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How war has shattered the life of a Sri Lankan village
Pura Handa Kaluwara (Death on a Full Moon Day),
written and directed by Prasanna Vithanage
By Piyaseeli Wijegunasinghe
29 February 2000
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this version to print
Prasanna Vithanage's film Pura Handa Kaluwara has been
shown at film festivals in North America, Europe and Asia but
has yet to be released in Sri Lanka where it is certain to provoke
controversy. The reason is clear. Pura Handa Kaluwara (Death
on a Full Moon Day) deals with the devastation of people's
lives caused by the brutal 16-year war carried out by the Sri
Lankan state against the Tamils living in the North of the island.
The writer of this review was only able to see this film by
attending the Festival of Recent Sri Lankan Films (14-18 February)
held at the Alliance Françaisean institution connected
to the French embassy in Sri Lanka. At this festival a video of
the film was projected onto a larger screen, and it has to be
stated here that this manner of viewing the film prevents this
writer from doing it full justice. Despite this disadvantage it
is clear that Vithanage's film is a powerful work and one that
will resonate with all those confronting the escalating number
of tragedies produced by a war that has claimed at least 55,000
lives and left many more maimed, homeless and poverty stricken.
Pura Handa Kaluwara, which was produced on a budget
of only US$80,000, is one of those few serious movies made each
year in Sri Lanka. Self-assured and sensitive direction by Prasanna
Vithanage and an extraordinary performance by veteran actor Joe
Abeywickrama as Vannihamy, the film's main character, combine
to produce an intensely dramatic story about one man's struggle
with the tragedies caused by the war.
The film tells the
story of Vannihamy, an elderly farmer from one of the Sinhala
villages in the northern dry zone of Sri Lanka. In the opening
sequences we see a land parched by a long drought, and the villagers,
including Vannihamy, undergoing great hardship due to the scarcity
of water. Vannihamy, even though he is blind, is an experienced
farmer and predicts that rain can be expected within four days.
He enlists the help of his future son-in-law to reinforce his
mud hut's decayed thatching to withstand the monsoon's downpour.
Vannihamy has two daughters and a son. The elder daughter,
Sumana (Nayana Hettiarchchci), has married and moved away from
home. Sunanda (Priyanka Samaraweera), the younger daughter, lives
with the father in expectation of her marriage to a young man
in the village. Vannihamy's only son has joined the army fighting
in the North.
The film begins with the sound of gathasBuddhist doctrinal
verses that are rhythmically chanted. The influence that Buddhism
wields over people comes in for sharp criticism later in the film.
Clearly this chanting is intended to give the film viewer an awareness
of the great disparity between Buddhism's manner of comprehending
life and the reality of a country ravaged by war. The doctrinal
verses chanted here signify that the Triple-Gem (Buddha,
his doctrine and his disciplesthe monks) will bless the
believer and protect him from evil. The chanting of the stanzas
merely as an accompanying background rhythm at the beginning of
the film does not have the potential to convey to the viewer any
other meaning than the traditional one. One may even say that
the chanting, which is carried by the wind and reverberates in
the distant horizons of the village, could have their age-old
traditional effect on an unwary viewerto lull man into unthinking
acceptance of any social atrocity perpetrated on him.
Full moon daya day of immense religious significance
to Buddhistsarrives. Buddhists consider this a day in which
universal ahimsa (no harm perpetrated on any living
being) should prevail. It is on this day, when serenity is supposed
to reign supreme in the thoughts, deeds and words of mankind,
that the coffin said to be carrying Vannihamy's son arrives in
the village.
The film deals principally with Vannihamy's reactions to his
son's death, especially his refusal to believeagainst all
evidence to the contrarythat his son has been killed in
the war. Vannihamy also rejects the money given by the state as
compensation to members of a dead soldier's family.
The idea, which provides the film's essential foundation, is
that the war raging in the North is not considered by the people
to be their war. None of the characters representing ordinary
people speak passionately about either taking part in the war
or winning it. It is certainly something outside the pale of their
deep-felt needs, but which at the same time has insidiously managed
to become a necessary evila way to earn a living,
when conditions of life are extremely difficult and problematic.
The only character we see making a pro-war, patriotic speech
is the Buddhist monk from the village temple who, accompanied
by a few villagers, visits the bereaved Vannihamy. The monk suggests
that the villagers should honor Vannihamy's son, a soldier who
has laid down his life for the motherland, by building a bus shelter
in his name. Vannihamy off-handedly replies that a bus shelter
would be beneficial to people no matter why it was built.
