Kuda Lena, Rajagala. Pic by Tharindu Amunugama |
['The Morning Inspection' is the title of a column I wrote for the Daily News from 2009 to 2011, one article a day, Monday through Saturday. This is the 224th article in the new series that began in December 2022. Links to previous articles are given below]
‘One
day we should go to Rajagala,’ I told Tharindu Amunugama, insatiable
explorer and wonderful travel companion. ‘Of course,’ he said. We’ve
planned but it never happened. It is on our unwritten ‘must go’ list
which neither of us allow to gather dust.
Perhaps by way of a
nudge or for the relevance in terms of plans we’ve talked about,
Tharindu sent me a Facebook post. It was a picture of three people among
the Rajagala ruins along with the following caption: “රජගල” නොදැකපු
සංචාරකයෝ, සංචාරකයෝ නොවේ (tourists who haven’t seen Rajagala are not
tourists).
I feel that it was not meant to be condescending or to
ridicule people who travel and yet have not visited Rajagala although
it could certainly be read as such. It is essentially an invitation:
‘you must visit this place!’
I took it in that spirit. I
responded to Tharindu: ‘මමත් කවදා හෝ සංචාරකයෙක් වෙන්න බලාපොරොත්තු
වෙනවා!’ ‘When you return in November,’ he said. All in good spirit, as
it should be.
I pondered about the claim, though. On the one
hand, it’s like saying ‘you are somehow a lesser human being if you
didn’t do this or that,’ which of course is too silly to dwell on. What
is ‘Rajagala’ and where is ‘Rajagala’ are the questions that I thought
about.
It took me back nine years. April 13, 2013. I’ve written
about it in an article titled ‘The trust location of Kala Wewa,’
published in the now defunct ‘The Nation.’
The gist:
I
wanted to go to Kala Wewa and called a friend, Wasantha Wijewardena,
self-proclaimed ‘professional rastiyaadukaarayaa (loafer).’ He agreed to
accompany me. So we took off with a full tank of petrol. It was around
2 pm when we stopped for a cup of tea somewhere near Narammala. This
was when Wasantha made a brilliant observation: ‘There are many Kala
Wewas this side of Kala Wewa.’
Of course!
It is what we
want anything to be. Our Kala Wewa on that occasion was the Maha Wewa in
Madadombe, a village a few kilo meters from Gallewa, which is about
nine kilo meters along the Galgamuwa- Ehetuwewa road. It was not Kala
Wewa. The Kala Wewa serenity is something else. It was, however, serene
enough for us.
There’s something about the physical aspect that
is too unique to replicate. Maha Wewa, Madadombe, is not Kala Wewa,
Anuradhapura. There could be, theoretically, many Rajagalas outside the
Digamadulla District and the Gal Oya basin. If ‘monastic complex’ is
about deep and sustained reflection on eternal verities, then the world
is made of Rajagalas, one could argue.
And my mind wanders to and stops at the Paṁsudhovakasutta in the Anguttara Nikaya. It is the parable of the panner. I need not venture into the extrapolations:
malindadocs@gmail.com.
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