25 April, 2024

Blog

Lakshman Kadirgamar – The Father I Remember

By Ajita Kadirgamar

Ajita Kadirgamar

Typically on a parent’s birth or death anniversary family members make a trip to the graveyard, place flowers, say a silent prayer or shed a tear. April 12, 2013 marks the 81st birth anniversary of my father Lakshman Kadirgamar, and for the first time since his assassination eight years ago I am here for his birth anniversary, on Sri Lankan soil where the dastardly deed took place.

However I have nowhere to go to remember him, pay respects or even reminisce. My father’s parents, four brothers and sister, all long departed, never received the remains of their beloved youngest son and sibling into the family grave. My father has no symbolic earth-bound resting place, no urn containing ashes, no headstone, nowhere to lay flowers.  Upon his death eight years ago, his ashes were unceremoniously stolen from us, his children and rightful family, despite pleas for at least a fair share. Knowing my father as we his family did,  he would have wanted at least some part of his remains to be returned to their rightful place within the family plot, for he was fiercely proud of his ancestry and of the family name.

For me the past ten years living in the US, during which time he was assassinated, meant there were no daily reminders of my father’s greatness or his standing in Sri Lankan society. But now that I am back in the motherland there is no escape. His name comes up in every socio-political conversation whether public or private, his statue stands tall in the heart of the city, total strangers from all walks of life, upon learning of my connection to him, praise his life and mourn his premature loss. His memory will live on no doubt as a great son of Sri Lanka, forever etched in history.

Kadirgamar with Ajita

What do I remember of my father? I called him dada and he called me ‘sweetheart’ or Ajj all his life.  Growing up, on the very, very rare instances he admonished me, he would call me by my full name. And then I knew it was serious business.

He traveled extensively his whole life. When I was a young girl he would bring me Barbie dolls, lacy stockings and socks, baked beans, chocolate, pencils, erasers and other luxuries that were not available in Sri Lanka in the austere 60’s and 70’s of my youth. I was the envy of all my classmates when I brought my stationery treasures to school or wore my stockings and socks to birthday parties.

I do remember when I was very young, sometimes on a Sunday morning as he lazed in bed with the newspapers, I would breeze in, jump on the bed and coerce him to lie flat on his stomach so that I could  walk up and down on his spine like a tightrope walker or pretend I was a cowgirl riding a horse. Ever patient, he would humour me.

My father was of course the consummate lawyer, always holed up in his chambers located at the front of the house, or appearing in various courts around the country, or travelling around the world. So we did not see much of him. But I would frequently skip in and out of his chambers, past the clerk, other lawyers and clients. He would always acknowledge my presence even if he was in the midst of something important. I was a familiar sight to all of the client and lawyer colleague ‘uncles’ too, usually riding my bike up and down the driveway or the lane, sitting in a tree or on a wall or engaged in some other tomboyish activity.

For the first decade of my life, he had to be summoned, even coerced from his law chambers to pose with my brother and I for annual birthday photos during our parties. This was something he hated apparently, since he can be seen frowning in most photos, his mind no doubt on the case he was analysing or the notes he was taking at the time.  When he was not dictating letters, he always wrote his copious notes by hand. In fact I don’t recall him ever using a typewriter and certainly not a computer. I doubt that even in the last years of his life he ever transitioned to computer and cell phone technology. Yes, he was old school in many ways.

He is of course best remembered for his fine speeches, some prepared, some off the cuff, for he was a master of the English language. When I was in my teens and in the throes of writing essays and sitting exams, he presented me with his Oxford English Dictionary which he had used at Law College and at Balliol College. Dedicating it to me he wrote, “When in doubt, look it up”. I too inherited his love, respect and awe of the written word and even though I am more likely to look up a dictionary or Thesaurus online these days, his dictionary will be passed on to my son who also demonstrates remarkable writing skills.

Kadirgamar with grandson Keira

Growing up in Ceylon, I was always aware of how sociable and well loved my father was. He had a grand assortment of very close and dear friends. They were Hindu, Buddhist, Muslim, Burgher – such an eclectic mix, such wonderful personalities with names like Ananda, Sandy, Vichu, Fritz, Gordon, Ralph, Singha, Terry, Malli, Douglas. He loved their company, and craved stimulating conversation. He relished spending one-on-one time with them on the verandah or in the garden at Anderson Road and later at Thunmulla Junction, talking about the law, politics, world affairs, and the good old days, all the time sipping their drinks and smoking their cigarettes. During the many years he spent in Switzerland at the UN, I think he felt socially isolated and he missed the camaraderie and old boy’s network that makes Sri Lanka so special. On his trips to Colombo therefore, he would meet up with as many friends and colleagues as possible, getting his full dose of social life  and intellectual revitalisation before returning to the routine and mundane lifestyle of the western world.

He did love the water. Childhood family holidays in Trinco, Passekudah, Kalkudah and Bentota would find him leisurely swimming laps in the hotel swimming pool or bobbing around carefree in the ocean even after the sun had set. How ruthless that he was killed as he stepped out of his own private swimming pool, after doing what he loved, the only activity that allowed him a modicum of freedom and relaxation.

