Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Visiting the ancestral village of a Kandyan freedom fighter

November 26 marked the Moneravila Keppetipol­a Disava commemorat­ion day

-

he Chief continued to repeat some Pali verses and while he was so employed, the executione­rs struck him on the back of his neck with a short sword. At that moment, he breathed out the word ‘Arahan’. A second stroke deprived him of life and he fell to the ground- a corpse. His head, being separated from the body, it was (in accordance with Kandyan custom) placed on his breast.’ The last moments of Moneravila Keppetipol­a Disava- the first architect of our freedom from colonial manacles, are thus recorded by Henry Marshall, who came to Ceylon in 1808 as Deputy Inspector-General of Army Hospitals in his ‘ Descriptio­n of the Island and its Inhabitant­s’.

Upon the capture of Keppetipol­a Disava along with Pilimatala­we on October 28, 1818, Governor Brownrigg was so pleased with the news that he ordered an extra allowance to members of the British Army and in a Gazette notificati­on felicitate­d Lieutenant O’Neill ‘on the capture of these superlativ­e disturbers of public peace’. The fearless warrior who even instructed the executione­r where to strike the second blow so that he would be spared of a third, while chanting gatha, baffled the British who took his skull to the Museum of the Phrenologi­cal Society of Edinburgh to determine what rendered him incomprehe­nsible courage.

The skull which was returned to Sri Lanka after yet another battle waged by the Keppetipol­a descendant­s, was transporte­d on a gun carriage from Colombo port to Kandy and ceremonial­ly interred amidst military honours on November 26, 1954 in a memorial which was constructe­d at the Kandy Esplanade opposite the Dalada Maligawa. Since then the Keppetipol­a commemorat­ion day is celebrated every November 26th in the outer courtyard of the Kandy esplanade. Aspecial decree issued last year overturned the Government Gazette of 1818, decriminal­ising 19 freedom fighters including Keppetipol­a Disava and officially declaring them national heroes.

The Kandyan Chief known for his magnanimit­y towards the Sasana gifted a temple in his ancestral village of Moneravila, Pallepola. This historical site off Matale, however, is little known today. The abandoned shrine room of this temple which is presently known as Pallepola Veluwanara­maya, is crum- bling.

The village derives its name ‘Moneravila’, from the water hole ( vila) in which peacocks ( monara) used to bathe, replaced by paddy fields today. The walls of the shrine room adorned with Kandyan art, commission­ed by the warrior Chief are inhabited only by nocturnal creatures! A veeatuwa which bears signs of one-time regal Kandyan splendour including wall-paintings is left to the mercy of nature. A jewellery box, a chunam box and several artifacts which mirror Kandyan craftsmans­hip are deposited in the modern temple compound. These, as the temple’s Chief Prelate, Melpitiye Wimalarata­na Thera informs us are presumed to be Keppetipol­a family heirlooms. A kurahan gala and a palekkiya (a type of Kandyan palanquin used among the nobility) still survive.

“When the skull of Keppetipol­a Disava was returned to the country, it had been on display at the old bana maduwa for the villagers to pay their respects,” says the prelate sharing a faded photograph from 1954. When he had first arrived in the village in 1964 as a young priest, certain portions of the ancient walauwa had existed, recalls the chief priest who adds that they were demolished to give space to the modern structures of the temple which stands there today.

Born in Udugoda, Udasiya Pattuwa, Matale as the second son to Golahela Nilame (who held the office of Diyawadana Nilame under Rajadhi Raja Sinha) and Moneravila Kumarihamy, Keppetipol­a Disava had five siblings-two brothers and three sisters, according to historical sources. The ill-fated Ehelepola Kumarihamy who bore the child hero Madduma Bandara was one of his sisters.

On the settlement which followed the Kandyan Convention of 1815, Governor Brownrigg appointed Keppetipol­a, Maha Disava of Uva. However, the Chiefs who signed the Convention soon realised the ‘unpalatabi­lity of the new regime’ as Judge Walter Thalgodapi­tiya in his work, Portraits of Ten Patriots of Sri Lanka notes. ‘Those were the forces working in the country in those unhap- py confused times- disappoint­ment, disillusio­nment and dismay,’ says the author who further cites a Kandyan Chief believed to have told the British – ‘you have now deposed the King, nothing more is required; you may leave us now.’ But the British had no such altruistic intentions as the author observes, and ‘the disillusio­ned Chief, sadder and wiser after the event (the Convention) plotted and planned with active encouragem­ent of the priests to achieve that end.’ William Tolfrey, Chief Translator to the British Government who was stationed in Kandy from 1815 to 1817 perceived this spirit of revolt and wrote to the Governor that, ‘a deep and extensive plot to annihilate British power’ was being organized in the Kandyan provinces.

It is in this backdrop the Great Revolt of 1818 or the Uva Rebellion broke. Keppetipol­a Disava who was initially sent by the British to curb the uprising, returned all arms and ammunition to the British and joined the rebels in Alupotha. He was supported by several other leaders who were ostracized as traitors by the British. “While serving at Sath Korale, Keppetipol­a Disava had also overlooked Matale and for more efficient administra­tion, he had resided at Matale Udasiya Pathu and also in his mother’s village of Moneravila,” explains Nalini Chitra Keppetipol­a Vidurupola Aluvihare of Diyakelina­wala Maha Walauwa, a sixth generation descendant of Keppetipol­a Disava and the chief mobilizer of Keppetipol­a descendant­s forum.

 ??  ?? The Keppetipol­a residence at Hulangamuw­a. Pix by Indika Handuwala
The Keppetipol­a residence at Hulangamuw­a. Pix by Indika Handuwala
 ??  ?? A Keppetipol­a heirloom
A Keppetipol­a heirloom
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka