Friday, February 6, 2026

Photography and Me and Dudley Senanayake

I was a photography man from the age 15.
 
I can still remeber in 1965, five (5) of my best friends made me to look like a fool. 
The plan was us to meet at Prince of Wales, Park in KANDY and each one poses for a photograph.
Sharp on time may be at 9.00AM, I was at the meeting place designated. I waited for half an hour and realized that this was a ploy to fool me.

I was told later one guy whose house was located near Prince of Wales, Park had kept watch of my activities.

I made a quick decision to go round the lake and take photographs. That is the day I became a photographer. 

To my luck my brother who became a veteran X-Ray technician or a radiographer had made a darkroom in our house. 
Even though, I did do any developing of Photographs, I learned the theory behind. 

Then thanks to Mallika Studio I had a large collection of Photographs in an album.
It was stollen by a guy called Sangakkara in my class (That is why I hate all Sangakkaras including the hopeless Superintendent of Kandy Hospital of Yesteryear. We got rid of him and it was very easy to expose his sordid affairs).

I had all the negatives and it was not a disaster.
Second episode was in early 1980 when I posted all my photos of UK and Negatives by Registered Post and I lost all of them. 

Then they started stealing my Royalty Cheques from Amazon Books. I send stop payement instructions to the principles and I stopped realization of those Cheques.

I do not send anything by post now in Ceylon but did post all the Dhammapadas to my friends before leaving CEYLON.

They even steal Dhammapada sent by Post in CEYLON.

 I bought a Petetson Colour Photography Kit in UK but that kit was also stolen by a family member while I was in New Zealand.

The latest Fuji Film digital camera with so many fancy digital iterations which I have not yet mastered is beside me.

Stealing and Fooling me as a kid not deter my life long interests.

It was Mr. De Livera of TITUS Stores in Colombo that started importing cameras to Ceylon.

It is glad to hear PM. Dudley Senanayake was a good photographer.

Reflection on J.V.P. and L.T.T.E and Photography

 

Reflection on J.V.P. and L.T.T.E and Photography

Joe Theodore De Livera in Conversation

I could not find a reliable Electronic Balance in Titus Stores but could find one in the open market of the Pettah Street, of course smuggled, under Rs.5000/= which I used for my Research Work on Placenta. 


Also read underneath what L.T.T.E. and J.V.P. done to our local industry.

I am a photographic addict but went in to colour photography in UK. I bought a Peterson Colour Kit but without a good dark room I could not progress.

Repriduction

We have chatted about this and that for over three hours on a Monday morning in his beautiful home set amidst a large garden in Colombo. 

Was it too long or too short for a colourful personality that is this octogenarian?

Initially, we sit on the lush lawn surrounded by large trees and hedges and then move into the hall bordering a meda-midula with a pond and more trees, to be served with delicious slices of home-made cake and steaming cups of tea. 
Finally, we tread upstairs to the large book-lined study, after spending a little time on the balcony, taking in the exercise equipment that he uses and also the view of the surrounding landscape.

Were three hours adequate, we wonder as we leave, to encapsulate the multi-faceted life of this person who has dabbled in many things, very successfully, with trust in God and the murmured whisper of “Thy will be done”.

Where do we begin – this is the question we grapple with. May be it would be best to begin with the well-known facets of his life, moving from the known to the unknown.

We have concluded this long interview while also taking photographs of none other than 85-year-old Joe Theodore De Livera in his home down Ananda Rajakaruna Mawatha, Maradana, with an “exquisite” view, in his own words, of Campbell Park.

This is the man, having taken over the ‘legend’ of Main Street in bustling Pettah, ‘
Titus Stores’ set up by his father back in 1924, to import and sell the first incandescent lamps, from which the name of the store came about lifted it out of the dumps and also successfully steered it through turbulent times generated by mushrooming modern stores.

Having to weave in many strands to showcase the rich tapestry of Mr. De Livera’s life, we begin at the beginning. 

Joseph Michael De Livera, a teacher, had strong views on how to bring up his one-and-only son (there is one daughter, too), while mild Mary Theodora never opposed his will.
So it was to the boarding of Holy Family Convent, Bambalapitiya, that Joe was packed off to from their home in Negombo at the tender age of five. In his father’s mind it was the “best” he could visualize for his son. At 85, his childhood may be a dim memory, but to this day, there is a tinge of sadness as Joe says “it was a terrible thing for a child” for it cut-off his closeness to his parents. He found comfort in singing and Mother Gonzaga recognized his “lovely voice” and got him heavily involved in choral activity.

