Friday, December 29, 2023

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2024 -TO THE MEDGRAD 62 GROUP

HAPPY NEW YEAR TO THE MEDGRAD 62 GROUP

I am resurrecting a post from our wonderful late batchmate Zita, which was posted in 2011. It is still relevant, and what a good way to remember her! 

Speedy.

New Year Resolutions- From Zita


I sit with twenty eleven receding
And twenty twelve fast approaching
Thinking of resolutions to make
While the world is still awake
Ghosts of resolutions made last
In mock parade seem to march past
Best-laid plans set like in gold
Alas, they do often unfold
What does the word mean anyway?
So you google Resolutions and Hey!


There are 1005 smart  definitions
(some of which defy comprehension)
You go away in confusion muttering
Unmentionable words uttering
Then open dictionary on ‘Resolution’ entry
Says it means ‘loosen up gently
Relax and release’ and end
This ghastly meaningless annual trend
‘God helps those who help themselves’ it’s said
But the devil is in the detail, I’m afraid!

HAPPY NEW YEAR

Sunday, December 24, 2023

MERRY CHRISTMAS 2023

 Merry Christmas!

On this Christmas day, 2023, please enjoy my presentation and spare a thought for all our batchmates and families. Let us also recall our dear departed friends with fondness and love.

Mahendra Gonsalkorale




Friday, December 15, 2023

Happy Christmas and Happy New Year 2024

 Happy Christmas and New Year 2024

Another year has disappeared!.

We lost five colleagues in 2023, making the departed total 52.

48. Cecil Saverimuttu 26.1.2023

49. J. C. Fernando 18.04.2023

50. Navam Chinniah 03.082023

51. PHILOMENA P THIRAVIAM 6.9.2023

52. Indrani (Subramanium) Anthonypillai Oct 2023

Please do keep in touch and you have many ways to do so- The Blog, the WhatsApp group, email, phone etc.

In accordance with tradition, we wish all colleagues and their families a most enjoyable festive season and a Happy New Year.

Chirasri sent this beautiful painting last year, which I used again.


Note added on 16th December.
Chira sent me a beautiful painting for this year and here it is. 
Chira wants me to add this:- "Wishing all my batchmates a Happy Xmas and New Year."

The number of people actively participating in the blog is dwindling, but we shall keep providing the food with the fond hope that it is being consumed by many, albeit without fuss or fanfare! We enjoy doing so and never lose hope. Do not forget that our “family” is still of great value to many of us.

Any articles and comments sent will make our day! So, please oblige

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Pram’s Forever 62 Group

Pram’s Forever 62 Group

Pram has been a key figure in promoting regular meetings of our batchmates in Sri Lanka. Whenever overseas friends visit Sri Lanka, she does her best to arrange a social gathering of batchmates and spouses. She has been doing this for years. When she visits London, she does the same, and I am always happy to assist her. Three hearty cheers for Pram! (no objection if this is increased to 6 cheers in line with inflation!)

The Sri Lankan chapter, now called “Forever 62”, last met on the 25th of November 2023 in the Library, Cinnamon Gardens Hotel in Colombo. Here are some photos sent by Pram and Indra (Anandasabapathy).

Try to identify all attendees when commenting, as there will be a special prize for the first correct entry!






Saturday, December 2, 2023

Dr Carmel Indranie Ernest- wife of Cyril Ernest, by Kumar Gunawardane

 An Incomparable Friend; Dr Carmel Indranie Ernest

Published on Island on line on  2023/11/26 

Indranie with husband, Cyril and daughters, Cheryl and Melanie 

 

“WHEN SOMEONE YOU CHERISH BECOMES A MEMORY,

THAT MEMORY BECOMES A TREASURE”   –ANON

The email from Cyril was short and simple. But the effect was seismic . It hit Kanthi ( my wife) and me with the might of a sledgehammer blow. Indranie, his lifelong partner, had passed away after a brief illness.

Cyril was one of my closest friends, and also my roommate in our final year in Bloemfontein, the boisterous medical student’s hostel adjoining Carey College. We got to know Indrani well in that eventful year in Los Angeles where I did an Echocardiography Fellowship with an outstanding Sri Lanka born cardiologist, Dr Tony Chandraratne.

