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A Boy in the Sand, Dubai, 1970s

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  A Boy in the Sand, Dubai, 1970s Denzil Jayasinghe 2 min read · Just now He stood in the baked earth of a dusty lot, shirtless, hands pressed against his hips in a gesture both defiant and curious — as if challenging the silent universe around him. Behind him stretched a barren landscape; the sand matched the tone of the afternoon sky, scattered mounds of earth like the sighs of a restless city not yet awake. He had just stepped off a Boeing 747, his first journey outside the world he knew. The heat struck him immediately — dry, sharp, inescapable. Around him, men in kanduras and headgear moved gracefully, figures both alien and regal in the haze. The air carried their stories: of trade, of ancient creeks turned into engineered canals, and of modernity clawing its way through sand and tradition. The boy was both spectator and participant, magnetic in his stillness. Around him, Dubai was beginning to transform. Crude concrete skeletons of buildings rose from the dunes, port and roa...

Fresher’s Day

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Fresher’s Day On May Day 1972, a boy steps into Aquinas College, uncertain yet hopeful – his first day in an ivy school, amongst Colombo’s world of rules, rituals, and whispered slang. Denzil Jayasinghe 3 min read · 4 hours ago My first morning at Aquinas College fell on May Day, and it seemed a curious sort of beginning. Perhaps all beginnings are a little odd – like opening a book at the wrong chapter and hoping to catch the thread of the story. Getting there hadn’t been easy. They thought me too young, and so I had to collect proofs of my worth, much the way a boy might gather stamps or marbles – one certificate here, another document there. I still remember pacing to Brother Lawrence Justinian, the head of the Christian Brothers. He was an imposing man, tall, dignified, the kind of person who filled a room without raising his voice. He signed my paper in blue ink, and in that moment, I felt both blessed and burdened. My father had the harder task: paying fees in pounds sterling, wh...

The River of My Mother’s Hair

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The River of My Mother’s Hair A boy in 1967 Dalugama recalls his mother’s long, oiled hair — its fragrance, its braid, its quiet rhythm — woven into daily life, a tender memory that lingers like evening rain. Denzil Jayasinghe 3 min read · Just now I remember my mother’s hair the way one remembers the first rains after a long, hot summer. Straight and black, almost a yard of it, shining with the coconut oil she rubbed in each morning. In the half-light of our house in Dalugama, sunlight slipped through the iron grills, catching the dust in the air, and her hair seemed a dark river flowing quietly through the day. I liked to sit close while she worked on it. She would sit on the low wooden chair by the kitchen window, comb in hand, and give me the small bottle of coconut oil to hold. I felt proud of that little duty. The kitchen smelled of woodsmoke, rice steaming in clay pots, and most of all, the fragrance of her hair. From outside came the sounds of Dalugama mornings: the bread man’s...

A Mother’s Heart

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A Mother’s Heart A mother grapples with the permanent loss of her son, Denzil, as he enters the Novitiate. She fears he’s becoming a stranger. Denzil Jayasinghe 2 min read · Just now S usan had always been good at reading the silences between words, especially Thomas’s. She’d thought that asking him to help with the packing might ease the weight of what lay ahead – those difficult days that would test them both. But his sharp, clipped answers told her everything she needed to know. It was better to let him be. She had always been the practical one, the one who faced hard truths without flinching. Yet neither of them had ever imagined sending their eldest away for so long. The Novitiate – even the word felt heavy on her tongue. Thomas, in his quiet way, had made peace with it. “We’re giving him to God,” he would say, as if repetition might make the sacrifice feel less like loss. “Surely we must love God more than our own children.” The words sounded right, biblical even, but Susan wonde...