Next it was a few years at Maris Stella College, where his father had been a teacher, followed by the family moving to a rented home on Gregory’s Road, while young Joe was bundled off to boarding school once again, this time at St. Joseph’s College, Maradana
Silently the tears would flow, as he longed to be in his own home.
With World War II breaking out, the family once again went back to their Negombo home, with another stint at Maris Stella College for Joe, followed by more years at St. Joseph’s College, Maradana

The Race Course was an airstrip, there were Royal Air Force personnel at             St. Joseph’s and once the war had stabilized, the Josephians were at their lessons in pol-athu classrooms put up in the premises of Aquinas College.
Incidentally, the De Livera family’s Negombo home in Thammita is now St. Joseph’s Home for the Aged with 135 elderly.

While the routine at college was daily mass and communion and lessons, he also came under the powerful influence of Fr. Ignatius Perera (who would later set up the Radio & Electronics Laboratory, the first of its kind in Asia) whom he “revered”. 
Although erudite Fr. Ignatius, a scholar in Latin and Greek with a flair for music and singing, did not teach impressionable Joe, he opened up a way of life for the boy, making him the first chorister of the Catholic Choral Society for he had “absolute pitch”.
His profound influence made Joe’s love of music blossom.

Singing and music were not Joe’s only passion as a boy of about eight but also photography, starting with an unwieldy box camera – a Kodak Brownie which was       “a real black pettiya”.

When asked how that interest developed, there is wry humour as he points out that “maybe it is a matter of the mind” as his parents were both “amusical and aphotographic”. 

Although he was NOT a graduate in science, law or engineering, he says that he has a very broad mind.
There is a pause in our conversation as he pulls out his I-Phone from his shirt pocket and says “this is of course far better” for taking photographs and also waves goodbye to wife, Hermie, about whom he speaks with much pride. “She is a science graduate,” he says, adding that she is a good wife and mother and fantastic cook, going on to explain how she hosted a Soroptimists’ meeting just a few days before, proof of her efficiency.

Both of them have green fingers, he laughs, while his wife has her very own bonsai garden and he also turned architect to come up with the “bold concept and design” of their home which had been admired by renowned architect Geoffrey Bawa.

As he himself says he was born with a silver spoon in his mouth and a big businessman, he may be as head of Titus Stores, the running of which he took over in 1965, but his track record is impressive. He had managed the family’s dairy farm with 2,500 Milch cows on 685-acres in Chilaw as a young man, with a bowser of milk being supplied from there each day to the Milk Board
 
This was until the government took over their land in 1972, ending the dairy business.

A strange mix it would seem, for Mr. De Livera had also ventured out to sea, being the pioneering entrepreneur to introduce the first trawler in Sri Lankan waters, initially in Pesalai, Talaimannar, and later in Kalpitiya.

He makes a point to mention that in those days he spearheaded resistance to Indian fishermen entering Sri Lankan waters, referring to the crisis between the two countries in recent times.

His Ceylon Seafood Company boats were trawling around two tons of fish including thoru, moru, thalapath, koppara, loads of small fry and about 50 kilos of prawns per day.
However, with the activity of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam mounting around Wilpattu and one of his boatmen being killed by them and also threats from the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna increasing around his factory in Negombo, Mr. De Livera had handed over the entire project to the navy, shifting his focus to Kokkadicholai in the East.

It was another landmark achievement for his new company, Serendib Seafood, for it was the first to freeze and export shrimp. 
“I started Sri Lanka’s first aquaculture project,” says Mr. De Livera, going back to the 1980s when he would be shuttling between the shrimp hatchery at Pitipana, Negombo, and Manmunai, near Kokkadicholai.

As the post-larvae mortality rate was high when transported by road, he used the Cessna 177 which he had bought for quicker transport between Katunayake and Batticaloa.

This project too had fallen victim to the bloody conflict raging in that area, with 27 of his workers being shot.

These tragedies were the “biggest shock of my life”, he says sadly.

The rest is history.

But the different corners of his study with an attached ‘dark room’ where lies old cameras, meanwhile, provide ample proof of Mr. De Livera’s wide and varied interests.

Self-taught, sans degrees he may be, but the microcosms represented in the study indicate the rounded personality that he is…………avid reader with more than 5,000 books on the shelves, businessman, photographer, dabbler in homeopathy and adoring grandfather. 

For amidst the line-up of accessories he needs for his daily work and relaxation, pride of place is being shared by lots of toys to keep his little five-year-old granddaughter entertained whenever she drops by.
 
From hobby to veteran
Work apart it is with a lot of passion that Mr. De Livera reverts to his pet subject – photography and the Photography Society of Sri Lanka.