As a lifelong sports enthusiast and prize winning Trinity College and Colombo University athlete (cricket, rugby, athletics) I know it pained him not to be able to go and watch the various matches and tournaments like a common citizen. He sacrificed every personal and social activity that we all take for granted to live as a virtual prisoner, whisked in and out of cars and buildings, surrounded by security at all times. In the early days of his political career and when the security risks were at their height, he apologised for not being able to go shopping personally to buy birthday or Christmas gifts for me or my son. I still have a hand written note he wrote with an apology and a cash check attached instead.

When packing to return to Sri Lanka at the beginning of this year I was faced with the mammoth task of sorting through all my belongings which have traveled around the world with me over the past 40 years. There were birthday cards, letters, telegrams and postcards he sent me during his travels in the 60’s and 70’s to England, Vietnam, India, Switzerland, France and other places. I could not bring myself to burn or shred them like I did a lot of other less sentimental material. And so these yellowing, fading mementos, in the absence of any of his other personal possessions which should rightfully have come to us his children, have once again traveled across the ocean and lie packed in a box, to be stored away for posterity.

My memories of him during our years in Oxford in the early 70’s seem to revolve around him smoking his pipe or cigar, both of which I hated for their pungent odor. I would scold him and tell him to stop the ‘disgusting habit’, which was for him a well deserved respite from the stresses of his life, and he would just keep puffing away, much to my annoyance. I will always remember him in his study – every house we ever lived in had to have a study – hundreds of law volumes stacked ceiling high, wearing his brown corduroy jacket, seated behind his desk with a cigar or pipe in hand, the desk lamp casting a halo of smoky light around him. This was the man in his element, the brilliant mind at work.

I used to love his white barrister’s wig and black robe which he had to wear when appearing at the Bar in London.  Once,  for a school play at Wychwood School in Oxford, I acted the part of a lawyer and he allowed me to borrow the wig and robe as my costume. I looked very dignified and authentic in my role and the other English girls were quite in awe of me.

Dada enjoyed gardening for a brief time while living in rural France. He planted some trees in the large, rather bare garden and enjoyed pruning and caring for the roses in summer. He also loved wine and he and my mother would go on wine buying excursions around France. How he would have loved one day to own a house with a proper wine cellar where he could store his treasures.

During my teenage years in Switzerland, one of the things we often did together was drive into Geneva  from the suburbs where we lived to buy the Sunday English newspapers for him and my favourite chocolate for me. Sometimes I hitched a one way ride with him to meet up with friends in the city. When we lived in a small village in France he and my mother would take turns to drive to the Swiss/French border to pick me up around midnight when I took the last bus home from the city on weekend nights. Once I turned eighteen and got my driver’s license he was very generous about lending me his old beat up car in the evenings and on weekends, for we lived out of the city and my social life was restricted by the train schedule.

In 1982 with just one suitcase in hand I came to Colombo on summer vacation from Switzerland where I was studying languages at the University of Geneva. That summer vacation turned into a 20 year stay due to a timely meeting my father arranged for me with the then Chairman of the Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation, M.J. Perera. SLRC had just launched and was looking for people with any kind of background in TV. I had coincidentally just completed a brief apprenticeship at TV Suisse Romande and when M. J. Perera heard this he readily offered me a job. We all agreed that the newly created Western Music section would be the best fit for me. So even a little experience was better than none at all and I became one of the pioneer producer/directors at the station. I soon got my first break as an interviewer, transferred to the Newsroom, and went on to enjoy a career that spanned 20 years in the public eye.

Thus my father was instrumental in the launch of my TV career. Once I had become a familiar face and name, whenever my father came to Colombo on UN business, the immigration and customs officers at the airport would ask if he was related to me, the Kadirgamar on TV. I think he got quite a kick out saying I was his daughter and of course he was proud of my achievements. The tables turned naturally once he entered politics and then everyone would ask me if I was related to him! I would say yes, that’s my father, and jokingly add “but I was famous long before he was!”

Much has been written about Lakshman Kadirgamar the lawyer, the intellectual, the statesman and the orator and though his whole life may have been a rehearsal for the leading role he was to play on the Sri Lankan political stage, I believe he remained a simple man at heart, with few needs but many dreams and plans for this island of ours.

Sadly, he never got to totally fulfill his role as a grandfather to my son, a role I believe he would have excelled at. His parting gift to his only grandchild, during a rare high-security orchestrated visit just before we left Sri Lanka for the US was a tie pin, something the child, now turned adult, cherishes.

We were never to see him alive again. The final time my brother, son and I saw him he was lying in a coffin, wearing his Trinity tie and tie pin, two items I suspect he may have wanted his son or grandson to have.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Latest comments

  • 0
    1

    Your dad was a great man with great achievements . Sri Lanka should be proud of this SON OF SRI LANKA . Unfortunately Kadirgamar did not do much for the Tamil Cause . He did not work with the late SJV CHELVANAYAGAM to implement the SJV /SWRD PACT; NOR WORK WITH THE BANDARANAYAKA GOVERNMENTS ( SIRIMA/ CHANDRIKA ) TO ESTABLISH A FEDERAL CONSTITUTION FOR SRI LANKA . HE DID NOT HAVE ANY INTEREST IN THE GRIEVANCES OF THE TAMILS. He did contribute to the popularity of Sri Lanka amongst the western Nations .

