Friday, April 25, 2014

Dr Subramanian Swamy's Lecture--Genetics in Sri Lanka.


email from "J. K. S. Weerasekera"

Mixing of genes. A big mix. Not surprising as the Moors, Muslims and traders of old kept their women back at home. Except those who came here from the east .

Actually it was claimed  statistically  that within 500 years a gene would spread to each and every individual in the world. That was before gene evidence came in.
The Sinhalese and the south Indians have about 10% “Aryan” blood, according to a very limited gene study conducted in the last decade.

And how mixed are the pure ‘Aryan”s? Ask the late unlamented Adolph Hitxxx !
Adolph too was very very mixed!
jksw


Interesting piece --worth a read-Thanks Philip

FORWARDING AS RECEIVED
Race in Sri Lanka: What genetic evidence tells us By Asiff Hussei
Muslims least exclusive community in Sri Lanka 
Race is a touchy issue almost everywhere in the world but nowhere is this more pronounced than in countries where there is a plurality of peoples. People become more race conscious when another group of people differing in physical features, language, culture and religion live in their midst. The greater the difference, the greater the distance. But there is one little thing that people often miss out on, which is that all races can freely interbreed with one another. This, needless to say, points only to one fact, that all humans have a common origin. From the Darkest African to the Fairest European or the Red Indian from a continent discovered a little over 500 years ago, all men are one. The Biblical story of Adam and Eve after all does seem to have a factual basis.
The latest genetic studies done on Sri Lankan populations have overturned some popular misconceptions with regard to race exclusiveness. For one thing, it has shown that the country’s Muslims known as the Moors, are the least exclusive of the peoples studied. On the other end of the spectrum are the Veddahs, who, despite some intermarriage with neighbouring Sinhalese have managed to preserve much of their original gene pool that goes back to the island’s Stone Age.
The study Development of Databases for Autosomal, Y-Chromosomal and Mitochondrial DNA Markers and their application in forensic casework and population genetics in Sri Lankan Populations by Dr. Ruwan Illeperuma took into consideration paternally inherited Y-Chromosome DNA, maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA and non-sex determined autosomal markers. It revealed some interesting facts on the peopling of Sri Lanka which both confirm and question established notions of race in the country.
Muslims least exclusive
The country’s Muslims, the Moor community have been shown to be genetically the most diverse of all communities, challenging the stereotype of the Moors being a rather exclusive people who hardly marry outside. Dr. Illeperuma found that the Muslims (Moors) possessed greater genetic diversity than the other ethnic groups studied, which would indicate that they have mixed more with others. For instance with regard to Autosomal or Chromosomal Non-Sex-inherited DNA, the Moors were shown to be the most heterozygous of the groups studied. This suggests greater gene flow into the Moor community from other communities when compared with the rest of the groups studied. This indicates that they had freely intermarried with these other groups.
Further with regard to paternally inherited Y-chromosomal DNA, the Moors were shown to possess certain male lineages that came from other communities and most closely approached those of the Sinhalese. They had the lowest number of population-specific haplotypes (Y-STR haplotypes), which indicates more sharing of male haplotypes with others than the other groups shared with each other. Furthermore, a phylogenetic analysis of male-inherited Y-chromosome haplotypes showed the Sinhalese to be closest to the Moors in male lineages when compared with the other groups.
With regard to maternally-inherited Mt DNA, the Moors shared the greatest proportion of non-unique haplotypes (HVS1) with others showing that they had been subjected to gene flow from the other groups in connection with female lineages. The Mt DNA tree indicated a clustering of Sinhalese and Moors, suggesting a close affinity when compared to the Veddahs and Sri Lankan Tamils. This suggests a greater contribution to their maternal lineages from the Sinhalese. Dr. Illeperuma however cautioned that the small number of Moors represented in the study does not permit us to be conclusive in this regard and that it is only a larger sample that could be reliably taken to be representative of the community as a whole.
What all this suggests is that the Moors have been the least exclusive of the country’s major communities, as far as the genetic evidence is concerned. That their maternally-inherited Mt DNA should closely resemble that of the Sinhalese should not come as a surprise given the historical evidence for Moor men espousing Sinhalese women. There is considerable evidence to show that the early Arabian settlers of the country intermarried with the daughters of the land. These early seafaring Muslims who arrived to trade here did not bring women with them and so married local women when they chose to settle down here.
The Moors of Akurana for instance trace their descent to three Arabian mercenaries who espoused Kandyan women during the reign of King Rajasinha II (1635-1687). The Gopala (Betge Nilame) family of Moors domiciled in Getaberiya in the Kegalle district likewise claim descent from Arab physicians who arrived in the country from Sind during the reign of King Parakramabahu II (1236-1270) of Dambadeniya and espoused Sinhalese women. Indeed, some of the members of this clan are said to have been given in marriage daughters of the Kandyan nobility. According to a surviving member of the clan who is now over 90 years old, Mohamedu Udayar of Gevilipitiya, oral tradition passed down the generations has it that their first ancestor who settled in the country took in marriage Tikiri Kumari, daughter of Unambuve Rala. This is interesting since the Govi clan of Unambuva were deemed to be of a very high status in Sinhalese society, being a clan with which even Sinhalese royalty, including the last true Sinhalese monarch, Narendra Sinha, married into. In fact, we were informed by Sheikh Mohamadu Udayar’s son, Sheikh Hamees that his father is still addressed as Nilame by elderly village folk while he too has been addressed as Punchi Nilame. The women of the clan he pointed out are likewise addressed as Menike. Titles such as these were used in the olden days only to address those of a high social standing.

