Wednesday, April 5, 2017

BOOK REVIEW TITLE: JOURNALS OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF SRI LANKA NEW SERIES VOLUME 61 PART 1 AND 2 2016 EDITOR :VIDYAJOTI E. WALTER MARASINGHE PUBLISHER :BIANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF SRI LANKA Reviewed by Hemantha Situge


BOOK REVIEW

TITLE            :      JOURNALS OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF SRI LANKA
                             NEW SERIES VOLUME 61 PART 1 AND 2 2016

EDITOR        :      VIDYAJOTI E. WALTER MARASINGHE

PUBLISHER :      BIANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY OF SRI LANKA

Reviewed by Hemantha Situge
e-mail : hsituge@gmail.com
blog : Hemantha Situge@blogspot.com

The Journals of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka (JRAS) New Series, Volume 61 Part 1 and 2 for 2016 edited by Vidyajoti E. Walter Marasinghe were distributed among the members of the RAS at the Annual General Meeting of the 172nd year held on Saturday 25th March at the auditorium of the Mahaweli Centre.

JRAS, Volume 61 Part 1 for the year of 2016 contains three articles, a book review and ‘a tribute’. They are : Mahinda Somathilake on ‘Ajanta Murals and their Chronology : A Critical Analysis’ from pages 1 to 32, Chandana Jayawardene on ‘Counting and Computation Abilities in Early Sri Lanka : A Review based on Buddhist Literature’ from page 33 to 68 and Sarath Chandrajeewa on ‘Veheragala Avalokitēsvara Bodhisatva : An Inquiry into Its Style and Period (The Mahayana Buddhist Bronze Statue in Colombo Museum)’ from pages 69 to 106, the review by Anad Singh on the book titled : ‘Buddhism at Sãranãth’ is found from pages 107 to 110 and the tribute of Hema Goonetileke on Dr. Christopher Reynolds is from pages 111 to 113 of the journal.

This reviewer wishes to make the following comments on the first article. At page 3 Somathileke states that : “Thenceforth, after centuries of neglect, the caves of Ajanta were discovered in the first part of 19th century AD, the earliest recorded visitor being some officers of the Madras Army who saw the paintings in 1819”. However Benjamin Rowland in his ‘The Ajanta Caves – Early Buddhist Paintings from India UNESCO 1963’ at P5 has stated that : “In the year 1817 the manoeuvres of a company of British Soldiers resulted in the discovery of the greatest cycle of Indian wall-paintings in the rock-cut cave temples of the Ajanta gorge …………”

The second comment, which this reviewer wishes to place on record is that the reference found in D. B. Dhanapala’s ‘Buddhist paintings from shrines and temples in Ceylon’ Collins London 1964 on the significance of Ajanta cave Buddhist paintings for Sri Lanka. Though the learned writer attaches a foot note at page 16 of the journal but it is in a different context from the very same book cited by the reviewer i.e. cave 17 paintings on the advent of King Vijaya. Three scenes found in the cave 17 would have been a merit worthy point of comment for the learned writer at least in a foot note; aptly it is the only place of connection to the Sinhala Culture. The first scene from the Simhala Avadana which depicts : “The army on the march, led by Simhala who is riding a white elephant.” The second scene also from Simhala Avadana which depicts : “Under a tent, Simhala and one of the ogresses, momentarily transformed into a beautiful woman, are conversing while, to the left, other ogresses are engaged in their gruesome practices”. The third scene is also from Simhala Avadana which depicts : “The sacred horse and its groom.” Cave 17 is somewhat is dealt with by Sarath Chandrajeewa at P79-80 in the same issue in his article. The painting on the advent of King Vijaya has had adorned the ‘Sinhala Bauddhaya’ commemorative issue in 1915.



The third comment which this reviewer wishes to make on this article is that Vini Vitharana in his ‘Sri Lanka – the Geographical Vision’ Department of Educational Publications Sri Lanka 1996. (The thesis accepted by the University of Ceylon Peradeniya for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy - 1966) at page 195 he states that : “Mookerji (1957, 29-30) (History of Indian Shipping) believes that the Jãtakas such as the Mahãjanaka, Valãhassa and Sańkha and the story of Vijaya stand evidence to the prevalence of large ship in Sri Lankan waters during the ancient times. He also presents several bits of sculptural, artistic and numismatic evidence from Sãnchi, Kanhēri, Āndhra, Ajantã and Borobudur ranging from 2nd century BC to the 11th century AD in support of a claim for the prevalence of extensive shipping in the Indian Ocean (ibid 35, 41-42, 45-50)’. This reviewer neither sees any iota of material cited by the learned writer on numismatic evidence nor on Mukerji cited to by Vitharana supra.

