Abstract:
Under the Bo Tree by Nur Yalman has been considered one of the best socio-anthropological
books on Sri Lanka. It is mainly based on field studies conducted in a Kandyan Village,
‘Terutenne’, for his PhD at Cambridge under the supervision of Edmund Leach from 1954 to
1956. The book was published in 1967 by the University of California Press and popularized
among academics as a prescriptive text on the Sinhalese society.
‘Terutenne’ is a fictional name coined by Yalman for Teripehe, a remote village in the Walapane
Division of Nuwara Eliya District. The focus of his study was on caste, kinship and
marriage in the Kandyan Sinhalese village in Sri Lanka.
The present research is an extension of Yalman’s study through analysing diaries of late
Mr. KB Nissanka who was a native of the village and the Head Master of the school when
Yalman conducted his research. Nissanka and his family have been widely referred to in
Yalman’s book and they have met each other on several occasions including some of the
important family functions at home.
Mr. Nissanka was born in 1908 in Teripehe and died in 1991 in the same village. He was
the Head Master and Principal of the Teripehe School for over two decades and later was
promoted as the School Inspector of the region. He retired in 1968 and continued his service
as a member of the Village Council and functioned in various other capacities which were
integral to the life and society of ‘Terutenne’.
He was a regular diarist from around the 1930s and these diaries are not only a record of
his personal life, but also a repository of facts which reflect various aspects of village life
and contemporary society in Sri Lanka. An analysis of these diaries is important as a cross
reference to Yalman’s claims and is a definite extension of Yalman’s study in terms of time
and scope.