He is the senior-most member of this 109-year-old society founded in 1906 to promote photography as a hobby, art and craft and now guides its destinies as its Patron.

His journey behind the lens and the society’s history seem to be inextricably-linked. We learn that the society had been set up as the Amateur Photographic Association of Ceylon by Henry Lorenz Wendt, father of the famous Sri Lankan photographer, artist and musician Lionel Wendt. Later it had been renamed and revamped in 1934 by Lionel Wendt with like-minded people. Those whose contributions that have made the society what it is today include P.J.C. Durrant, B.G. Thornley, Joe De Livera, B.P. Weerawardena and D.C.L. Amarasinghe who would meet at Wendt’s home to pore over and discuss at length the images captured by them.

Mr. De Livera launches into technical details of the cameras cradled by him over the years, starting with the Kodak Brownie Box, then a Kodak Folding Camera which was an improvement on the Brownie as it had a lens with a variable aperture and shutter and later a Rolleiflex. Next it was the Leica which he purchased in Zurich, Switzerland, while on a trip to Europe with his father after he had seen Thornley sporting one and he had read about “this revolution” in photography which could produce the 35-mm film format.

Harefield Hall Slipper Orchid, “It was BG (Thornley), as he was known, who introduced the Leica to me although it was Lionel Wendt who first introduced 35-mm photography and the Leica to Ceylon some time before World War II,” says Mr. De Livera in a piece written by                       R.H. Samarakone, himself a member of the society in ‘Legends’, a series in the society’s newsletters featuring senior members.

“It was after BG brought his Leica II to Ceylon that photographers like me realized the potential of this incredible camera and the 35mm format which later caught on like wild fire,” he adds.

Among the very important persons who purchased a
Leica was Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake who joined                 Mr. De Livera on sojourns around the country clicking snapshots in the 1950s which the latter would develop and print in his darkroom, as he had begun film-processing in a 35mm developing tank brought back from England in 1947.

Experimenting with the Leica, he had also found that it could be used for ‘Macro Photography’, samples of which he shows us in his study.
Realizing that 35-mm cameras were not available in the country, Mr. De Livera had imported and distributed through Titus Stores the Balda camera from Germany in 1955 which was “relatively cheaper” than the Leica, with one of his first customers being visionary science fiction writer       Sir Arthur C. Clarke.

Technicalities flow forth on how                Mr. De Livera, much later in the 1990s switched to Digital Photography with an Olympus 1.4 Mega Pixel Camera and more recently a Canon SX 20 IS.

A fitting tribute is paid to Mr. De Livera by Mr. Samarakone when he states: “Keeping abreast with the development of camera technology and having used many of the top of the range equipment of each era,     he is one of the very few of the senior photographers who took up digital photography at an early stage of its introduction in 1995

Having experimented with various types and styles of photography, he is considered as one who excelled in macro photography in the early days.”

Next he touches on the nomadic lifestyle of the Photographic Society until it found a home at the
Lionel Wendt Art Centre, having traveled the full circle.

The early meetings of the society were held on the first Monday of the month at Lionel Wendt’s house on Guilford Crescent, says Mr. De Livera, who had joined the society, on the invitation of Quintus Fernando, a university lecturer, a few months after the death of Wendt in 1944. The meetings continued there even after the death of Wendt until the old house was demolished to make way for the Art Centre.

It was then that the society moved from place to place, gathering in a small room behind the Planters’ Association of Ceylon (the current premises of the Cinnamon Grand Hotel) on Galle Road, moving out when the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation took over this premises; homeless for awhile; then the Young Men’s Christian Association in Fort; thereafter           nnMr. De Livera’s Dad’s residence, ‘Rendlesham’ down Stafford Place (now known as Sri Vipulasena Mawatha), Colombo 10; and finally a permanent home in the newly-built Lionel Wendt Art Centre.

Giving his input during the construction phase, it had been Mr. De Livera who suggested a solution to the lack of ventilation in the society’s meeting hall, a line of windows at the top around 15 feet from the ground which could be opened and closed by fixing a thick string. “These are still there,” he adds.

Singapore, I HATE as a stop over

Singapore, I HATE as a stop over

 
1. It is very expensive.

2. Singapore airline fees have gone up by (6) six fold.

3. Duty free are expensive and very poor selection.

4. Buy your wine from the wine stores outside not at departure lounge.

5. It is very crowded.

6. Airport Hotel for overnight stay is always booked.

7. Sleeping on an armchair after missing a connection flight is not pleasurable.

8. Food at the airport is expensive.

9. Books in bookshops are expensive.

10. Underground train is always crowded.

11. On one of the occasions I had 10 days of delicious English Treats.

They had just opened a new City Hotel.