The film makes clear that the villagers only consider joining
the army when they are in desperate economic straits. Vannihamy's
future son-in-law, for example, says that the way things are he
too will have to join the army. Vannihamy's son had enlisted with
the sole aim of providing for his familybuilding a better
home, ensuring a decent marriage for his younger sister. A letter
the young man sent from the front, which the family receives after
his death, expresses his desire to return home soon so he can
set to work on those tasks.
Vannihamy hangs on to this letter because it reinforces the
belief that has taken root in him that his son is not dead. The
coffin arrives sealed by the authorities, and the fact that no
one can see the soldier's mortal remains also strengthens the
old man's conviction. Vannihamy's refusal to believe in his son's
death is also bound up with his own attitude to life. He has,
to all appearances, triumphed over his terrible physical handicap,
blindness. Only once do we see him as an enfeebled manwhen
he falls in the field and is carried home by the villagers. At
other times his agility, alertness and confidence are such that
the spectator forgets that he is blind. He easily stands out as
the strongest character in the film. Vannihamy's belief in his
ability to triumph over difficulties leads him to believe the
same about his son. He says that the blood which ran through the
veins of his family's forefathers runs through his own and his
son's veins too.
A few days before an alms-giving ceremony is to be held in
memory of the dead young man, two soldiers emerge from the darkness
at night and approach Vannihamy, seated in front of his hut, to
tell him that they've brought a donation towards the alms-giving.
They explain that members of his son's army unit have contributed
to the donation. We see the old man struggling to face up to this
new and irrefutable proof of his son's death. This is the most
emotionally powerful moment in the film.
Early next day, as the eastern sky glints coldly with streaks
of morning light, we see Vannihamy shouldering his mamoty (spade)
and apparently heading towards the fields. We wonder whether he
has finally brought himself to accept the fact of his son's death,
but something unexpected takes place. Vannihamy makes his way
to his son's grave and starts digging it up. A young woman who
comes to the village tank to fetch water sees Vannihamy and informs
the villagers. They rush to the scene and take on the job of unearthing
the coffin themselves clearly with the intent of laying to rest
the doubts assailing Vannihamy. They retrieve the coffin, break
the seal and open it. Vannihamy, who is alert to everything going
on, eagerly fingers the contents. All that is in the coffin are
some pieces of wood and a large stonenothing that could
prove the death of Vannihamy's son. As he leaves the graveyard
Vannihamy is neither a defeated man nor spiritually broken. It
is clear that he still believes his son is alive.
Vannihamy's stubborn refusal to believe that his son is no
longer among the living evokes strong feelings in the spectator.
The old man's refusal to believe in his son's death becomes completely
plausible only when it is viewed as the result of an unconscious
protective mechanism operating against the unbearable reality
of his son's death.
It should be emphasized, however, that Vannihamy is not merely
a tragic figure. There is a nobility to his character that the
other villagers find almost impossible to understand. This quality
expresses itself above all in his refusal to accept the money
handed out by the state as compensation for his son's death. Vannihamy's
deep attachment to his son makes it impossible for him to face
up to the latter's death. This same love and a keen sense of spiritual
dignity stands in the way of Vannihamy's accepting the money.
What if my son comes home after we accept the money; how
can we face him? he asks.
Though Vannihamy may even appear to the others as slightly
mad, there is a profound humane logic in the stand he takes. The
young man had gone to war seeing it as the only means through
which his dreams could be realized. It was his son's dream of
happiness. To accept the money paid as compensation for his death
would be a betrayal, not only of the young man, but also of the
dreams he cherished.
Once the coffin has been opened Vannihamy is no longer nagged
by his relatives or harassed by the village's government officer
to accept the compensation money. After breaking the official
seal on the coffin it is no longer possible to apply for the money.
In the final sequences of the film we see Vannihamy as we saw
him at the beginninga confident man at peace with himself.
He comes to the village tank to fetch water, and listens eagerly
to a ripple of laughter coming from the children bathing in the
river. A scarcely perceptible smile comes to his lipsperhaps
he remembers how his son used to play in the river. Here the expectant
yet deeply melancholic mood, which had till then had gripped Vannihamy
as well as the spectator, seems to slacken as an unexpected downpour
patters on Vannihamy's shoulders.
This deceptively simple film, which has been widely praised
at many international film festivals, makes clear that the war
has no popular support but has been unexpectedly and forcibly
foisted by the Sri Lankan state onto the people, including the
poverty-stricken Sinhala farmers living in the North. It should
be seen by all those seeking to understand the human consequences
of Sri Lanka's civil war.
See Also:
An interview with Prasanna
Vithanage, Sri Lankan filmmaker
The struggle of the common man for self-dignity is very profound
[1 March 2000]
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