However it was not only women of the higher classes of Sinhalese that the Moors espoused. E.B. Denham observed in his Ceylon at the Census of 1911: “Amongst the Moors in Colombo and Galle at the present day there must be a fairly considerable infusion of Sinhalese blood; the number of Sinhalese women married to or living with Moors is fairly large”. We even hear of a Moor who had settled in a village of the untouchable Rodi caste of the Sinhalese, sharing their life and enjoying connubium with them, if we are to believe M.D.Raghavan who observed as such in his work Handsome Beggars. The Rodiyas of Ceylon published in 1957.

What is however interesting is that their paternally-inherited Y-chromosome DNA also showed some affinity with others, especially the Sinhalese, which may perhaps best be explained on the basis that some Sinhalese males entered the Moor community by way of adoption. There exists considerable evidence to show that the Moors of a little over a century ago adopted Sinhalese boys and girls, and brought them up as Muslims G.A. Dharmaratna observed in the latter part of the 19th century, in his work Kara-Goi Contest (1890) that “the Moors add to their number poor Singhalese boys and girls who are duly received into their community”. And Paul E. Pieris could observe in the early part of the twentieth century, in his monumental work Ceylon. The Portuguese Era (1914) that the adoption of anboys of other communities was “still a popular practice among the Moors”.
What all this shows is that the Moors of old do not seem to have harboured racial prejudices of any kind, unlike some who do today. It was probably in keeping with the spirit of their Islamic faith, which, like Christianity, held that all humans had a common origin – from Adam and Eve.


Incredible video of 80 year old tango dancer.


email from Kamalini Kanapathippillai

Thursday, April 24, 2014

The 'Southern Expressway' - E 01, Sri Lanka.





Click on web-link below to watch a video of snapshots of the journey:-

http://youtu.be/Ox4Tzh1vyss

Tamils of Sri Lanka.

email forwarded by jks weerasekera.

Ceylon Daily News 27 March 2014
Citizens’ Mail] 2014-03-27

Some true human qualities and colours of the Tamil people

The Mahinda Rajapaksa regime dispelled the differences which existed between the Sinhalese and the Tamils, established peace among all nations, and made 'one nation' out of the five communities and placed them as 'Sri Lankans'.

During the era our country was a colony of the British Empire, my father was one out of the few locals who were among the European rubber planters.
He was at Hatbawe Group at Rambukkana.
The workforce in this estate were Tamils of Indian origin who later became citizens like in every other estate in the country.

Sinhalese who lived in the bordering villages also were among them in small numbers, like today.

The estate staff had a weekly get-together with their families in one of the divisions on rotation, to while away the loneliness which surrounded them.

Dr. A.B.J. Rajendram from Jaffna was the estate Dispenser.
My father and Dr. Rajendram were bosom friends.
I was 12 years old when I met him for the first time.
He was pious and kind, loved us very much as he loved his only son Mangalanayagam who served in the RCyAF (Royal Ceylon Air Force).
During one such occasion in 1951 he suggested to my father to admit us to a school in Jaffna.
My father consented and within a few days I was in St. Patrick’s College, Jaffna with two of my younger brothers under the Very Rev. Fr. T.M.G. Long O.M.I.
Furthermore, Dr. Rajendram designated his intended son-in-law William to be our guardian.
William visited us every week and attended to our needs throughout the entire period of our stay there in loco parentis.
We hostellers were allowed to go home during the weekends and return on Sunday.
Rambukkana was a too long destination for the three of us to avail ourselves of this privilege.