My luck came indirectly.

I have only one meal a day when traveling since I hate public toilets.

Hotel toilets are reasonable.

Hotel breakfast is ordinary and I love garlic bread (MacDonald type) and they never made a good one in the hotel, I stayed.

So by 9AM I come out for Window shopping.

Also look for a single good meal.

Bananas are my favorites.

Morning Dosai at Komala Villa are nutritious and delicious.

I HATE rice.
 
City Hotel in Singapore
This was 10 days before its real opening.

This hotel made a "Open Display" of morning/afternoon English and Italian food in a street corner.

They were expensive until 1PM and after that they sold the balance left, at cut rate to close the shop to save overtime for salesmen.

This was a bonus for me and the items were fresh.

I bought them in bulk for the full day and the next morning breakfast.

For 10 days I had Super English Meals at cut rate and on the 10th day I was flying back.

Regarding drinks, I have a favorite yogurt milk in Singapore (not Greek yogurt) and  tea and coffee I made myself from the hotel stuff.

No alcohol at all.

America First

 Thursday, August 18, 2016
America First

American Brain Waves

I have chosen the above title to show how we follow the American Hegemony.
 

The Current need is alternative Energy Sources!
We are not investing on Solar Power.
Why I do not know?

Below are two my old pieces reproduced
.
They are in a private domain and not visible in public domain.

Human Destiny

It looks likes human needs take paramount importance.
The needs of other living beings on this planet is no concern.
Human needs are not measured by bare existence but by uncontrolled desire, greed and exploitation of the very environment he lives in.

He is not very responsible but very erratic in behavior.
He explores and expands both in numbers and the spheres of influence.
When the going is good he expands and when the going is bad he perseveres at the expense of all other beings.
Human is the only species (cannibalism) known to eats its own beings and all the other edible beings.

He does not spare anything that this earth can offer,
 
When the going is good it is
Lancashire hotpot with lamb but when the going is bad it is only potato hotpot.

His culinary desires which includes
cannibalism speaks of his destructive nature.

How can we say he is a rational being?

Only rationality is his own existence at the expense of sometimes his own fellow beings.

Rat race and nothing but rat race.

That is the virtue of all powerful capitalism, power and wealth.

There is something wrong in this simple equation.

Expand, exploit and try to gain control at every advantage point.

He does not learn lessons from the past,
 

40 years ago in 1973, when oil price hike followed after the Middle East Conflict
he was ill prepared.

I saw what that meant for our children.

Thousands and thousand of children died of starvation and illness.

We are not ready for its repetition.

This time it is the global warming which is going to precipitate it.

40 years ago it was oil and energy and thereafter the food crisis.

When there is scarcity we tend to invest more on the same resource instead of changing to alternative resources.

In fact after the last oil crisis we had being using oil at a rate far more energetic than before.

We were not ready for the global warming.

In fact, we did all to precipitate it.

Then there will be a Youth Bubble.
 
The rich dictators were not receptive to the needs of the poor while piling up money for their own fantasies.

How can we say man is rational.

His greed dictates the front line.
The ones who are behind the line or sitting on the bench have no say.
Unfortunately this equation is going to change.
Be prepared the human, the stupid exploiter.
 
Forest Harvesting

I was bit inquisitive why there are
so many tornadoes and hurricanes in America.

I just went to Google Earth and had a little peep from above of North America’s, the West and the East.

There is hardly any difference in tree cover over the land, East or West.

Mostly farmland and build up areas.

That did not give me any clue to the state of the forest cover.

Then I went and searched deforestation.

Americans harvested 90% of the land in 70 years from 1850 to 1920
.
Entire East was covered with Forest and fair proportion of the West was covered with primary forest.
The deforestation continued to this century and
America now has mainly secondary forest covering 10% of the land.
American knew that the CO2 problem started around 1920 and continues even today due to their exploitation of fossil fuel.

Did they tell the truth to the world?

Big No.

In Ceylon we had 90% forest cover until around 1850 and British started deforestation for coffee and tea cultivation.

By the time they left in 1948 forest cover was over 60% but before they left they pass a law prohibiting encroachment of the Crown Land.

From 1948 to 2000 we have decimated another 40 percent especially after 1970.

We are now below the minimal threshold of 25% to maintain our rivers.

This land now can be called the People’s Land instead of the Crown Land and the tree felling and the development go on.

When the thermal power plant is operational we will be approaching 10% level which is the cut off point for desert classification.

Acid rain will do the rest even we stop cutting to Zero.

