Sunday, July 12, 2015

A Sinhalese Village




A
 Sinhalese village is not a “village” in the sense of crowded assemblage of houses. Such villagers may indeed be seen in Ceylon in the dwellings of the erstwhile tribes, the Rodiya, the Kinnaraya & the Veddha- as also the villages of the functional service communities, the Beravaya (the nekati), and the kumbalkarya, the potter. These groups apart, a Sinhalese village is territorially extensive. Each house bog or small stands in its own grounds, thickly grown with an assortment of trees and plants, notably the coconut, Jack, plantains & yams, breadfruit and other trees and plants of economic value, or of no value at all.

Every village has its highland of houses and gardens, with either a chena as in the Dry Zone grown with seasonal crops, or paddy plots as in the wet zone. The number of houses in a village varies according to its extent irrigation facilities & topography. Round each homestead is a live fence, with or without a style at the front with two or three cross-bars. One step into the premises of the house crossing the style, or by letting down one or two of the cross-bars. The house has an open courtyard. A long front veranda is a feature of most houses, big or small. This gives to the living room.

Food Habits

Food habits are more or less the same for all classes, a morning meal generally of hoppers (Appa), pittu or string hoppers, with hot fish or meat curry, or the pol sambola alternatively, kiribath (rice cooked in coconut milk) and tea, mid-day meal of rice & spicy curries & the night food of rice & curry repeated, not generally so heavy or sumptuous as the mid-day meal. Both fish & meat are generally not served at the same meal. Boiled or curried jack, bread-fruit, manioc & tubers from part of the menu of an average noon time meal. In the southern province, curds & honey, is the favorite last course. The curd is of buffalo milk and the honey, the delicious honey of coconut toddy. The making of honey of the coconut toddy, is a specialty of the Sinhalese peasant of the south.

Chewing the betel, with Arecanut, and the lime (Chunam) comes at the finish of every meal. It is indeed a habit so inherent in the villager, that there is scarcely awaking moment he is not without the quid of betel in his mouth. In this he is one with the south Indian villager. Those used to it, and to the flavor by a small quid of tobacco taken with the betel. The spittle, colored red, is spat out & seldom swallowed.

Normally cleaner that the man of the town, the villager is fond of elaborate & daily baths, in the tanks which dot the country side, running streams, or in the quiet retreat of shady pools. After the bath the hair is combed and oiled, secured in a shapely knot (The Konde) at the back of the head. Women let the hair loose to dry, before doing up the konde (hair).

The pintaliya & pahan pela

The pintaliya or the water pot is among the wayside feature of rural Ceylon. True to Buddhist traditions, it reflects concern for the weary travelers. Simple as the idea is the water vessel, its disposition & equipment, has a certain technology about it.


At nightfall the villagers in Ceylon light a coconut oil lamp on a stand in the garden, the pahan pela by the side of the house. The idea is to propitiate the “Huniyam Devatawa”. The premises are kept clean. Prosperity is supposed to follow the visit of the God of the night. In essence a ceremonial light to the Gods, in form it varies from the very simple to highly elaborate patterns.