Hero, humanist and true Gunner | Page 2 | Sunday Observer

Hero, humanist and true Gunner

4 July, 2021
Major General Ananda Hamangoda
Major General Ananda Hamangoda

The guns of North and the East have long gone silent; normalcy restored within our nation; heroes have been decorated; those departed commemorated.

For some twenty thousand or more families who lost a loved one in the 30-year terrorist war \ that plagued our nation, the battle against terrorism continues within. The trauma of losing a beloved, the struggle for survival and the coming to terms with the reality that ‘you got to move on’.

Major General Ananda Hamangoda USP, MSC, PSC was brutally struck down by a suicide bomber on Stanley Road Jaffna on July 4, 1996, a day prior to the customary display of terror known back then as ‘Black July’.

Major General Hamangoda was the Brigade Commander of 512 Brigade Jaffna and Coordinating Officer for Colombuthurai, Jaffna and Ariyalai at the time of his untimely death and was entrusted with the restoration and rebuilding efforts in the Jaffna Peninsula in the aftermath of the ‘Riviresa Operation’. He met his tragic end while participating in the opening of a building material corporation outlet on Stanley Road.

Hailing from the Regiment of Artillery and having been in active service for over two decades, the comfort of the Brigade headquarters was unfamiliar to him.

With an ever-present smile he took to the streets of Jaffna where he blended effortlessly with the people of the area including civil servants, Hindu and Catholic clergy, school children and Tamil civilians.

Regardless of his position as an Army officer he was one who firmly believed that words could achieve more than weapons in their journey for reconciliation.

He would get on to a push bike and ride for several miles to resolve a drinking water issue affecting the people of the area. His happy-go-lucky style soon became popular among the people of Jaffna, as done with his adversaries who put an end to his golden career on July four.

Following his death, the walls of the Jaffna city were adorned with a bright yellow poster of Major General Hamangoda in conversation with a Tamil mother and the words “He who placed humanity ahead of destruction made the supreme sacrifice for his motherland – you will forever remain our hearts”; Thus was the love and admiration of the Jaffna people for this brave soldier.

As his teenage children he would amuse us with stories of his good old days as a schoolboy. Peddling a push bike was not unfamiliar to Major General Hamangoda. Cycling to his school Maliyadeva College, Kurunegala with his friends was a daily ritual he enjoyed. He led an active life even as a student and humbly triumphed in the many achievements at school.

He was an all-rounder and went on to become the College’s Deputy Head Prefect, Best Orator, Captain of the Badminton team, Sergeant of the College Senior Cadet Platoon finally winning the Gold Medal for the Best All Round Student in 1971.

Major General Hamangoda joined the Sri Lanka Army on January, 5, 1973 and was posted to the Regiment of Artillery. He was a founding member of the 6th and 7th Artillery Regiments and later went on to be the Commanding Officer of the 6th Artillery Regiment. Major General Hamangoda was proud of his ‘Gunner Tribe’.

As children we recall being taken for countless parades where he would proudly point out the ‘men in brown boots’ with their artillery guns. Major General Hamangoda was the highest-ranking Artillery officer to be killed in action.

Many would not have guessed his military background for Major General Hamangoda had qualities which were irreproachable. He was a kind, humble and warm personality to those around him.

A devout Buddhist he held every other religion in high esteem. He took great pleasure in visiting the Meegoda Bhavana Madyasthanaya and inquiring into the wellbeing of the theras.

Two weeks before his death he was pictured in friendly banter with students at Hindu College Jaffna during a ceremony held at the school.

It was the week before his death that he was invited to address a group of nuns at the Jaffna Church. Minutes before his death he had the merits to visit Naga Vihara in Jaffna and obtain blessings.

He was a loving husband, father and a rare human being. He made sure that his long days way from home were not at the expense of his family.

If a visit home on a rare occasion was not possible, he would speak to us on the telephone and make us recite dictation or poems. He never lost his temper and had an infectious sense of humor.

Even the angriest teachers at school would get charmed by his smile so we took extra care to take him to school on Parents Day. The two years spent at Command and Staff College Wellington India was the longest we had enjoyed as family and few months before his death he took us on a family vacation to World’s End. Possibly a signal that the end was nearing.

Darling Appachchi for 25 years we have mourned your loss. Yet the tears just won’t go away. Your memory still lives on while we the survivors have become the living dead, for on that fateful day at Stanley Road you took with you a part of each of us. We love you and miss you painfully. May we unite as family again in this samsaric journey.

A series of pinkam will be held in remembrance of Major General Hamangoda and 21 others who lost their lives in this incident, notably Major Colombage (SLMP), L/LCpl Pushpakumara (6GW) ,L/LCpl Seneviratne (7 SLLI), Cpl Bandara (SLMP),L/LCpl Gunawardena (SLMP), Ranjith Godamuduna, former SSP Carlyle Dias and Asoka Dassanayake.

Alms will be offered to Naga Vihara Jaffna by the 512 Brigade, donation of food packs to the Corona Treatment Centre at the Ruhunu Teachers Training Centre and Karandeniya Base Hospital, donation of educational material to needy families of the Sri Lanka Artillery Regiment, offering of meals to the Karuna Orphanage in Piliyandala and Sanhinda Home PitaKotte and numerous pinkam by family members overseas.

Our sincere thanks to the officers and all ranks of the Regiment of Artillery, 512 Brigade Jaffna and 613 Brigade Kamburupitiya for their able assistance.

Lovingly remembered by his wife Indrani, children Buwani, Maheshni, Dulshan Ryan, Ruchinda and Nadeesha together with grandchildren Resharn, Kisali, Vinith and Chedi.

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