The article carries a subtitle ‘Paintings and their Chronology’. Benjamin Rowland cited above has stated that (at page 145) “It is said that the great Buddhist sage Asanga lived for a time at Ajanta. He is remembered as the exponent of the Yogachara docrine, in which all reality is a dream, and for his conjuring of the Hindu gods into the Buddhist pantheon……. A reflection of Asanga’s teachings may perhaps be seen in the composition of the Great Bodhisattva in the presence of his sakti the Buddhist counter part of the female energies of the Hindu gods.” This reviewer does not find that Mahinda Somathileke has endeavoured to go into the times of the great Buddhist sage Asanga who has supposed to have lived for a time at Ajanta.

The article contains one map and nine photographs where no photo accreditations are found therein. Did the JRAS violate the copyrights of any previous photographer or an author? The editor of JRAS has over looked the fact that Somathileke has not used diacritical marks as per ‘Guide lines to the Contributors’.

The second article is of Chandana Jayawardene’s is a review based on Buddhist Literature - the article does not say whether it is published or unpublished literature. The article does not cite the following : B. C. Law’s ‘History Pali Literature of Ceylon Vol. I and II London 1933. Louis de Zoysa’s ‘Catalogue of Pali, Sinhalese, and Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Ceylon Government Oriental Library Colombo’ 1876 and the ‘Catalogue of Pali, Sinhalese and Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Temple Libraries of Ceylon’. Colombo 1885. D. M. de Z. Wickramasinghe’s ‘Catalogue of Sinhalese Mss in the British Museum’ London 1900 and the ‘Catalogue of the Sinhalese Printed Books in the Library of the British Museum’ 1901, A. B. Keith’s ‘History of Sanskrit Literature’ Oxford 1928, W. A. de Silva’s ‘Catalogue of Palm Leaf Manuscripts’ (Memoirs of the Colombo Museum) Vol I 1938, James de Alwis’s ‘A Descriptive Catalogue of Sanskrit, Pali and Sinhalese Literary Works of Ceylon’, Vol I (1870) 2 and 3, William Skeen Government Printer Colombo and Somapala Jayawardhana’s Hand book of Pali Literature Colombo 1994.

Another noteworthy omission is that Wilhelm Geiger’s ‘Culture of Ceylon in Medieval Times’ edited by Heinz Bechert Wiesbaden : Otto Harrassowitz 1960 which is not cited to in his article.

The third article is of Sarath Chandrajeewa’s. This reviewer fervently believes that it is Veheragala where the title is found as Veragala (see : first paragraph it is referred to as Veheragala) How did this error seep in throughout the article?


Nandasena Mudiyanse in his ‘Three unpublished Mahãyãna Bronzes from Ceylon in the British Museum’ JRASCB Vol XIV, 1970 pages 46 to 49 has described from the Hugh Nevill collection which is assigned the British Museum Registration Numbers 1898-7-1-135 (figure 1) and 1898-7-1-136 (figure 2) where he has stated that : “The deity sits in Maharajalila, the left hand sitting resting on the asana while the right holds a lotus flower in bloom. The left leg hangs down, but the right is bent and is placed on the seat”.                                                                                   (emphasis added)
At page 04 of the journal this reviewer finds a photo of the Avalokithēsvara Bodhisattva. But curiously at P31 of the journal in Somathileke’s article cave 1 part of a photo of Ajanta Cave paintings : Padmapani Bodhisattva typically resembles Avalokitēśvara Bodhisattva of Veheragala in Sarath Chandrajeewa’s article. Sarath Chandrajeewa in his article totally ignores this painting or Nandasena Mudiyanse’s account cited by this reviewer.

This reviewer finds a photograph which appears in the Wikipedia free encyclopeadia on Avalokitēśvara Bodhisatva ‘a bronze statue of Avalokitēśvara from Sri Lanka CA 750 CE from Burmingham Museum of Art’ is also not adverted to by Sarath Chandrajeewa in his article.

This reviewer is of the fervent opinion that cave 1 of Ajanta mural painting Padmapãni Bodhisattva furnishes the right hand clue of posture of the carrying a flower in statue of Veheragala. Any observer would find that these two have strikingly similar features. Curiously Sarath Chandrajeewa aptly agrees with the reviewer though he has not cited cave 1 painting of the Ajanta murals.

John Clifford Holt in his book titled : ‘Buddha in the Crown Avalokitēśvara in the Buddhist Tradition of Sri Lanka’ Oxford University press 1991 states that the first to fourth statues from Tiriyaya cited in his work from Ulrich Von Shroeders’ book, the figure 12 (Holt’s) the bronze statuette from Boston Museum belongs to Ananda Coomaraswamy’s collection, figure 16 of Holt from Natha devale from Kandy all there statues are in lion’s roar posture – thus lokeshwara features.” Nandasena Mudiyanse’s ‘Mahãyãna Monuments of Ceylon,’ M. D. Gunasena Colombo 1967 is not referred to by the learned author. Pl to Pl 14 contains no accreditations to the photographs that appears therein. Did the JRAS violate the copyrights of a previous photographer or an author?