On the courteous invitation of hosteller Ramanathan who took notice of the situation, we spent the weekends with his parents.

On the left side of the Tellipalai railway station is a level-crossing.
Immediately passing it on the right side was Ramanathan’s house.
His merciful and hospitable parents treated us in the same manner they treated their son.

We can never forget the home made Jaffna string hoppers and puttu (pittu) with or without sugar, or with curry, and fruits especially mangoes and other varieties of tasty food we were treated with by his generous mother every time we spent a holiday with them.
Her loving motherliness did not make us feel the absence of our mother to whom we were able to go to only once in three months.
When I was with my parents awaiting results of the Higher School Certificate examination I was invited to spend a holiday with this doctor who was then at Kirimittiya Estate at Menikdiwela.
My presence with them made the elderly couple happy because I filled the absence of their only son away in employment.

I assisted the doctor in his clerical work in the dispensary.
One day the Superintendent of the estate Jack Burtons paid a surprise visit to the dispensary.
On seeing him I exited at once.
Having observed my calligraphy during his inspection, the Periya Dorai had conveyed his desire to see me at his bungalow.

The following day as I stepped into his bungalow in the company of the doctor at 7 a.m. as appointed, “Do you like to become a planter young man?”, he questioned me.
“Yes Sir”, I replied. “This evening you will receive the letter”, he concluded.
On that day in 1958 as destined, I began to apprentice as a Superintendent.

When premier S.W.R.D. Bandaranayake was assassinated in 1959 I was Assistant Superintendent of the Peak Division of that estate.
This is how the foundation to my future was laid by a Tamil national for the second time.
During my tenure of service in the Gal Oya Development Board, S.C.T. Sambandhan an Assistant Superintendent from Kopay in Jaffna was an official who was close to my heart. I first met him in 1962.
When he assumed duties as the Sugar Plantation Manager, he placed me as his Senior Aide and when he assumed duties as the General Manager he placed me as his Personal Assistant.
When my six months old twins fell sick in end 1973, I happened to pay an informal visit to my office mate Sinnathamby’s house on my way to the Batticaloa hospital.
His parents lived near the railway station close to the GODB’s transit stores.
I gave up my idea of admitting my children to the hospital when Thamby’s mother undertook to cure them.
So we stayed with them in Batticaloa until she cured my children.
She cleaned their wounds, washed them daily and having a box containing the materia medica, treated them and cured them sooner than we expected.
She was no second to my children’s own mother.

When my three year old second son was admitted to the Batticaloa hospital in 1974 to be treated for nephritis by Paediatrician Dr. S. Pathmanathan, it was the House Officer Dr. Ragunathan who looked after our son as we were 47 miles away in Hingurana.
According to the nursing staff, Dr. Ragunathan had been carrying my son in the nights trying to pacify him when he cried calling for his mother. These are the true qualities of the Tamils.
I am placing this material before a new generation to enable them to understand the true colours of the people of this country and give up spiteful misconceptions rooted in rancorous writings and utterances of the misanthropists of the past.
L.A.W. LIYANA ARACHCHI
KADAWATHA

 

Lasith Malinga's yorkers

email from "J. K. S. Weerasekera" - 
Awesome
As a youngster he was “that bugher from Galle”.

13 minutes of Yorkers at 139-144 Km per hour.
jksw


Subject: Slinger Lasith Malinga's yorkers - Awesome


Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Coeliac disease and NSAIDS.

Is ibuprofen making us sick? Research suggests it may cause gut conditions such as coeliac disease

A National Institutes of Health study revealed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs can cause intestinal inflammation and can increase the permeability of the intestines.

Full Story:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2610158/Is-ibuprofen-making-sick-Research-suggests-cause-coeliac-disease.html

23 April 2014
http://www.dailymail.co.uk

Spectacular Salsa - Paddy & Nico - Electric Ballroom | Britain's Got Talent 2014.

email from Gallege De Silva

21 Apr (3 days ago)

Your never too old......................enjoy.






THIS WILL MAKE YOU STARE IN TOTAL AWE ( and maybe disbelief! )
 
Whatever this sweet gal is taking, I want a full dose of it!.
 
Enjoy.