    • 0
      0

      If Sri Lanka is proud of him why did they get rid of him?

      • 0
        0

        SRI LANKAN CULTURE!!!!!!!!

      • 0
        0

        What a question ?

        Do you think that only good and healthy living in a population?

  • 0
    0

    There are more of the Kadirgamar’s running around trying to muffle even a fair hearing for the tremendous war crimes that took place during the last weeks of the war in 2009. We have produced Kalu Suddha’s like K and so many others who willl like any one’s ass for a piece of gold…. it is sad but true that sri lanka especially specializes in producing a class of uncles and auntys…who are only in it for themselves….At least you got the best deal out of their material ambitions i hope.

  • 0
    0

    Dear Ajita,

    Thank you for sharing with us your personal experiences with your dad – who was a true patriot than the many who claim to be today. Be consoled that he still lives within the hearts of all true Sri Lankans.

    The entire world is aware of his great achievements so the few comments here from the ‘dead and gone LTTE’ sympathises does not matter !

    Let them grieve for their dead terrorist masters while we grieve for the best that Sri Lanka ever produced !

    RESPICE FINEM !

  • 0
    0

    Kadirgamar was the quitessential Lankan. He SAW that the LTTE will one day be vanquished, that the only path was to work together as a country and be a part of the global village. Unfortunately he life was taken by cowards.

    His memory will live for ever!

    Respice Finem

    • 0
      0

      LK was Great Icon of Srilankans!!! We loved him yet to be loved as we livewith LOVE in our hearts!!!
      So the HATE eliminate from our hearts!!!
      Dear Ajitha, We are Kandyans. Your Dad was a Trinitian!!! Most of Trinitians are Great people in Srilanka. So do your Father also.
      But we have to stay away from Evil people.
      When we don’t do it. It happens what your Dad faced.
      But Good will remain good. Bad as bad.
      This is the World! So leave it in the hand of GOD!!
      May your Dad’s Soul Rest in Peace!!!

  • 0
    0

    Dear Ajitha
    Thank you for the moving tribute from a daughter to her father. Both as a professional and father and one time Senior Advisor (Culture) to your father, I share the pain and loss you suffer caused by Lakshman’s untimely departure.
    To be associated and work with Laksman was an education, privilege and honour. What is written of him and his contribution is far beyond what is recorded and known. Probably many will never know. I too do miss him and his valued vision beyond the chasm of tribalism and barbarism.

    I cannot do better than to quote the last few lines from my published tribute to him titled
    WALKING THROUGH CORRIDORS OF CULTURE WITH LAKSHMAN KADIRGAMAR: REMINISCING A PRINCE OF DIGNITY.

    “‘….. do you have time to talk over some matters?’ This was his gentle way of entering into a dialogue over the phone. It conveyed an explicit character of quality about Lakshman. This expression itself indicated the premium he put on our time and respect for the professional. The sound of those gentle and cultured words will echo in my mind for years to come as a message of humility. To me, after Ananada Coomaraswamy, Kadirgamar epitomised the best qualities of Classical Sri Lankan culture blended with the highest cultural norms of the Internationalist. No one has the right to deprive any society of such an elegantly accomplished individual who believed in the beauty of all encompassing culture of human dignity. Kadirgamar’s memory and ideals will be a permanent beacon to all those who value quality of life and the culture of dignified humane aspirations. Prince of Dignity, your task is done. Rest with ease and enjoy the poetry of life you inspired in others! Written with deep affection and respect in your memory”.

    Sudharshan Seneviratne. Professor of Archaeology. University of Peradeniya

    • 0
      0

      Prof Sudharshan Seneviratne

      My elders tell me that you have published numerous research papers over the past thirty or so years and urge me to read all of them.

      Please let me know how best to access all your life time work?

  • 0
    0

    This a heartfelt tribute to a father by his loving daughter. As a daughter who had also lost her father (coincidentally with the same name of Lakshman) I am appalled to see how certain individuals have used this forum to post meaningless chatter of politics, race, terrorism and what-not. This is indeed very sad. We all may have our own individual opinions of the late Mr Kadirgamar, but may I please request from those who have nothing good or nice to say, to please not say it at all? This is certainly not the forum for such debates as Ajita is only letting us all know of her father and who he was to her – not to you, me or the rest of the country, and we all should respect that.

  • 0
    0

    Envy breeds hate. Class breeds admiration!

    Caliban

  • 0
    0

    Loving reminiscences by a daughter that should be respected and left unsullied by Hate. However, Hate has been expressed in no small measure in this thread of comments, the focus being Sinhala Buddhists who are cited as the single cause of all the problems of this country, while all other groups who have joined in taking this country on the road of Hate and Violence are conveniently absolved.
    Lakshman Kadirgamar stated with conviction when he took the floor of the UN General Assembly that the “Sinhalese are not racists”, and on the occasion of his portrait being unveiled at Oxford said so eloquently that “Oxford was the icing on the cake, but the cake was baked at home”.
    Should we not honour his memory with the sentiments that he himself subscribed to?
    ————
    P.S. Just one more fact to be remembered: Even the JVP who were acknowledged to be Sinhala nationalists, openly stated that they would accept Lakshman Kadirgamar as Prime Minister.
    Doesn’t that say it all?
    One of these days, it would not be a surprise to have these columns accuse/insinuate the Sinhalese of having killed Duraiappah, Amirthalingam and Neelan Tiruchelvam!

