High Commission of Sri Lanka in India

Sri Lanka Commemorates the 150th Birth Anniversary of Swami Vivekananda PDF Print option in slimbox / lytebox? (info) E-mail
Tuesday, 18 June 2013 05:29

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A Postage Stamp to commemorate the 150th Birth Anniversary of Swami Vivekananda was issued by the Philatelic Bureau of Sri Lanka and the First DayCover ceremonially handed by the Postmaster General  to His Excellency Mahinda Rajapaksa, President of Sri Lanka at ‘Temple Tress’ on Friday the 7thJune 2013 in the presence of a large and distinguished gathering. 

Several Ministers, Members of Parliament, Diplomats, Senior Government Officials and Community Leaders graced the occasion.  Those present included the Acting High Commissioner for India in Sri Lanka Mr P Kumaran, Swami Atmaghanananda from Chennai who was invited by the Government of Sri Lanka to represent the Ramakrishna Mission in India, the members of a Special Delegation from the India Foundation led by Shri Ravi Shankar Prasad Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, a Delegation of 4 Swamis and 18 Devotees representing the Ramakrishna Mission in Sri Lanka and 2 Nuns from the Ramakrishna Sarada Mission,  the Principal, Deputy Principal and a Senior Students representing  the Vivekananda College, Colombo and  representatives of the Hindu Swayamsevaka Sangha including its President Mr. R. Wijayapalan. 

The perception of the challenge to the authority of the indigenous socio-religious value systems and cultural ethos of Asian communities posed by Christian missionary activism stirred the emergence of movements of religious reform and spiritual nationalism in both India and Sri Lanka in the closing decades of the nineteenth and the early decades of the twentieth century. While the Hindu Revivalist Movement in India was inspired and given direction by Swami Vivekanada, the Buddhist Revivalist Movement in Sri Lanka was steered and inspired by Anagarika Dharmapala. Not only did these two religious leaders scatter the seeds of a religious – spiritual revival in their two neighbouring countries and generate the spiritual energy to inspire a whole generation of freedom fighters to propel the nationalist movements that eventually freed their people from European colonial rule, they also took the respective messages of Hinduism and Buddhism to Europe and America as well for the spiritual uplifting of the West. 

They eventually met at the historic Parliament of World Religions in Chicago in 1893 where Swami Vivekananda represented Hinduism and Anagarika Dharmapala represented Southern Buddhism which was the term applied at that time to Theravada Buddhism. The two religious leaders, Swami Vivekananda being the elder of the two by just one year, became close friends and together strengthened the Hindu – Buddhist tradition of Peaceful Coexistence as a fundamental tenet of world peace and the spiritual fountainhead of Indo – Sri Lankan friendship and understanding. 

(Communique issued by the Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies (BCIS), Colombo, 13 June 2013)

 

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