Indranie was born in 1942 in Moratuwa, a town hallowed in history; 1942 was also the year that the Japanese bombed Colombo and Trincomalee. Moratuwa which escaped the bombs was the birthplace of heroes who bravely stood up to the British conquerors, peerless philanthropists and also skilled artisans who fashioned furniture from local hardwoods; these surpassed the best European fitments.

She would no doubt have imbued this heritage as well as those of her parents; her father was an accountant and the mother a dutiful housewife. Indranie was the second of five siblings and was noted always for her placid temperament, charming smile and friendliness. She was also deeply religious. However she also was adept at separating wheat from the chaff; one of her favourite sayings was ‘all that glitters is not gold’.

At school she shone academically but was also proficient in sports particularly netball and athletics. In 1962 she was among the first recruits to the newly established medical school in the sylvan surroundings of Peradeniya. It was here that the champion cricketer, Cyril, bowled over the pretty colleen and embarked on his longest partnership. They married 53 years ago and could echo Winston Churchill’s words “we lived happily ever afterwards”.

Both graduated in 1967, she from Peradeniya and Cyril from Colombo where he had relocated on account of his many sporting commitments. In 1973 they emigrated to the USA for further medical training; Cyril qualified as a cardiologist and Indrani as an Internist . They then moved to Lancaster in California in 1977 where both established outstanding practices . ( Indranie was a popular and successful physician as many of her former patients would attest. One very eloquent tribute states “her warm smile, quiet demeanour and even temperament made everyone who encountered her feel comfortable in her presence”. She remained a caring and dedicated physician to the end of her days. But the family was her first concern. Cyril and the two beautiful and accomplished daughters Cheryl and Melanie were her primacy.

ANNUS MIRABILIS

I arrived, unannounced , in Los Angeles in 1988. Cyril somehow got wind of my coming, and on a Friday evening fronted up in the Howard Johnson Hotel in Boyle Heights. With few preliminaries, he bundled me into his luxurious Mercedes sedan and drove onto their elegant mansion in Encino the suburb where Michael Jackson too lived. Indranie was at the door with a warm welcoming smile which made me feel at home instantly. A delicious meal followed, the first of many.

It was my first meeting with Indranie. I had heard about her from our mutual friend and fellow hosteller Ganesh. Cyril and he traveled to Peradeniya on their free weekends.

Being a very private person, Cyril , never breathed a word about his mysterious sojourns; neither did he say anything about his many sporting accomplishments.

There were many other visits to Encino at weekends; they would guide me around the myriad shops in LA, and Indranie in particular helped me to get the household goods I needed for an unfurnished apartment which I had rented in South Pasadena, prior to Kanthi’s arrival.

One weekend they drove me to an orange grove outside the city, where a friend resided.Indranie graciously let me sit in the front , so I could enjoy the sweeping vistas and Cyril’s commentary.

Even after Kanthi came we were regular visitors. Cyril would invite eminent cardiologists who he felt maybe useful to me; also some colleagues from our year of 1962 in Medical school. Kanthi being a good cook , we were able to reciprocate their hospitality.

Their sincerity and affection was never more evident, as when Kanthi fell ill.

She had a severe upper abdominal pain; I imagined the worst and visualized removal of the gallbladder which was a major undertaking in the pre-laparoscopic surgery era.Indranie being the skilled internist she was, pacified us and telephoned a pharmacy near us to provide appropriate medications.

Next day we went over to her rooms where she performed a detailed examination and got the needed scans. Then we were seen by a surgical colleague who reassured us that it was an intestinal colic. Our relief was immeasurable. The year ended on a happy note.

We had a farewell dinner in our apartment which was graced by Cyril and Indranie. There were many encounters since. Once both of us were stranded in the Los Angeles airport as the friend who had promised to pick us, failed to turn up. We then called Indranie who promptly invited us home. Cyril was away in Lancaster as he was on call.

Our last meeting was in the Anantara Peace Haven Resort in Tangalle in Sri Lanka in 2020, just before the Covid pandemic broke out. We along with Cyril , Indranie and Melanie and others were attending the wedding of Lareef Idroos and Nabila’s daughter.

All of us had a grand time with friends and colleagues. Sadly it was also our last rendezvous..

We can now only seek solace in Jalaluddin Rumi’s wisdom.

“Do not grieve. Anything you lose comes around in another form”

And the deathless verse of Mary Elizabeth Frye

“Do not stand at my grave and weep,

I’m not there I do not sleep,

I’m a thousand winds that blow,

I’m the diamond glints on snow,

I’m the sunlight on ripened corn,

I’m the gentle autumn rain.