  • 0
    0

    Sudharshan Seneviratne gets it wrong and Emil van der Poorten is mostly right.

    Kadirgamar served in the same cabinet as Douglas Devananda and Anuruddha Ratwatte, the former responsible for many abductions and killings, and the latter for many massacres of Tamils and Muslims. I know the murder of Kumar Ponnambalam by the Ratwattes happened then, and if my memory serves me right, the murder of Taraki Sivaram happened when he was still the foreign minister.

    Earlier, there was the bombing of a church in Navali with a lot of people getting killed, which he declared as nothing, and there was the massive exodus in Jaffna.

    And he who used the plight of the children conscripted children by the LTTE internationally as a major plank to get the LTTE banned, saw nothing of that under Karuna when the latter had switched to his side.

    So to call Kadirgamar a ‘prince of dignity’ is ludicrous.
    His political ambition prevented him from listening to his conscience; to be in the cabinet at that time, fully aware of the murderous fellow ministers and saying nothing against it, was to lose all decency and dignity. His daughter should realize that.

    • 0
      0

      Agnos

      You are looking at a great man, a colossal figure, with the jaundiced eyes of a bitter old Jaffna man, an ethical midget. What you get in life is determined by your measure as a human being. With your little spoon you cannot fathom the sea. Broaden your horizon and you will be – believe me – rewarded. Most commentators have sensibly seen him as a humane, genial Sri Lankan and not as a Tamil with the usual virulent victim complex. We have to be grateful he agreed to come down from his lofty heights to work with run of the mill politicians to tackle the problems his beloved country faced at its most critical hour. And future generations will benefit from his rare and cultured legacy in building a new pluralistic Sri Lanka.

      • 0
        0

        While I sympathise with Ajita, I cannot forgive Kadirgamer for betraying the Tamils.

        He was capable but what is the use when he had not used his talents for honest and honourable service to the nation.

        When he was in Canada he denied the Bindhnuwera massacre of detainees, when the whole world knew what had happened there.

        He even was not true christian, in choosing some one out of his own religious belief as second partner.

        What is the use of his talents and wealth which he had misused
        and lost his soul.

        • 0
          0

          “When he was in Canada he denied the Bindhnuwera massacre of detainees, when the whole world knew what had happened there”
          That is why he is a true son of Sri Lanka.

      • 0
        0

        Intellectually and morally inferior people like OutRider are not expected to have the capacity to think logically. As the poster above me –Saravanan–also says, Kadirgamar denied many GoSL atrocities. In addition to the Bindunuwewa massacre of Tamil detainees, I remember the Udathalwinna massacre of Muslims.

        He had converted to Buddhism and got married to a Sinhalese lady, a close relative of a high ranking SL Army general. And he went around the world lying for the regime to which he was loyal. Is it surprising that many Sinhalese ‘loved’ him?

        Some people try to group him with Neelan Thiruchelvam. Neelan was for a solution that came close to federalism, and he never sought to be part of any SL regime. Even though and he was among those who told Kadirgamar to get into politics during the early, hopeful period of CBK presidency, he had been with the TULF, and most Sinhalese, who now pretend to be concerned for him as he was killed by the mad LTTE, did not agree with his political demands when he was alive.

        And if Kadirgamar wanted to express his opposition to the LTTE, he could have done so from outside the regime, more like Rajan Hoole who made a lot of personal sacrifices to bring out the truth within LTTE-held areas. But he took the easy way out, joined the regime, and went around the world lying for his masters. That hardly makes him a great man.

        • 0
          0

          Agnos/Saravanan

          You are a citizen of Sri Lanka; You carry a Sri Lankan passport; You vote in Sri Lankan elections; You even work in some Sri Lankan government department or corporation and draw your salary or pension from the government. If you are in the diaspora you are very quick to correct if someone mistakes you for a Guyanese, Bangla Deshi or even a Tamil from India. You say, “No No No I’m from Sri Lanka. Why? Because you feel they regard Sri Lankans as more refined and cultured. You are ashamed to be mistaken even for a Tamilian from Tamil Nadu. Yet you say it is wrong to hold a political position in the government. It’s okay for Tamils in the south to vote for the UNP. It’s even okay to run for parliament but you should not join the government ranks. You should forever stay in the opposition. This is the same logic the LTTE followed in killing Durayappah, Neelan (didn’t join the govt. but supported Chandrika) and Kadirgamar. Your own logic. Yet you say the LTTE was mad in killing Neelan. (By the way do you then say the LTTE was sane in killing the other two?)

          I know your type. Your very existence, your very self-worth is defined by your ethnicity. Otherwise you think you are a zero. So you delude yourself into thinking that if you join the “Sinhala” government you will lose your ethnic chastity. So you zealously guard it like a Jaffna woman keeping away from the Sinhala rapist government. Don’t you think this is nothing but primitive mentality and tribal mind-set?

