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President
Mahinda Rajapaksa said, important
monuments like the Lion Rock Sigiriya,
of the 5th century AD that belonged to
the magnificent Anuradhapura era gives
the nation immense power and courage to
build our nation now.
He was speaking after
declaring open an ultra modern
archeological museum built with Japanese
assistance at Sigiriya to depict the
historical era reigned by the God King
Kashyapa and to house fascinating
artifacts found during decades of
excavations at the site.
Former Prime Minister
of Japan and the President of Sri Lanka
Japan Friendship Association, Yasuo
Fukuda joined the opening ceremony of
the museum at the invitation of the Sri
Lanka government.

photos by Chandana Perera
President
Rajapaksa said, “ The museum
could show us thousand and one things
from our own splendid past that could
fascinate us – things which we did not
know and things that could be collected
and exhibited for us and our future
generations to see with awe.”
The
President said as a nation they
protected the Sri Mahabodhi , which was
grown from a sapling of the same tree
under which Prince Siddhartha attained
the Buddhahood, and the whole Tripitaka
and Buddha’s tooth relic for the entire
world. During foreign invasions and
during famines like the dangerous
Beminitiya Famine the Buddhist monks
were taking Kara leaves as a meager food
to sustain and protect such treasures.
He said
during millenniums ago we were a nation
who maintained museums, according to our
historians.
President Rajapaksa and former Prime
Minister Yasuo Fukuda planted two ebony
plants endemic to the area to
commemorate the opening of the museum.

photos by Chandana Perera
The
modern museum built according to
international standards cost 480 million
Rupees to built and the Japan
International Cooperation Agency (JICA)
funded the project. It has been built to
improve culture oriented tourism.
A very
attractive artifact which stole the
attention of the President was a
beautiful gold earring found during
Sigiriya excavations and a furnace used
to melt iron ore during Anuradhapura
era.
A huge
panel, in the museum, exhibited the
Megha Lathas and Vijju Lathas of the
Alakamanda of the God King (Kuwera)
Kashyapa, that are depicted in the
famous Sigiriya frescoes.
The
museum contains print and electronic
media aids and houses a theatre with
modern facilities, auditorium, and a
spacious vehicle park.
Ever
since Sigiriya was re-discovered by the
British explorer John Still in 1907 it
has fascinated the modern world. Arthur
C. Clarke the science fiction writer who
lived and died in Sri Lanka thought that
Sigiriya knew a kind of technology quite
ahead of its time. Clarke’s contention
was that the fifth century Sigiriya
damsels depicted in the frescoes were
actually holding transistor radios in
their hands. Artifacts collected and
exhibited in the new Sigiriya museum, no
doubt, will open up new vistas about a
fascinating time of Sri Lanka’s history.


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