When you awaken in the morning’s hush,

I’m the swiftly uplifting rush,

Of the quiet birds in the circled flight,

I’m the soft stars that shine at night.

Do not stand at my grave and cry,

I’m not there. I did not die.

Farewell our dearest Friend.

May the good Earth lie softly on you.

May God hold you always in the Palm of His hand.”

Kumar Gunawardane

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Kumars’ thoughts and appreciation of the Blog

Kumars’ thoughts and appreciation of the Blog

Kumar Gunawardane

Note by Speedy. This was sent to me by Kumar to be published as a comment. I thought it was worthy of  a post in its own right. Thank you Kumar.

Dear Mahen, Srianee, ND, Rohini, Sanath, Bora, Suri, Lucky et al.,

My sincere apologies for my long absence from the blog. There are many valid excuses which I will not elaborate upon. But I have been a regular visitor, enjoying the posts and the comments.

Thank you, Srianee, for the glorious photos of the 2017 reunion. I lingered long, reliving that wonderful occasion. Sadly some of the attendees are not with us, but we must be thankful that so many of us are alive and kicking. I also cherished your post on Dr Abraham Varghese’s “The Covenant of Water “. Will get a copy when I return to base. Coincidentally, I met a friend who had been one of his pupils.

One of my favourite novels is Of Human Bondage, the semi-autobiographical novel of Somerset Maugham; the leading character is based on his own experiences. SM’s stammer becomes  Philip Carey’s limp. His unrequited love for Mildred, the waitress, also struck a chord with me. 

You will be acquainted with other great writers/ poets who were also physicians. Foremost being Anton Chekhov, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Khaled Hosseini and John Keats. 

William Osler, who has been called the “Father of modern medicine” was also an excellent writer. ‘He had recommended to his students that they should have a non-medical library by their beds that could be dipped in and out profitably to create well-rounded physicians’.I was lucky to purchase a copy of his “Principles and Practice of Medicine, which was being discarded by our hospital library. 

Mahen, I sincerely appreciate your valiant efforts to keep the blog alive and vibrant. You deserve a medal, perhaps even an equivalent to the Victoria Cross for your endeavours. Your innovations truly added lustre to an already sparkling blog. Thanks also for the photos of you with Manil and Jimmy and those of the Colombo mini-reunions. All credit to Pram, who, as has been said, does the hard yards and then keeps a low profile. You all look good; I hesitate to say well preserved, as a sarcastic wit could link it with fruit or fish. 

Manil looks much the same as she was fifty years ago when we chanced upon each other during an MRCP course at the Northwick Park Hospital. At Medical School, she was only two seats away from me at Physiology lectures; but in those staid times, our tête-à-têtes were few. A notable exception was a visit to her home in Udahamulla with the late Tilak D. He was smitten,  had got to know that M and I were distantly related and twisted my arm. We arrived unannounced, except for the roar of Tilak’s motorcycle; she and her mother were very hospitable, however, and in true Sri Lankan style, fed us well. 

I was sad to learn of Indrani Subs demise. I remember her mainly for her mellifluous speaking voice and being congratulated by Prof Koch for a good presentation at the regular student physiology seminars. They were a great innovation and should have been emulated by other departments. 

Mahen, I have written an appreciation of Indranie, Cyri Ernest’s wife. I will forward it in due course. 

ND, what can I say about you that has already not been said. Your masterpieces alone make the Blog worthwhile to be preserved for posterity. 

Rohini, Bora, Sanath, Suri and Lucky, it has been a privilege to be your friend these many years. Your achievements have embellished our group, but it’s mostly your friendship and good humour that I cherish. Also, your contributions to the Blog. Bora’s Banter in the blog is a good read over and over again. Please keep writing.

 Kumar

Thursday, November 2, 2023

BATCH REMINISCENCES

BATCH REMINISCENCES - 50th Anniversary Batch Reunion 2017

The 2017 Reunion at Jetwing Hotel in Negombo from 3rd to 5th March

I am publishing a selection of photos sent by Srianee (Bunter) Dias (Fernando). Some of our friends have left the departure lounge and boarded, First Class, of course! I won't spoil the fun by identifying everybody in this wonderful collection. Thanks, Srianee. If any of you want to add to this collection, please email them to me.