          At the same time the cunning Jaffna man doesn’t hesitate to secretly sleep with the rapist government for economic benefits.
          We all know many so called true Tamil nationalists from FP through TULF to present day TNA doing business with the government through the backdoor in darkness. I also know many diehard Tigers who had come to the west on scholarships to pursue post-graduate studies who were quick to sign the oath swearing allegiance to the unitary state made mandatory for all government sector and university employees under the 6th amendment which was rammed down by JR soon after the 1983 riots. Even some principled Sinhalese were rather indecisive first because they felt it was insensitive to impose it on the Tamils even before the Black July embers had fully died down. But to my surprise all the diehard Tigers had already signed and mailed their oaths. I asked them why, and they said in typical Jaffna fashion, “Regardless of whatever you do, you have to protect your jobs back home.” This is the duplicity of the Jaffna man.

          Kadirgamar, in contrast, had the courage of his conviction to join the government and work openly for what he stood for without cowering to the barbaric LTTE. And are you so jaundiced you cannot accept that in this day and age a man can marry a second time and to anyone he likes if he so desired? You must be intelligent enough to understand social convention has nothing to do with morality.

          • 0
            0

            In any Airport say you are a Sri Lankan and see how they look at you. Yes it used to like that but all is gone. I know many Sinhalese say they are from Bangladesh to save them from embarrassment.

          • 0
            0

            I brought up his marriage to the Sinhalese lady not to question the propriety of his second marriage, but to argue that many Sinhalese were happy because he was being ‘Sinhalized,’ and that they felt a sense of kinship with him.

            As for your inane interpretation that I am against Tamils joining the GoSL– as long as the regime is an oppressive, corrupt, terroristic or racist, anyone who joins such a regime cannot remain unsullied by it.

            True that Neelan supported CBK since at least initially she appeared to be a liberal president who would provide a good solution to Tamil grievances. But unlike Kadirgamar, Neelan never denied or dismissed GoSL atrocities.

            I don’t think your little brain can figure these things out, so I don’t want to waste my time anymore. You are welcome to ramble on and shift goalposts.

            • 0
              0

              Agnos

              My little brain tells me you are signalling a switch to the defensive mode and you need a time out. But try not to score a same side goal next time.

  • 0
    0

    There’s no place in Sri Lanka for Gentlemen and Scholars and True Patriots.

    It’s a crook Jokers Land, govern by crook Jokers, for the crook Jokers on instructions given by crook Jokers wearing many different uniforms.

    • 0
      0

      And you are one of those crooks that can see everything is handlled by crooks,

  • 0
    0

    The people who are turning this into a political discussion ( yet again) and spewing hatred (both sides) should remember that Ajita is writing her memories as a daughter. Let us all leave it at that. I think for any child no matter what age,who has lost a beloved parent would like the memories to be as they were. If a person can raise kids who in turn will appreciate and love the efforts will have achieved what everybody – no matter what race, religion, nationality – yearns to be a good person. Let him be that. A dearly loved father.

  • 0
    0

    As a non-Sri Lankan I heard that this man betrayed the Tamils and chose to be with the powers of the moment.His loss is sad for the family but history will remeber him as a traitor to the Tamils.

    • 0
      0

      pushpa, you are absolutely correct. as you say in the eyes of tamil people he will always remain as a traitor. he sided with sinhala terrorists to daemonize tamil people to the international community.
      he was hell bent on branding all tamil people as either terrorists or terrorist sympathisers. he spent all his time and effort to discredit the tamil community. i would say he was much worse than jeyaraj fernandopulle and muttiah muralitharan. in short he was prepared to go any length to fulfil his own ambitions and aspirations at the expense of tamil people. i repeat his ancestors sold their faith to secure their financial future and this man sold his race to secure his position. in fact there are people in the uk celebrating the death of thatcher and if their is freedom of expression i have no doubt tamil people will do the same for this man.

      • 0
        0

        Rama,
        Why do you assume that “his ancestors sold their faith for financial future” ??
        Not all Tamils who converted to christianity did so for financial benefits.
        Many embraced christianity out of conviction, and this is true even at the present time.
        Please do not assume things.

        • 0
          0

          saravanan, whether you like it or not the forefathers of present day tamil christians traded in their own faith in exchange for an alien faith for material benefits. these were people who were unable to differentiate between left and right and you are talking about conviction. what a load of rubbish.

  • 0
    0

    Dear Ajitha,
    When you read these comments you will fathom how narrow minded these so called people are. You shared your dads personal life and how these losers fight each other. Donkeys in absolute terms.

    I think your dad’s wish to have the tie and the tie pin in the family again is not a daunting task for you. You can just walk into that institution and ask for a seat in any grade. In my opinion you should do it!!!

  • 0
    0

    Dear Ajitha,
    I must in fact tell you that not only the tie and the pin but his School crest woven with the trinity lion which hung high above all in his study, framed and looked glorious to me when I last saw it, should be a part of his children too.
    He forever remains in our hearts, a true gentleman and a professional.

