C. Sittampalam
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C. Sittampalam (Cathiravelu Sittampalam) is the first Cabinet Minister of Posts and Telecommunications in independent Sri Lanka (then Ceylon).[1][2]
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[edit] Early life & education
C. Sittampalam was born on 13 September, 1898 and had a brilliant academic career at Royal College, Colombo. He passed the Cambridge Senior with first class honours and with distinction in Mathematics at the age of 15 years.[1]
At Royal College he won coveted prizes including the English Essay Prize, the De Zoysa Science Prize and the Mathematics Prize. He was also the editor of the college magazine and the Secretary of the Literary Association. He graduated in Mathematics from the University of Cambridge. He qualified as a barrister in the Middle Temple. [1]
[edit] Politics and death
He served the government in various capacities such as District Judge and Government Agent in various areas including Matara and Hambantota and on retirement from the Civil Service he was elected as MP for Mannar by a multi-ethnic constituency, consisting of majority of Tamils by contesting as an independent candidate and was appointed as First Minister of Posts and Telecommunications by the Don Stephen Senanayake when he formed his first Cabinet of Ministers of Independent Ceylon in 1948.[3][1]
The other ministers in this Cabinet were some of the stalwarts of that era, such as S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike, John Kotelawala, Dudley Senanayake, A. Ratnayake, Oliver Goonatilake, Edwin Wijeyeratne, J. R. Jayewardene, Lalitha Rajapakse, Prof. C. Suntheralingam and five others. [1]
He provided a large number of villagers, hundreds and thousands of villages with receiving sets, so that the village people were able to listen to broadcasts from Radio Ceylon and many of the popular items now in the programme were initiated by Mr. Sittampalam. I remember one of the items which was inaugurated by Mr. Sittampalam was pirith which is very popular with the Buddhists today." He was also the Minister for Industries, Industrial Research and Fisheries for a short period.[1]
He started the opening of a large number of sub-post offices and thus improved the postal services in the rural areas. Mr. Ratnayake, Wattegama (a contemporary, a distinguished politician and later Speaker of the House of Representatives) on the occasion of his death on 3 February 1964 stated of him "I remember one of the things he did which today is one of the most popular things in Ceylon, is the provision of radio sets to villages.[1]
[edit] Family history
Sittampalam hailed from a distinguished Tamil family from Jaffna. His father Arumugam Cathiravelu was a Magistrate and District Judge. His uncle Arumugam Canagaratnam was the Chairman of the first Urban Council of Jaffna and built and founded Canagaratnam Maha Vidyalayam. Mr. C. Sittampalam's grand uncle Viswanather Casipillai was a Crown Proctor and co-founder of the Jaffna Hindu College. [1]
Mr. C. Sittampalam's own brother C. Ponnambalam was the First Mayor of Jaffna, and his brother-in-law C. Casipillai was the Third Mayor of Jaffna. Sittampalam's son Dr. Arjuna Sittampalam and his grandson Dr. Ganesh Sittampalam have taken after him in the field of Mathematics, the former being a top Investment Banker in the United Kingdom and the latter having entered the Guinness World Records several times for his academic achievements at a young age. Sittampalam's eldest daughter Devalakshmi was a lawyer and her son Dr. B. Anandkumar, Justice of the Peace was a prominent Information technology specialist and lecturer and currently the chairman of the Gods Own Children Foundation which has dedicated its services for disabled children.[1][4][5]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Stamp to honour Cathiravelu Sittampalam. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd [Daily News] (February 26, 2004). Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
- ^ First cabinet had only 14 ministers. Wijeya Newspapers Ltd, Sri Lanka[The Sunday Times] (September 23, 2007). Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
- ^ India/Pakistan:Chapter 12: Tryst with independence. Asia Times Online Co., Ltd.[Asia Times] (October 27, 2001). Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
- ^ The Gods Own Children Foundation. GOC - School for the Special Child (August, 2007). Retrieved on 2008-03-01.
- ^ Devalakshmi Balasundaram ( Sittampalam ): HER LIFE HISTORY. Retrieved on 2008-03-03.