If you move your meeya (mouse) to any photo and click, all the photos will appear in small icons at the bottom of the page. You can click on them one by one to see them in detail. The one you click will appear in the centre till usurped by you clicking on another When you want to return to the Blog. move your mouse pointer to the top Right corner, where you will see a white diagonal cross in a square box, then click on it, and you will return to the Blog page. 

If you wish to save an image on your computer, right-click with the mouse pointer on the photo and you will be given the option to save it.




















Wednesday, October 18, 2023

KEEPING IN TOUCH

Keeping in touch.....

Mahendra Gonsalkorale (Speedy)

We do our best to keep in touch.

We have a WhatsApp group

We have this Blog.

We see each other whenever it is possible during our travels.

The pictures you see include my meeting last week with Jimmy and Manil Katugampola and pictures that Pram sent me of her group. Also, a photo of Maheshwary Nadarajah (Singarayer) with Sarath Perera (junior batch) taken earlier this year)

Long may it last, as the ship gets ever nearer to docking!

Pram has a "Forever 62"meeting which she describes as follows:

"The group in SL is called Forever 62. Bunter ( Srianee) gave us the name when she was here earlier this year and joined us for one of our dinners. We are a happy bunch of about 14. Not all of us manage to get together monthly but we try. We are organising a Christmas party on the 20th December"







Saturday, October 7, 2023

Indrani Anthonypillai ( nee Subramanium) passed away

Indrani Anthonypillai ( nee Subramanium) passed away


I just received this sad news from Pram Senanayake.

"Dear friends just heard the sad news that Indrani Anthonypillai ( nee Subramanium) passed away in the UK. I have been in close touch with her. Spoke to her even 4 days ago. Her brother Bala, who was also our batch, is in the USA and is flying over to The UK for the funeral. Her daughter Dr Rose & her son in law Dr John brought her to all the London reunions. We will miss her".

I shall post more details when I receive them.

May her Soul Rest in Peace.

Saturday, September 23, 2023

Cyril Ernest's wife Indrani passes away.

 Cyril Ernest's wife Indrani passes away.


As most of you know by now, Cyril's lovely wife, Indrani, passed away recently.

I have met her in my travels to the US and also at Reunions in Sri Lanka. She was always most welcoming and friendly with her engaging personality.

They have two daughters, Cheryl and Melanie.

Let us all join in conveying our condolences to Cyril and family. 

May she Rest in Peace.

Monday, September 11, 2023

Sad news of Philomena P Thiraviam passing away

Sad news of Philomena P Thiraviam passing away


Just heard from Maheswary Nadarajah (Singharayer) that PP Thiraviam passed away on the 6th of September.
She is the 51st on the list of departed colleagues

I recall her as a quiet girl, always in Sari.
As far as I know, she never left Sri Lanka.
More details will be posted when I can get them. Please send me or post a comment if anyone has any information about her.

Saturday, September 9, 2023

The growth of Medical Faculties in Sri Lanka. Mahendra Gonsalkorale

The growth of Medical Faculties in Sri Lanka.

Mahendra Gonsalkorale

In our time there were only two Medical Facuties in Sri Lanka, Colombo and Peradeniya. This article attempts to show the growth in medical faculties in Sri Lanka. I should be most grateful to our colleagues in Sri Lanka, especially Sanath Lamabadusuriya who is intimately connected with Medical Education in Sri Lanka correct any errors and add helpful comments.

The longest standing Medical School in Sri Lanka, the Colombo Medical School, was founded on 1st June 1870 and admitted twenty-five students. They were awarded a diploma of Licentiate in Medicine and Surgery (L.M.S.). In 1880, the School was named the Ceylon Medical College and the L.M.S. was registered with the General Medical Council of Britain without further examination.

Following the establishment of the University of Ceylon by the University Ordinance of 1942, the MBBS degree and the BDS degree awarded by it were also recognized for registration by the CMCC and the medical school acquired university status as the Faculty of Medicine.

Subsequently, in 1978, the university act was changed and the campuses of the University of Ceylon became regional universities. Thus, the Faculty of Medicine became part of the University of Colombo.

Over time, more faculties of medicine were established; at present, there are 12 medical faculties in Sri Lanka, i.e. the medical faculties of the Universities of Colombo, Peradeniya, Jaffna, Ruhuna, Kelaniya, Moratuwa, Sabaragamuwa, Rajarata, Wyamba, Uva Wellassa, South Eastern and Sri Jayewardenepura.