  • 0
    0

    kadirgamar did his job as the foreign affairs minister brilliantly.Unfortunately too brilliantly for the tamils.i don’t think he considered himself a tamil.He just felt that he was a Srilankan and a job is a job and it has to be done well.Being a non racist can be really tough in srilanka from the vituperative comments we see from racists here.All sinhalese and tamils will have to decide one day when they reach the fork on the road whether to travel like kadirgamar on the srilankan path or whether to travel on the sinhalese/tamil/muslim path.

    If we all travel on the srilankan path like kadir then the country is heading in the right direction towards peace and prosperity.If the large majority of us decide to go on the sinhalese/tamil/muslim path then we will be heading to disaster with a loss loss situation for all of us,our children and grandchildren and unborn generations.

    • 0
      0

      He is not a Tamil not even a Demula. A pure Sinhalease. A master liar.

  • 0
    0

    I had the honor and privilege to meet him briefly during one of his last visits to DC. Listening to him give a speech about Sri Lanka was an absolute treat. One of our finest Oxonians and probably will be Sri Lanka’s last true Statesman!! May he RIP!!

  • 0
    0

    Gamini,

    I read both your posts in this page carefully and congratulate you.
    You know the story fairly well. LK, as the Bard would have it, treated the world (and Sri Lanka) as a stage and played many parts therein.
    He had charisma, finesse and courtly manners – but within that veneer
    there was much more. This is a page in which a daughter pays her tribute to her dear Father and is no place to speak ill of the dead.
    Perhaps we can discuss this in another piece – when I will have much to share with you.

    Senguttuvan

    • 0
      0

      Senguttuvan is correct…

      Anyway, I have said enough and more since I attended his funeral, on August 15/16th 2005, and my brother was falsely arrested.
      That is nearly 8 years.

      It is sad that Mrs. Ajita Perera has returned to Sri Lanka after her son has gone to college or to further his studies and wrote this piece for obvious reasons.

      But this Kadirgamar will always remain a lightning rod where the Sinhala State terrorist and racist will always praise him and the majority of the Tamils will curse him like they do of Ettapan, Quisling the former Prime Minister of Norway, and Benedict. Disturbing the hornet’s nest will always stir the emotions of the Tamils as this subject is an emotional one.

      Despite Kadirgamar rendering yeoman service to the Sinhala State Terrorist the Rajapakse regime has no real good word for him nor felicitate his services to the Sinhalese. Only the JVP and the Chandrika loyalist praise him, as well as the Sinhala Yakkos/racist at a different level.. That is sad for the children and grandchildren of Lakshman Kadirgamar.

      His two brothers Sam and Rajan have no such problem with the Tamils, although they never helped the Tamils, that I am aware of. However theyb never hurt them at all, and they always loved their hometown Jaffna and their heritage.

      This is what the Rajapakses do, and there is no clear evidence that LTTE committed the assassination, and that fact was established during my brother’s incarceration and investigations. It was a useful election stunt by the Rajapakses and even in his death he hurt the Tamils and the Sinhala opposition while Ranil losing the Presidential election for many reasons…. It was the Rajapakses who benefited and see where the country stands nationally and internationally.

      Two factors need to indicate the position. The 7,251 Billion rupees debt and the military budget @2.5 Billion dollars. When the UNP Parliament was dissolved the military budget was only $600 million dollars.
      Who pays such bills and loss of foreign aid, investments and trade??

      The rupee has depreciated from 92 rupees to 130 a whopping 40%. Mahinda Chintanaya….

      • 0
        0

        Donald

        I hate coming to this conclusion.

        I think your one sided, narrow minded sympathy for Tamil bigotry will remain with you forever. Incurable.

        Sorry mate. You are not Kadirgamar material.

        • 0
          0

          LK helped Tamils for sure a lot. And all other Sri Lankans as well. By pulverizing LTTE bigots on the international stage.

          That was the biggest support anyone could ever deliver our Tamil citizens. Liberation from violent, racist, fascists of the LTTE.

      • 0
        0

        Uncle Donald

        Good conclusion with usual mud sling.

        It is high time that you could pass some of yoir LTTE funds that are being collected for another futile war to Mahinda Chintanaya if you are so concerned about SL economy.

        Your orations always ends up with the usual mud sling at Mahinds and the clang. Sour grapes?? Did you also predict in 2009 that Mahinda will crash down?

        Keep trying like the fox in that billy goat story. Or collect some merits for the next journey. It is up to you as it is your own life.

    • 0
      0

      When you are a public figure and your actions resulted in many peoples lives and deaths, kidnapping rape murder and arrest. and when you were part of machinary that condoned planned and executed all these. You played a part that supported and strengthened the machinery. People have every right to talk and condemn the action of such men. Same happens to Thacher Regan Sadam Gadahi Ghandhi, ….

      • 0
        0

        and blood sucking terra leader podian VP too.

  • 0
    0

    I am amazed by the tributes of all sorts on this man. Yes, a man who can rise above his own race, religion and culture to embrase all mankind is indeed great. LK is only a handful of Tamils who had a true Sri Lankan identity in heart. The so called LTTE tamils do not have this big heart, and killed all aspiring Tamils of that greatness. Finally we are left with utterly selfish racial narrow minded Tamil leadership. As long as we do not have men and women who can work as true children of Sri Lanka better we do not bestow any special powers to these bunch of jokers.

