The annual Anagarika Dharmapala commemoration
lecture was delivered by Dr. Risiman Amarasinghe, Director,
Dharmapala-Olcott International Research Foundation of Sri Lanka
last Saturday at Suvisuddharama Hall, Wellawatte. This lecture
titled, ‘Dharmapala and his work’ was sponsored by the Colombo
South Research Circle.
Dr. Risiman Amarasinghe said that Lanka’s
history does not record the activities of a layman who has
rendered such an enduring service to Buddhism and its survival
as Anagarika Dharmapala since king Parakramabahu VI of Kotte.
When the observance and practice of Buddhism was at a serious
decline in the country due to the pressure exerted by the
colonial government at the time Dharmapala strove hard at the
risk of his life to revive Buddhism here. He toured various
places in the island in his caravan inculcating Buddhist
principles and the value of living according to the Buddhist
culture. Thereby he brought about a renaissance in Buddhist
practice.
In this endeavour he was ably assisted by
another eminent Buddhist leader, Valisinghe Harischandra, who
spent all his wealth to clear the jungles, then covering the
shrines in the city of Anuradhapura and around it. After he had
cleared the jungle and restored most of the ancient shrines,
Buddhist monks were able to occupy them. Thereafter many monks
were able to enjoy the incumbency of most of the ancient
Buddhist shrines there.
When Colonel Olcott began his Buddhist
educational campaign after founding the Buddhist Theosophical
Society in Colombo, Dharmapala wholeheartedly supported him. He
went round the country translating into Sinhala the speeches
delivered by Olcott in English. He supported the Buddhist
Theosophical Society and the Buddhist Defence Committee Olcott
initiated as an active member of both.
With the support of leading Buddhist monks like
Vens. Migettuwatte Gunananda, Hikkaduwe Sumangala and Weligama
Sumangala he restored many Buddhist places of worship in India
including Buddhagaya for generations of Buddhists all over the
world to worship. In Dharmapala’s religious propagation
activities he received the financial support of his affluent
grandfather, Lansage Don Andiris Perera Dharmagunawardena, whose
munificence as a Buddhist leader of the time is recorded by Col.
Olcott in the journal, Buddhist’, Vol. III, 1889-1890. In fact
he financially helped his father Hewavitaranage Don Carolis to
set up the famous furniture shop H. Don Carolis & Company in
Colombo. Don Carolis however changed his name from
Hewavitaranage to Hewavitarana by dropping the ‘ge’ ending in
the original name when the British government conferred on him a
Muhandiramship, following the normal practice of the time.
Dharmapala visited foreign countries to
propagate Buddhism. In this regard his epoch making addresses at
American Institutions are well known. His address to the World
Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893 impacted vastly in
the spread of Buddhism in the west. Dharmapala helped to found
Ananda College in Colombo and Dharmaraja College and Mahamaya
Girls’ College in Kandy.