Then we can say we are better than America in case of deforestation and go for an IMF loan.


Very soon we will be no different from Dubai.

Regards to American
tornadoes and hurricanes trees act as a wind breaks and control the water cycle better.
They should reforest America back to 1920 or continue to have this cycle every year.

Problem is there is no country rich American can go to avoid hurricanes since
rest of the world is no better including China.

This is what I call the development of the
Earth Crisis.

The prediction that world ends in 2012 should be rephrased that "The irreversible loss of biodiversity is in full swing from now onward with the global warming well established and irreversible."

We Ceylonese will be drilling oil with Indian help till sun goes down.

RAVANA sites in CEYLON

1. Ussangoda (Nonagama) or Hambantota
Related to Dandu Monara Yantraya

2. Sita Eliya
Nuwara Eliya

3. Horton Plane
Thotupala Kanda
Us Eliya
Pushpaka Vimana

4. Wariyapola

5. Weragantota

6. Gurulu or Kurulu Potha
Mahiyanganya


7. Sigiriya
Palace of RAVANA

I believe Ranil Wickrasinghe had an old ola script that disappeared when his house was raided during ARAGALAYA. This ola script had details about RAVANAs Airports.

His desire to auction Mihintale to India should prevent him ever becoming the president of CEYLON again.

His uncle JRJ was called the Yanki Diki.

I call him the Yaka Diki

Yaka is another name for RAVANA the King.

 
British Vandalism of Ravana Relics of Nuwera Eliya 
 
This is in Evolution and finding facts for a book in the future.

British for their Wisdom had removed a Sel-Lipi in Harrassagla, Nuwara Eliya, a Stone Relic erected to locate the place where King Ravana was interned.

It is said Ravana Curse follow any who desecrated these places.

The Kachcheri was supposed to have caught fire three times in Nuwera Eliya and subsequently the last Kachcheri was build plastering the Sell-Lipi to the wall. 

This the level they go to destroy our ancient history.
It is human vandalism not seen even during Roman time.
With time truth will emerge and the British will be shamed damned for these sordid acts.
I do not ask for representative actions but we should expose the truth in the name of Buddha who followed long after Ravana.

No wonder Coffee and Tea Plantation would have been a ploy to erase this history.

Locals or Sinhala People did not want our history to be erased so they did not volunteer working in the estates.
 
They were not lazy buy were smart for the time.

Tamils were used for this purpose and currently using Norwegian and Tamil diaspora to do the bidding for erasing the true History of Ceylon.

Raj Somadeva and Indians are still continue to do this shoddy work unhindered.

It is time for proper investigation.

Bokken Kleppe is also in this game.

Karma Speaks to Deepak Chopra

Deepak Chopra published book in English that Buddha had sex with a child of 9 years. This book was shown to me by a Christian book salesman of Sarasavi Bookshop
I immediately got all Deepak Chopra books banned in CEYLON.
 
Another dirty Indian.
 
Now is being exposed as a pedophile.
 
His name is mentioned 33,000 times in Epstein files.
Donald Trump name is mentioned 53,000 times.
 
I left UK since, I saw these abuses almost on weekly base and every attempt to proper investigation by me (a foreign guy by their assessment) was scuttled. 
 
However, I managed to proceed with at least 3 cases with criminal charges
They did not call me to open court for cross examinations, since every time I was reprimanded, I used to say, I have more incriminating evidence that I would bear free, if I am questioned in open court. 
 
I was meticulous and this took a toll on me. 
 
I went there to learn more advanced pediatric stuff. 
 
Coming to Jimmy Savile and Jim'll Fix it program, I had a credible suspicion he was pedophile.
 
BBC had helpful tolerance to him in spite of his sordid acts. 
 
However, in late 1980s pressure was high for the BBC.
 
I left UK in early 1988, never to return to UK.

This was true in New Zealand, too.
 
I left New Zealand in 1994, again never to return with too kids under 7.
 
My unofficial investigations in Ceylon that  included that Silva guy and the Television channel that belonged to his brother revealed it was prevalent in CEYLON, too.

That is why I switched to Pathology in CEYLON which is my bread and butter.

What is the outcome?

Divert attention
 
Possible IRAN and AMERICA War.

First salvo is due.

I do not believe Scott Ritter's prediction.
 
Middle East War is good off ramp for Keith Stamer of UK, too.

Horn of Hormuz would be closed soon.

Oil price hike like in 1963 is inevitable.

Then, every sordid affair is forgotten.

Strangely, Davis Icke who is banned by YouTube is surfacing after over 30 year gap.

Is this all an AI generated SAGA by Elon Musk?