  • 0
    0

    Thank you for the memories…..i remember as a very young schoolboy my late father Berti Warusavitarne going for a consultation with him leaving me in the car for two hours!!!!
    Best wishes to you and family

    • 0
      0

      And a fine father you have!

  • 0
    0

    I am a Sri Lankan, a Sinhalese, a Trinitian. I have never met the late Hon LK and never “branded or tribalised” him as a tamil, a Sinhalese, a Trinitian, when I got to know him. I will remember him as a human being, a gentleman, truly great Sri Lankan, the best Foreign Minister ever, who was honest, caring but also not afraid to let his views known.
    Ben, you may be right in saying that he was a ordinary man and he may have had his misgivings and wrong decisions. That is part of being human. But for all Sri Lankans he is a great and will be remembered as a great son of Lanka, the same as we have for Ananda Coomaraswami.
    To Ajitha, please disregard the comments by some of these foolish people. Believe in your dada, just trust that we Sri Lankans will never forget his name, as he was amongst those greats of mother Lanka, no comparison to RP, CBK, JR, MR or RW. He was a true gentleman. I wish him peace in his rest with the bottom of my heart.

    • 0
      0

      Have you met a Trinitian who burnt the Jaffna librarry

      • 0
        0

        But he did it for a Sinhala cause.

      • 0
        0

        FYI,

        Jaffana library was burnt by LTTE.

        To brand Sri Lanka as a racist state for propaganda. Gamini Dissanayake was not involved. But, framed by the cunning LTTE.

        It is now a fact.

        • 0
          0

          Ben Hurling,are you out of your mind.Everyone knows that the Jaffna Library was burnt by the UNP ministers.All the sinhales i have spoken to have accepted that fact,whereas you a burger as usual for your own survival due your diminishing numbers is bumsucking the sinhalese.It won’t work mate,they will just use you and dispose you like a condom anyway,so don’t waste your time bumsucking them,becaause loyalty isn’t one of their virtues,but they do have other qualities i like.

          There is something called karma,and because of the dastardly deeds that once powerful and arrogant ministers of the UNP did,now they are no more.Not only that even the once great UNP is practically no more.I won’t be surprised if one day they can only come to power with coalition government only with the TNA,SLMC,JVP and the DP and a new party formed from a divided SLFP.How long would that government last.Probably 6-12 months.

        • 0
          0

          Ben Hurling

          “It is now a fact.”

          Is it from Mahawamsa?

  • 0
    0

    Ajitha
    Thank you for sharing some of your thoughts. I am not an avid reader, but read your article with much interest. i am an eternal admirer of your father though I did not know him personally or perhaps not that well for tht matter. However, He was a role model for us. He proved that people respect for what you are and not what ethnicity you belong to.
    I was somewhat disgusted to see the political dialogue your leter has created. It is unfortunate that some people do not have the decency of respecting a fallen human.
    May the blessings be with you and your family and hope you will keep the family flag flying.

  • 0
    0

    Your father is a great man.We have to nurture that type of Sri Lankans to save this island.Why don’t you take the initiation to do that through the Kadiragarmar Institute?

    • 0
      0

      Dearest Ajitha,

      I have never met you but have heard the name before. Never plat the dirty tricks of politics. Your father shouldn’t have been a politician. A gentleman of his calibre should have played a better role. I do respect your father even if he is dead.

    • 0
      0

      Poor girl doesn’t even have a bit of ashes to remember her father. He spoke Sinhalese became a Sinhalese, became a Buddist, disowned his nationality and religion, turned a blind eye to the sufferings of his kith and kin, manipulated the forign governments, successfully hid the war crimes, hired propaganda companies to camouflage the truth,….But somebody mentioned a bad word “PM”, and they got rid of him and as usual blamed it on you know who. Poor fellow for all what he did they didn’t give a small spec of his ashes to his own daughter. Good servant but worked for the bad master.

  • 0
    0

    LK was the only tamiil person would be pm or president
    from sinhalese votes definitely.
    All the sri lankans loved him.
    He was a very respected personality among all
    the communities. Ltte didnt want him to come high

    • 0
      0

      jude silva

      Why didn’t the generous Sinhala/Buddhists appoint him to the ceremonial post of Prime minister?

      Didn’t he have the right looks?

  • 0
    0

    Mr Lakshman kadiragamer is the only politician whom I respect a lot for being a politician with policies never changed for political gains.We really need more of gentlemen like this to guide us.
    So sad to miss a person of this calibre and qualities.He will be respected and remembered in all walks of lives from our small country.
    Dr Nandana
    Consultant Physician

    • 0
      0

      Dear Dr Nandana Consultant Physician,

      I neither know you or heard about you, But when I go through these comments, I just came up with yours and you are the only one I could see with a name Dr Nandana Consultant Physician. I think your parents must be remarkable to name you Dr Nandana Consultant Physician.

