Independence Sri Lanka (1988-89) referred to as ‘The Bheeshanaya’ or ‘The (period of) Terror,’ a movement made mostly of youth fighting a brutal regime with perhaps some notion of a better world.

We don’t know what exactly happened to Jayasiri. We know that landscapes such as that which roll like epic narratives visible from places like Beragala and Yatawatte have been splattered with blood.

Early this morning Piyasiri came to me in a dream. We were in a small hut. I corrected the mistake of having deliberately misnamed him.

‘You are Piyasiri!’ I said.

He looked at me. He sported the same expression that was on his face 27 years ago when I called him ‘Jayasiri.’ He didn’t say a word. He walked to the window that was just a few feet away and which, in my dream, opened to a landscape such as I've described above. He climbed on to the window sill. He flew into the distance. I hadn’t noticed that he had wings.

Maybe he always had them.

This article was first published in the DAILY NEWS [July 15, 2020]

Other articles in the series 'In Passing...':  [published in the 'Daily News']   
 
Eyes that watch the world and cannot be forgotten 
 Let's start with the credits, shall we? 
The 'We' that 'I' forgot 
'Duwapang Askey,' screamed a legend, almost 40 years ago
Dances with daughters
Reflections on shameless writing
Is the old house still standing?
 Magic doesn't make its way into the classifieds
Small is beautiful and is a consolation  
Distance is a product of the will
Akalanka Athukorala, at 13+ already a hurricane hunter
Did the mountain move, and if so why?
Ever been out of Colombo?
Anya Raux educated me about Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA)
Wicky's Story You can always go to GOAT Mountain
Let's learn the art of embracing damage
Kandy Lake is lined with poetry
There's never a 'right moment' for love
A love note to an unknown address in Los Angeles
A dusk song for Rasika Jayakody
How about creating some history?
How far away are the faraway places?
There ARE good people!
Re-placing people in the story of schooldays   
When we stop, we can begin to learn
Routine and pattern can checkmate poetry
Janani Amanda Umandi threw a b'day party for her father 
Sriyani and her serendipity shop
Forget constellations and the names of oceans
Where's your 'One, Galle Face'?
Maps as wrapping paper, roads as ribbons
Yasaratne, the gentle giant of Divulgane  
Katharagama and Athara Maga
Victories are made by assists
Lost and found between weaver and weave
The Dhammapada and word-intricacies
S.A. Dissanayake taught children to walk in the clouds
White is a color we forget too often  
The most beautiful road is yet to meet a cartographer

malindasenevi@gmail.com

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