There is also a Faculty of Medicine in the Sir John Kotelewala Defence University in Ratmalana.

North Colombo Medical College (NCMC) was the first privately funded medical school in Sri Lanka. It started in 1980 with the admission of 100 local and 20 foreign students

In 2022, about 1200 graduated from the Universities in Sri Lanka

1,961 students who sat for the A/L examination in 2019 and 14,80 students who sat the A/L examination in 2018 had enrolled at medical faculties in the respective years.The total number of students allowed to enroll at universities following the 2020 A/L examination is 43,500, which is a significant increase compared to the 12,000 students who enrolled for universities after to 2019 A/L examination.

Medical graduates from Sri Lanka have an excellent reputation, and certainly, here in the UK, they are recognised for their reliability, skill and overall excellence.

It would be interesting to view the statistics (if available) on how many doctors left to work abroad permanently.

13.09.2023  The following comment was made by Prof. Sanath Lamabadusuriya and as it contains valuable information, I am adding it to the main post.

Professor Sanath LamabadusuriyaSeptember 12, 2023 at 6:04 AM

Thank you very much Mahendra for documenting the history of medical education in Sri Lanka. In the early 1970s, University admissions were standardised so that Tamil students had to score more marks than the Sinhala students, to be admitted to Universities. Opposition MPs such as Gamini Dissanaike announced in Parliament that if and when they come to power, standardisation would be abolished. With JRJ's resounding victory in 1977, standardisation was abolished. Then, although Tamils formed 13% of the population, relatively and numerically more Tamils qualified for admission which was politically not palatable and more Sinhala students were admitted,so as to balance the equation. With the increased intake, the two existing faculties, Colombo and Peradeniya, could not accommodate the increased intake. Therefore two new Faculties were opened in Jaffna and Ruhuna so as to accommodate the increased intake. When the Chairs were advertised, I applied and was appointed to the Chair in Ruhuna and I assumed duties on the 1st of September 1980. I was there until I returned To Colombo in September 1991, when the Chair was advertised; on both occasions I was the only applicant!
The Peradeniya Faculty was established because the country was short of doctors, quite ironically, when the first Peradeniya batch graduated in January 1967. all of them were not offered jobs in the government sector and were given an allowance of a few hundred rupees and requested them to be attached to a GP, so as to be trained in PP. At that time, the ECFMG examination was conducted in Colombo and quite a lot of us sat for it. When I sat, about 75% of the candidates were Indians because the exam was banned in India. Our colleagues applied for jobs in the US and quite a lot when to a hospital in Coney Island in New York.
Ruhuna and Jaffna Facuties were established together in the late 1970s. The NCMC became the Kelaniya Faculty in 1991. Sri Jayawardenepura Faculty was opened in 1993..The Rajarata and Eastern University Medical Faculties were opened in July 2006.The Kotelawela Defence University Medical Faculty was opened in 2012.The Sabaragamuwa and Wayamba Medical Faculties were established in 2018, and I was invited to be the consultant for the Sabaragamuwa project. Currently, I am in Ratnapura because the SLMC has sent a team for a review prior to accreditation.
Therefore I have been closely involved with four State Medical Faculties ( Colombo -Emeritus Professor, Ruhuna-Founder Professor, Rajarata-Visiting Senior Professor since April 2015. Sabaragamuwa-Consultant and Visiting Senior Professor).
There was a Presidential directive to open Private Medical Schools.
I was invited to be the Chief Consultant to establish a Private Medical School by Lyceum and SLIIT in Malabe. The Teaching Hospital for SLIIT will be the one in N'Eliya and I will be going there tomorrow from Ratnapura. The hospitals in Rikiligaskada,Teldeniya and Dickoya would be the cluster hospitals. The Teaching Hospitals for Lyceum would be in Chilaw and at Seeduwa, at the Vijaya Kumaranatunga Hospital.
Gateway and the NSBM will also be opening Private Medical Schools in the near future.

Tuesday, August 29, 2023

To Blog or not to Blog- by Speedy

Keeping in touch- "To Blog or not to Blog, that is the question"

Mahendra "Speedy" Gonsalkorale

This was posted in January 2016, and I thought it might be useful to revisit it. It appears as it did in the original, unedited. Come on my friends, release those thoughts lurking in the background and share them with us!