      If one thing you can learn from the character of Kadiragamar is the selfless nature of the man, In Sri Lanka people are so obsessed with their school, University, Degree, Job, Title, Race, Caste. Namely ardent savior’s of Buddhism. But actively followers of emptiness, Everybody is exerting their powers based on their title,
      Go to police, Policeman is the king.
      Go to a hospital, Nurse Doctor is the king
      Situation is alike everywhere, What happened to the human decency, Being nice to a fellow human being. Talk/Treat someone with respect. Enjoy your freedom respecting others. If a Dr Nandana Consultant Physician can not understand this, How can other people understand this?
      Dr Nandana Consultant Physician, This not a personnel attack to you, This is an attack to the whole empty middle class in our country.

      Dr Kadragamar had the best schools, best universities, Best Jobs, But none moved the man, He is humble like a bamboo tree, He is a rare giant in this shitty world.
      May he attain Nirvana oneday.

  • 0
    0

    valuable comments from an admirable lady about a great man. LK was the best foreign minister the country ever had. For him the country was first before his religion race and family. I am tahnkful to Her Excellency Chandirka Bandaranayake for absobing him into politics. Madam Ajita, We salue your father. His will every be fondly rememdered.

    • 0
      0

      Dear Dr M.L.Najimudeen,

      I neither know you or heard about you, But when I go through these comments, I just came up with yours and you are the only one I could see with a name Dr M.L.Najimudeen.I think your parents must be remarkable to name you Dr M.L.Najimudeen.

      If one thing you can learn from the character of Kadiragamar is the selfless nature of the man, In Sri Lanka people are so obsessed with their school, University, Degree, Job, Title, Race, Caste. Namely ardent savior’s of Buddhism. But actively followers of emptiness, Everybody is exerting their powers based on their title,
      Go to police, Policeman is the king.
      Go to a hospital, Nurse Doctor is the king
      Situation is alike everywhere, What happened to the human decency, Being nice to a fellow human being. Talk/Treat someone with respect. Enjoy your freedom respecting others. If a Dr Nandana Consultant Physician can not understand this, How can other people understand this?
      Dr M.L.Najimudeen, This not a personnel attack to you, This is an attack to the whole empty middle class in our country.

      Dr Kadragamar had the best schools, best universities, Best Jobs, But none moved the man, He is humble like a bamboo tree, He is a rare giant in this shitty world.
      May he attain Nirvana oneday.

    • 0
      0

      Your excellency Madam Chandrika Bandarana Yakka also absorbed the famous Mervyn Silva into politics. Dont forget.

  • 0
    0

    valuable comments from an admirable lady about a great man. LK was the best foreign minister the country ever had. For him the country was first before his religion race and family. I am tahnkful to Her Excellency Chandirka Bandaranayake for absobing him into politics. Madam Ajita, We salue your father. His will ever be fondly rememdered.

  • 0
    0

    After reading the comments I came to the conclusion that LKs killing was planned by some one or group within SLFP.

    Then I went to read Remembering Lakshman Kadirgamar Through Anecdotal Accolades ( dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/19955 Dr. U. Pethiyagoda)
    “Had Lakshman Kadirgamar been allowed to live, he would today (12 April) have reached the age of 81 years. His brutal and cowardly murder by the LTTE on 12 August 2005 snuffed out his life and undid in seconds what 73 years had taken to achieve.”

    Dr UP is blaming the LTTE…..

    • 0
      0

      DB jeyaraj fell out with LTTE. He has his own agenda to settle with LTTE. Dont waste your time reading his stuff. They are written for a purpose that is all. As your first impression was LK was eliminated by those close to him because he was standing in somebodies way. He tried everything to be a Sinhalese Buddhist but failed failed and paid with his life for that,

  • 0
    0

    There are very few in this world I respect, and I am so proud to say this is a one human being that deserves due respect, He is a character anyone to follow. He was a potential candidate to rule our country, Neither Chandrika or Mahinda gave hime the due place, May be the race card played there.

    I would vote for this many anywhere for anything. A true human being with worldly knowledge to save the frogs in Sri Lanka.

    The good people always die soon. What a waste to a nation of vanities

  • 0
    0

    LK was not smart enough to know that it was successive sinhala governments that engaged in terror actions against innocent Tamils before militants youth took up arms against a terror state. He defended a terror state for his own political gains. He was a traitor to true Tamils around the globe. Sinhala people glorify his education and intellect because he studied at so called elite institution of great Briton , I know so many people who were educated at elite institions turned out to be worse than illiterate people. wisdom comes from intuition not from these so called elite instituition.

  • 0
    0

    HE IS TH BEST PRIME MINISTER WE NEVER HAD. HE WAS A THOROUGH DIGNIFIED GENTLEMAN.I still remember him being interviewed by CNN.

    From a Sinhalese

    • 0
      0

      @Supun

      You may be a Sinhalese as you claim to be.But you are a bare-faced liar. And you lie through your teeth when you say Kadir Aiyya was the best PM we never had. Being a Sinhala man you will NEVER accept a Tamil as PM. So stop your tom-fooling talk.

Leave A Comment

Comments should not exceed 200 words. Embedding external links and writing in capital letters are discouraged. Commenting is automatically disabled after 5 days and approval may take up to 24 hours. Please read our Comments Policy for further details. Your email address will not be published.