The book review by Srikant Ganvir at page 110 has published his personal e-mail hitherto which no JRAS have published same for a contributor. It should be borne in mind that the inner back cover instructions ‘Guide to Contributors’ (item no. iii) is only for communication purpose and not for publication purpose. The title of the book sought to be reviewed has been carried as Sing Anand 2014, ‘Buddhism at Saranath’. The final article remains a tribute where it is found as “Tribute Hema Goonetileke” in the contents.Whither the title Dr. Christopher Reynold? Did the past journals of the RAS SL publish this column as an obituary or as a ‘tribute’ or as an appreciation? Secondly could a person who writes on another academic could he or she make personal recollections or remarks on the very same person? Did the JRAS contain this tradition?

The Part 2 of Volume 61 New Series of the JRAS the contents reads as follows : Shanthi Jayawardene’s ‘Uri Lanka’s Tãrã Devi,’ from pages 1 to 20, S. Sarath Mathilal de Silva’s ‘The Concept of Equality : its Scope, Developments and International Legal Regime’ from pages 31 to 54, Ramla Wahab-Salman’s ‘A History of the ‘Ceylon Moor’ Press (1882 - 1889) from pages 55 to 70, Susantha Goonetileke’s ‘Happiness and the Psychological Contents of Anuradhapura Society’ from pages 71 to 88 and Uda Hettige’s Tribute on Prof. Senaka Bandaranayake from pages 89 to 90. It is evident that JRAS part 2 is a slimmer and contains less pages than the part 1 because it has only ninety pages. JRAS Part 1 is only replete with hundred and twelve pages.

Once this reviewer perused the first article in part 2 volume 61 only he could realize that ‘Uri Lanka’ is an error for ‘Sri Lanka’ – it is a ‘printer’s devil’ !

This article on ‘Tara devi’ is on a museum object found in the British Museum. The article neither contains the museum object inventory reference number of figure 1 nor of figure 2 solid cast gilt bronze 0.17 meters Tara Devi. The writer Shanti Jayawardene has even not attempted to trace at least the museum object number of figure 3 Tara Devi seated found in the National Museum Colombo nor figure 11 Avalokitēsvara Tiriyãya cited in page 9 JRAS. This reviewer finds it as a sine qua non to identify the museum object by the museum inventory number as the museum inventory contains information that would have furnished the reader of the RAS of the day it reached the museum and how it reached the museum the background of the object of study to the academic or the member of RAS. The article on ‘Sri Lanka’s Tãrã Devi contains figure 1 to figure 27. This reviewer did not find any of these figures are mentioned or referred in the article in parenthesis. The reviewer identifies this as a lapse in the JRAS.

Another salient omission by Shanthi Jayawardene is that he has not referred to U .Von Schroeder’s ‘The Golden Age of Sculpture in Sri Lanka’ Visual Dharma Publication, Hong Kong 1990. vide : at 90 -1 Samadhi Goddess (no 30) is  Jayawardene’s figure 3 where National Museum object no. 40.474.144 registered in 1940

w.w.w.britishmuseum.org/research/collection-online-object_details on Acquisition notes ; original papers (June 1830) – To Mr. Henry Ellis (Principal Librarian) from Sir Robert Brownrigg reports that the image ‘was found in the NE part of Ceylon between Trincomalee and Batticalou’. The height 143 cm (not including plinth), width 44 cm, depth 29.5 cm, date 08th Century (circa) culture period Anuradhapura. The museum identification no. 1830,0612.4 which is displayed in the room number 33 of the British Museum.

But P. E. P. Deraniyagala in his article cited in f.n. 2 by Shanthi Jayawardene (at P 23 JRAS, Volume 61 Part 2) at P 268 has stated that : as “………. high dug up near Trincomalee ……….” Therefore what Jayawardene says cannot be accepted i.e. “Her find spot is not known ………..”




The description provided by British Museum online is as follows :

“Goddess. A standing figure of a female deity (Tãrã) solid cast in bronze and gilded. The figure has a high tubular coiffure (jatamukuta) held in place by a medallion flanked by makara-s (water creatures) The medallion was probably set with stones as were the lower body dressed in tight – fitting cloth knotted at the hips. The upper body is uncovered. The proper right hand is in varadamudrã (gesture of giving) left hand in katakahastamudrã (the hand pose wherein the tips of the fingers are applied to the thumb so as to form a ring, as if to hold a flower). The two middle fingers of the right hand are missing as are toes from both feet.”

Therefore this reviewer finds that the description provided by Shanti Jayawardene is inadequate when he compares it with the British Museum on line description.