If I pose that question by dropping the ‘l’, the answer is easy! I was tempted to write as I have been wondering for some time why our Blog is not as popular as I was hoping it would be. This view may be erroneous if we base popularity on the number of hits as nearly 890,000 is not bad for a Blog! But we must remember that this is probably not a true representation of popularity as quite a number are automatically generated by surfing robots, as I have pointed out before. These are automated mini-programs, which search Blogs hoping to dredge useful data such as emails of people. Even if for argument’s sake we regard that 50% are robotic hits, it still leaves a healthy 400,000 plus hits. But if we consider how interactive it is, by looking at numbers who comment, then we do fall short by quite a margin. The total number of persons who have commented is below 20 and of these there are less than 10 very active people.

The questions I am posing are these. Why is the comment rate low? How can we get more people involved? How many of our Batch colleagues actually use it? Is it worth sending a questionnaire by email to get the answers? Does the Blog serve a purpose? Is the time and effort made by Lucky so unselfishly, worth it?

Or is this a wider issue about how school friends or University friends keep in touch? We have moved in different directions and we have built up new friendships and we may feel a need to move on putting our past behind us, especially if that part of our past is something we want to forget. We have formed groupings within us based on where we live and our own interests. Our circles have widened and those who we consider worth keeping in touch, we still do but the criterion has to be much wider than “he/she was my batch colleague”. The bonds that we had then have to be very strong for them to survive the ravages of time. We are pleasant when we see each other, but life has taken us in different directions, and we have moved on. We may not feel the need to rekindle the relationship.

Then there is the question of priorities. There never ever is enough time to do what we wish to do and looking at the Blog may not be a priority. Like a good restaurant, if we enjoy the experience, we will come back!

There are other possible factors such as familiarity with computers and the Internet. I still have friends who get their children to set up their TV, check their email!

How much a person uses anything depends a lot on how useful (enjoyable) it is to that person. The Blog may be an avenue to display their talents (music/poetry with me and Zita, and writing in ND’s). It may be a pleasant way to spend time reminiscing. It may rekindle old friendships (e.g., with Razaque in my case). It gives us an opportunity to rejoice at the success of colleagues (e.g. Lama), it may be a medium to recall with pleasure a time we were together at a critical phase of our life, it can be a way to show our appreciation to our Teachers, it could be a medium to enlist help for a good cause connected with our Medical Faculty. It has also been a reminder of our mortality with the growing number of obituary notices.
I have posed many questions and tried to indicate why I feel that the Blog has a lot to offer. I am a firm believer in putting the past behind and moving on. There is no time like the present moment but the present moment could be enriched by learning from the past, but not dwelling in it pondering on the “what might have been”. That kind of reflection, the “what might have been”, is pointless and corrosive and is a recipe for discontent.

But to me, what is important in the final analysis is not how frequently we keep in touch but the ability to pick up and continue from where we left. I felt that very much at the last Batch Reunion when I met colleagues after so many years.

So come on my friends, pull out your fingers and start typing on your keyboards either as a comment, or as an email to one of us. As for me, I enjoy reading the Blog and contributing to it and shall continue to do so.

With best wishes,

Speedy

Monday, August 21, 2023

The Covenant of Water- Book review by Srianee Dias

The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese 

A Review and Recommendation.

By Srianee Dias

The indication that you have just finished reading an exceptional book is the melancholy feeling that you get when a good experience is over, such as after a relaxing vacation or a special concert.  You are sad to say goodbye to the characters who have been your companions for the last few days or weeks.

‘The Covenant of Water’ is such a book.  I decided to read it in spite of its intimidating 700+pages, because Abraham Verghese is one of my favourite authors.  He is a physician and writer who is presently a Provostial Professor and Vice Chair of the Department of Medicine at Stanford University.

The story, which spans about 80 years and covers 3 generations, begins in Travancore, South India, which later becomes part of the State of Kerala.  The author depicts the characters and their surroundings with tender detail and great affection, and one can develop strong connections; because those of us who grew up in that part of the world probably knew people like that.  The descriptions of some of the characters will make you chuckle.

I have not visited Kerala, but people who have travelled there remark on the similarities to Sri Lanka. There are descriptions of hill country tea estates, beaches and villages, which are all familiar to us.

The story is chronological and feels like short stories featuring the various characters woven together in the narrative. There are many references to the history of the times, the British occupation of India, World War II, the struggle for independence, the activities of the Communist Party in Kerala and so on.   It is a family saga with joyful celebrations and heartbreaking tragedies, all described in exquisite detail with great sensitivity.

