D. B. Dhanapala

Diyogu Badathuruge Dhanapala
Born 1905
Tissamaharama, Sri Lanka
Died 1971
Nationality Sri Lankan
Alma mater Mahinda College, Galle
Allahabad University
Occupation Journalist, biographer, art historian

Diyogu Badathuruge Dhanapala was a pioneering Sri Lankan journalist and author.

Early life and career

Dhanapala was born in Tissamaharama and educated at Mahinda College, Galle and Allahabad University in India. After an early career as a writer and a journalist at the Ceylon Daily News, where he made a name as Janus, in the famous "Blue Page" of the Ceylon Daily News. His pen portraits of the movers and shakers in the then Ceylon made his writing style unique in the country at that time.

After a while his disagreements with the Lake House resulted in him leaving and going on to teaching as the principal of Dharmaloka Vidyalaya Kelaniya . He returned to journalism to found the Lankadeep, the Sinhala daily which exits to this day as the Sinhala language daily with the largest circulation.

Lankadeepa was unique at the time because it was original journalism in Sinhala. At that time the Dinamina which was the only other Sinhala daily was a translation of the Ceylon Daily News. Lankadeepa had its own reporters, was the first to give name its reporters in the stories they reported. It devised a special Sinhala font, and created a linotype for itself. It had its own photographers and created special pages for cinema, literature at the same time creating first ever Sinhala cartoon strip, Neela.

A note in the back cover of the new edition of Among Those Present, D. B. Dhanapala's most famous book, says although Dhanapala’s Sinhala writing was neither prolific nor unique, he attained an almost cult status for his writing in the Daily News.

Nonetheless, this outstanding writer in English was the doyen of Sinhala journalism who served as Chief Editor of the Lankadeepa which broke new ground by becoming the country’s first Sinhala daily which was not a translation of an English newspaper.

He was also the founder of the Dawasa Group of Newspapers published by M.D. Gunasena & Company under the name and style of Independent Newspapers of Ceylon Limited challenging the supremacy of Lake House during the waning years of the Times of Ceylon.

Dhanapala’s pen portraits were of a mix of people ranging from Anagarika Dharmapala to D.S. and Dudley Senanayake, G.P. Malalalasekara, Oliver Goonetilleke, Herbert Hulugalle, John Kotelawela, Nicholas Attygalle, L.H. Mettananda, S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike and many more

All this gave the Lankadeepa a special identity, which it retains to this day. Mots of the noteworthy journalists in Sinhala were products of the Lankapeepa. This in essence led to D.B.Dhanapala being called the doyen of Sinhala journalism.

Journalism

Dhanapala started in journalism working at the Ceylon Daily News Newspaper published by the Lake House Group. He later moved on to take up a position as Principal of Dharmaloak Vidyala in Kelaniya. From there he founded the Sinhala newspaper Lankadipa in 1948- a news papa[per which has the largest readership today.[1] and commenced a long-standing friendship with fellow reporter PA Ediriweera. The newspaper began as a six column tabloid in 1947 and was a standard seven column daily newspaper by 1949. His ability to influence political thinking in the Sinhala speaking population is believed to have caused concern among the politicians in power in the incumbent government (from the United National Party) as he supported the campaign of Mr S.W.R.D Bandaranaike in the 1956 general election.[2]

Career as author

Dhanapala was a well known biographer of leading personalities in Ceylon and is best known for his book on contemporary political figures Among those Present. His writing also includes work on Buddhist paintings from shrines and temples in Ceylon [3] and the story of Sinhalese paintings.[4]

Travel industry

Together with P. A. Ediriweera he founded the travel firm Ceylon Tours.

Honours

The Sri Lanka Press Institute commemorates his memory through the award of the D. B. Dhanapala Award for the Best Journalist .[5]

Family

Dhanapala was married to Rathi Dhanapala teacher, poet, artist and author,[6][7] and his family followed him into the media and creative fields. He was the father of filmmaker D. B. Nihalsinghe and photographer D.B Suranimala [8] who married Ranjini Ediriweera (who acted in the film Wer stirbt schon gerne unter Palmen? (1974) [9] and later joined her brothers as a director of Ceylon Tours) the daughter of his friend and business partner PA Ediriweera.[10]

References

  1. DB Dhanapala in Encyclopaedia of Sri Lanka by Charles A Gunawardana page 115. books.google.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  2. "33rd death anniversary of D. B. Dhanapala". http://www.dailynews.lk. Retrieved 2011-01-21. External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. "Buddhist paintings from shrines and temples in Ceylon". http://trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 2011-01-21. External link in |publisher= (help)
  4. Buddhist paintings from shrines and temples in Ceylon. books.google.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  5. "When Journalists made news" (PDF). www.thesundayleader.lk. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  6. "Remembering a pioneer in education Rathi Dhanapala". sundaytimes.lk. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  7. "Detail of painting by Rathi Dhanapala". www.flickr.com. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  8. "The folk drama of Ceylon 2d ed.by E. R. Sarachchandra. Photographs by D. B. Suranimala.". openlibrary.org. Retrieved 2011-01-21.
  9. "Wer stirbt schon gerne unter Palmen?". www.imdb.com. Retrieved 2011-01-22.
  10. "The Ceylon Tours Legacy continues Daily Mirror 25th October 2011". print.dailymirror.lk. Retrieved 2011-01-21.


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