Devabandhanage Piyadasa (4 April 1946 – 15 November 1989: si, පියදාස රණසිංහ), popularly known as Piyadasa Ranasinghe, was a
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka (, ; si, ශ්රී ලංකා, Śrī Laṅkā, translit-std=ISO (); ta, இலங்கை, Ilaṅkai, translit-std=ISO ()), formerly known as Ceylon and officially the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, is an ...
n political activist who was killed by army forces. He was the organising secretary and a member of the
JVP party in the period 1970–1989. He was also known as Dibba, Sudu Mama and Dunuwila.
Family background and early life
He was born on 4 April 1946 in Pahalawatte of Warapitiya village in Walasmulla, Sri Lanka as the third child of the family with seven siblings. The father Devabandhu was a farmer by profession. His mother Wijesiri was a housewife. Piyadasa received his primary education at Egodabedda Maha Vidyalaya, Hambantota, and from Kiramba Dhammananda Maha Vidyalaya up to grade 8 and his higher education at Weeraketiya Central College. He was a hostel student at the school and was once the student leader of the hostel.
He was married to Seelavathi Senasinghe alias Sheela alias Sujatha. The couple had only son, Uvindu. Both of them are residing in Ududamana, Thihagoda, Matara by 2020.
Political career
Ranasinghe served as the JVP organising secretary from 1983 until his death in 1989. Piyadasa joined the JVP as a GCE Advanced Level student, and became an active member during the
1971 JVP insurrection. He was later arrested in 1971 and transferred to Anuradhapura from the Kelaniya Vidyalankara University Camp and the Ridiyagama Outdoor Camp. Later, a group of JVP activists including Nandana Marasinghe raided the Anuradhapura prison on June 13, 1972 and rescued 32 JVP members including Piyadasa, Heenbanda Wanasinghe and Akuresse Francis. Although Piyadasa was charged with assaulting the Walasmulla police on April 71, he was acquitted and released in 1976.
Piyadasa was a talented lecturer who was called to educational camps. After free from the jail, he worked as a science and mathematics teacher at Kiramba Dhammananda Vidyalaya and later at Egodabedda Maha Vidyalaya. Police also banned a meeting he chaired on August 11, 1978 in Angunakolapelessa. He was elected to the JVP Central Committee in 1979 and later to the Politburo. During this period he resided in Kirama, Hambantota. Although he was also known by some as the unofficial internal secretary of the party, he did not hold such an official position in the JVP as a government registered political party.
He also became the political leader of the Central Province during the
1987–1989 JVP insurrection
The 1987–1989 JVP insurrection, also known as the 1988–1989 revolt or the JVP troubles, was an armed revolt in Sri Lanka, led by the Marxist–Leninist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, against the Government of Sri Lanka. The 1987–1989 insurr ...
and the finance secretary after the assassination of
Sumith Athukorala. After the JVP was banned in July 1983, Piyadasa Ranasinghe was considered as the third leader of JVP after Wijeweera,
Upatissa Gamanayake
Don Upatissa Gamanayake ( si, උපතිස්ස ගමනායක; 17 October 1948 – 13 November 1989), also known by his alias Dias Mudalali, was a Sri Lankan politician and the deputy leader of the Jantha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) during ...
and Athukorala.
With the banning of the JVP in July 1983, Piyadasa and Athukorala, who were not involved in public politics, were elected to the Politburo. It was through the commitment of both of them, that the JVP was able to build a good network of organizations within a year by meeting undisclosed activists on district committees in person. Meanwhile, they were joined by a number of activists who were not open to the security forces. Piyadasa also coordinated relations between the JVP and Minister Ronnie de Mel which was an unofficial affair on behalf of Rohana Wijeweera. Even after the ban, there was an informal discussion between Rohana Wijeweera and Finance Minister Ronnie de Mel in the second week of February 1984 through Piyadasa's coordination.
However this link was severed in 1986 with the outbreak of the second JVP insurrection. This was largely due to loyalty of Ronnie de Mel to the Indo-Lanka Accord, which was forcibly signed in July 1987.
In his final days, Piyadasa lived in a house in Napana in the Gunnepana area of Matale.
The last JVP Political Bureau meeting chaired by Wijeweera was held at Galaha House on November 11, 12 and 13, 1989. The meeting ended on November 12, 1989 at noon as the government imposed a night curfew on November 12, 1989. After the meeting,
Saman Piyasiri Fernando
Sellapperumage Saman Piyasiri Fernando (23 March 1958 – 29 December 1989: si, සමන් පියසිරි ප්රනාන්දු: ''nom de guerre'': Keerthi Vijayabahu), was the military wing leader of the Janatha Vimukthi Peram ...
,
Lalith Wijerathna
Lalith may refer to
* Lalith Dissanayake, Sri Lankan politician
* Lalith Athulathmudali, Sri Lankan politician
* Babu M.R. Lalith, Indian chess player
* Lalith Wijerathna, Sri Lankan politician
* Lalith Kaluperuma, Sri Lankan cricketer
* Lalith ...
, Gamanayake and Wijeweera left in a car. Shantha Bandara went his separate ways. Piyadasa and
Somawansa Amarasinghe
Amarasinghe Kankanamlage Somawansa (1 January 1943 – 15 June 2016 as si, සෝමවංශ අමරසිංහ), commonly as Somawansha Amarasinghe, was a Sri Lankan politician, and the 4th leader of Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, after Rohana ...
left for Madawala in a separate vehicle to retrieve some money that had been kept for security. On the way back, Somawansa descended Mount Trinity whereas Piyadasa Ranasinghe and
H. B. Herath were arrested at Galaha's house on the same day. He was detained at the Mattegoda camp after being tortured and killed on November 15, 1989.
In popular media
The biographical film of
Rohana Wijeweera
Patabendi Don Jinadasa Nandasiri Wijeweera ( si, පටබැඳි දොන් ජිනදාස නන්දසිරි විජෙවීර; 14 July 1943 – 13 November 1989, better known by his ''nom de guerre'' Rohana Wijeweera, was a ...
's late life titled ''
Ginnen Upan Seethala
''Ginnen Upan Seethala'' ( si, ගින්නෙන් උපන් සීතල; The Fire born frozen) is a 2019 Sinhala biographical film about Sri Lankan Marxist revolutionary Rohana Wijeweera directed by Anuruddha Jayasinghe and produced by ...
'' was released in 2018. The film was directed by Anurudha Jayasinghe and popular actor
Thusitha Laknath
Thusitha Laknath Galindawattha (born September 7, 1983), is an actor in Sri Lankan cinema, theater and television. He played Rane in the television serial '' Deveni Inima''.
Early life
Thusitha Laknath was born on 7 September 1983 in Sri Lanka. ...
played Ranasinghe's role.
Bibliography
*Rohan Gunarathna (1990), ''Sri Lanka, a lost revolution, Institute of fundamental studies''
*C. A. Chandraprema (1991) ''Sri Lanka, The Years of Terror- The JVP insurrection 1987-1989'', Lake House Bookshop,
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ranasinghe, Piyadasa
1948 births
1989 deaths
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna militants
Prisoners who died in Sri Lankan detention
People from British Ceylon