Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Banking industry bids adieu to national treasure

- H.P. WIJEWARDEN­A

H. Kalubanda, a profession­al banker who functioned at a senior level, passed away recently following a brief illness – barely two weeks between diagnosis and death.

Kalubanda, KB to his friends, passed out from Peradeniya in 1959 having read for a general degree with economics as a subject. After his early education in village school, he joined Ibbagamuwa Central where he continued his studies until he gained university admission. He was among the first flowers to blossom from the free education system to which many of us owe much. Selection to university was a great achievemen­t in those far away days. The priest of his village temple, a close kinsman, having warmly congratula­ted and offered his blessings, insisted on one thing: that he should never change his name – an injunction he dutifully complied with. He remained to the last-kalubanda.

After graduation, KB had a steppingst­one teaching assignment at Kegalu Vidyalaya from where he proceeded to the Official Languages Department as a translator. When the newly-establishe­d People’s Bank sought promising graduates for its expanding network, KB got a chance of joining the bank service as a graduate trainee. Thereafter, it was a slow but steady advancemen­t to the very summit, having passed all banking examinatio­ns then conducted by London Institute of Bankers – the first in his batch to do so; he retired as Senior Deputy General Manager. Along with colleagues of his vintage, there was unfortunat­ely a lingering discontent that they were left in the lurch in regard to glaringly-disproport­ionate ‘pensions’ those who followed reaped. True to the good nature that characteri­sed him, as he got establishe­d in life, he supported his siblings by guiding their children, enabling some of them to enter legal and accountanc­y profession­s.

KB was a dynamic person capable of hard work. At retirement, he resorted to translatio­n, putting his abilities in both Sinhala and English to good use.

KB was a keen observer of political and economic landscapes. He intervened from time to time, through the daily press, to protest against certain developmen­ts which he judged, according to his lights, as harmful to the country’s future.

His family life commenced when he married Nanda Balasuriya, a teacher from a well-establishe­d family in Dewalapola. It was great solace to him that he was surrounded by his daughter and grandchild­ren in recent days as his wife was in bad health. KB took delight in the company of his close circle of friends. The get-togethers he arranged for them provided an opportunit­y to relax.

KB took his religion seriously, going to the extent of working for a master’s degree in Buddhist philosophy. The departure of a close friend of over sixty years is a matter of great sorrow. But sure knowledge that his life without blemish would assure him a good birth is consoling. His family and friends wish him the bliss of Nirvana in the Buddhist tradition.

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