While reading this book there were times when I felt that I was re-living my past.  In the early part of the story, in 1933, a young Scotsman recently graduated from Medical College joins the Indian Medical Service in order to develop his skills as a surgeon.  Coming from a working-class background, he felt he didn’t have the right connections to get ahead in his field in England.  The description of his first appointment in Madras in Longmere Hospital (a fictitious hospital) took me back to my first appointment after my internship in Karawanella!  Two crowded wards were assigned to him filled with Indian patients,  while his boss, a Senior Civil Surgeon, looked after the almost empty ward reserved for British and Anglo-Indian patients. 

In Karawanella, the set up was rather similar, where the DMO only allowed his ‘private’ patients to be admitted to his ward, by underlings like us.  These patients had paid him a fee privately (Illegal for a government medical officer).  We were given strict instructions not to admit any ‘floor’ patients to his spotless ward.  We didn’t always follow the instructions, but that is another story!

Similarly, when Verghese describes the experiences of a medical student, I was transported in time to the formalin reeking anatomy block, and the pathology lab with shelves stacked with specimens in glass containers.

There are many medical details throughout the book,  because I think Dr. Verghese cannot completely shed his role of a teacher of medicine. Perhaps it is a bit too much detail for the average reader, but I enjoyed those sections immensely.  One does not have to be a physician to relish this book.

There were many passages and sentences which I read over and over again because the language and the imagery were so beautiful.  (That is why I don’t enjoy listening to audiobooks.)  An example: writing about a matriarch who relates family stories, he writes “…such memories are woven from gossamer threads; time eats holes in the fabric, and these she must darn with myth and fable.”

From my reading this book, I learned about the St. Thomas Christians of that region.  Their ancestors converted to Christianity following the visit of St. Thomas, one of Jesus Christ’s disciples, in AD 52.  They are some of the earliest Christians. There are many biblical and literary quotations in the book, faithfully acknowledged in the notes.

I hope some of the readers of this blog will pick up this hefty book sometime soon and start reading.  It will be difficult to put it down.

Saturday, August 5, 2023

The Late Anton Navam Chinniah MD. On 3rd August 2023

 Sad news of Navam Chinniah passing away.


Navam is the 50th in our batch to say goodbye. He passed away peacefully on Thursday, August 3rd

The following note was derived from the Obituary Notice on the Abriola Parkview Funeral Home website. It was sent to me by Srainee (Bunter) Dias, who was the first to inform me.

Navam will be remembered as one of the brightest students in our Batch. He always had a very assured and confident manner, and a warm smile. He emigrated to the USA in 1968  and enjoyed a very successful career.

Obituary of Anton N. Chinniah, MD (From Abriola Parkview Funeral Home in Trumbull, CT)

Anton Chinniah, MD, age 80, of Trumbull, beloved husband of Sriani Selviah Chinniah, passed away peacefully on Thursday, August 3, 2023 with his loving family by his side. Born in Colombo, Sri Lanka, he was a son of the late Wilfred and Grace Jayamaha Chinniah.
Doctor Chinniah immigrated to the United States in June 1968, starting his life in Bridgeport, CT and settling in Trumbull, CT. He had a successful career in medicine spanning over 50 years at Bridgeport Hospital. He had his own private practice in Bridgeport where he treated each patient with love and compassion, always listening and giving them proper treatment and sound advice. He worked for his community not just for himself. He instilled these values in his children.

Navam with Indra Anandasabathy
at a Party in CT, Oct 2016
Of all his roles in life none was more valuable than that of husband, father and grandfather. He loved spending time with his family, creating memories to last a lifetime. He was at his best when his grandchildren were by his side. He had a special relationship with each one and was always there to cheer them on at sporting events, school plays or any of their activities. He especially shared his love for the New York Mets with his family. The unconditional love he gave and the values he taught will forever live in the hearts of all who knew and loved him.
In addition to his beloved wife of 55 years, Sriani, survivors include his three loving daughters and their families.

 A Catholic Mass and burial will be celebrated on Thursday, August 10, 2023 at 11:00 a.m. at St. Theresa's Church, 5301 Main St., Trumbull. Interment will follow in Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Trumbull. Relatives and friends may greet the family on Wednesday, August 9, 2023 from 4 – 7 p.m. in the Abriola Parkview Funeral Home, 419 White Plains Rd., Trumbull.