On a careful perusal the reviewer could observe that Shanthi Jayawardene in his article on ‘Sri Lanka’s Tara’ has cited the tenth century ‘Mihintale inscription of Mahinda IV which records the existence of a house for the goddess mininã – a Sinhala name for Tãrã Devi (vide : at P7 supra) and ‘A tenth century pillar inscription of Kassapa V who followed the Tantric Trikãya doctrine.’ (vide : at P10 ibid) But he has not provided the reader the Epigraphia Zeylanica or the Inscription of Ceylon, or University of Ceylon or JRAS reference at least in a foot note which would  have provided the reference to the description of the epigraphy record.

The next comment which the reviewer wishes to make is that a new  unaccepted way of writing has emerged by the figures provided therein. That is by mentioning the once who holds the copyright i.e. © British Museum, © National Museum, © Ulrich Von Schroeder, © CCF and © Senake Bandaranayake. This reviewer condemns this mode of writing as it is a sheer violation of the copyright law of the country.

The next article is written by S. Sarath Mathilal de Silva on the ‘The Concept of Equality : Its Scope, Developments and International Legal Regime’ The writer is identified at the beginning of the article itself as an Attorney-at-Law in which hitherto is not found at the beginning of an article in the JRAS.

The third article is by Ramla Wahab-Salman on ‘A History of the ‘Ceylon Moor’ press (1882-1889) which refers to Orabi Pasha – page 65-6 in the JRAS Part 2. This reviewer finds that a book published by Frewin and Co. Colombo in 1983 titled : ‘Orabi Pasha – The Egyptian Exiles in Ceylon’ written by A. C. Dep. is not referred to by the writer Wahab – Salman. Arnold Wright’s ‘Twentieth Century Impressions of Ceylon’ 1903 also contains some material on Orabi Pasha. Wahab - Salman has turned a blind eye to the said material. This reviewer’s next comment is that she even has not referred to Dr. Lorna Dewaraja’s ‘History of Muslims in Sri Lanka’ authoritative book published for Muslim of Sri Lanka 1994.

At P56 in her article Wahab-Salman provides a definition to the word “Moor” by citing Quadri Ismail former news editor of the Sunday Times newspaper of Sri Lanka. This reviewer does not find that she has used the Glossary by S. A. W. Mattau published by the National Archives as volume III 1985-6.Also see P581-3 Hobson-jobson by Yule and Burnell 1903.

Muslim Nesan (Muslim Friend) referred to in the said article emerged ere (vide : at page 61 JRAS) the National Archives was established in 1885. Ramla Wahab – Salman does not indicate whether Muslim Nesan was subsequently registered at the National Archives of Ceylon.

Susantha Goonetileke’s articles titled : ‘Happiness and the Psychological Contents of Anuradhapura Society’ down below at page 71 contains RAS address, phone number, email and even his personal mobile number which is against the JRAS tradition. The tribute on Professor Senaka Bandaranayake by Uda Hettige is another personal tribute which is not found in the JRAS tradition.

The reviewer could lay his hands only on a very few reviews on the JRAS. They are viz. No. 3856 of volume 152 (1943) of Nature that world renowned magazine on nature, No. 09 volume 43 of Museum Journal and M. N. Pearson’s review on JRAS, NS, volume 39 special number Colombo 1995 published in JRAS volume XL, NS, 1996 P182-3

The JRAS in recent times does not include the proceedings of the General Meetings, lectures and Council Meeting records. The reviewer asserts that after volume 59 was published in 2011 for the past six years no JRAS has published these records. Isn’t all past Councils of the RAS since 2011 are responsible for this serious lapse. O’temporaes O’mores What times What practices!! This reviewer also sees that the past journals published colour photographs for the articles contributed (e.g. vide: volumes 40, 46 and 49 special number) Quo Vadis the JRAS? Has JRAS declined in the standards?


The JRAS is highly acclaimed as a peer reviewed journal. This review on JRAS Volume 61 part 1 and 2 for 2016 is written with a fervent intention to ascertain despite these serious lapses, errors and inelegancies whether the Editor Vidyajoti E. Walter Marasinghe together with the publications committee 2015/2016 led by the Chairman Dr. Malini Dias, Dr. Hema Goonetileke (Ex-officio President RASSL) Dr. Subhangi Herath, Mr. Wijeratne Bohingamuwa, Mr. H. Mahinda Goonasekara and Ms. S. L. Ranasinghe have acted within the parametres of the law and or within the objectives of RAS. This reviewer is of the fervent opinion that there is a paramount duty cast on the members RAS to continue hundred and seventy year old legacy for posterity. Thus otherwise the Latin maxim would come into play in the future that : “Ex diuturnitate temporis omnia praesumuntur rit et solennitur esse acta – From lapse of time, all things are presume to have been done rightly and regularly.  

No comments:

Post a Comment