E. L. B. Hurulle

The Honourable Deshamanya
Edwin Hurulle
MP
එඩ්වින් හුරුල්ලේ
3rd Governor of North Central Province
In office
11 May 1994  September 1994
President Dingiri Banda Wijetunga
Preceded by E. L. Senanayake
Succeeded by Maithripala Senanayake
Sri Lankan High Commissioner to Australia
1st Governor of Central Province
In office
June 1988  1 February 1990
President J. R. Jayewardene
Ranasinghe Premadasa
Preceded by Office created
Succeeded by P. C. Imbulana
Minister of Cultural Affairs
In office
23 July 1977  1989
President J. R. Jayewardene
Prime Minister J. R. Jayewardene
Succeeded by W. J. M. Lokubandara
Minister of Communications
In office
March 1965  31 May 1970
Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake
Succeeded by Leslie Goonewardena
Member of the Sri Lanka Parliament
for Horawupotana
In office
1977–1988
Preceded by T.B. Herath
Succeeded by Constituency Abolished
In office
1956–1970
Preceded by T.B. Poholiyadde
Succeeded by T.B. Herath
Personal details
Born 19 January 1919
British Ceylon
Died 6 April 2009(2009-04-06) (aged 90)
Sri Lanka
Nationality Sri Lankan
Political party United National Party
Spouse(s) Malinee Hurulle (née Galagoda)
Children Maya, Deepthi, Themiya, Vajira, Kanishka
Alma mater St. Patrick's College, Jaffna
Trinity College, Kandy
Occupation Politics, Diplomat
Profession Politician
Religion Buddhism

Deshamanya Edwin Loku Bandara Hurulle (Sinhala: එඩ්වින් ලොකු බණඩාර හුරුල්ලේ) (19 January 1919 – 6 April 2009) (known as E. L. B. Hurulle) was a Sri Lankan Member of Parliament, diplomat and Provincial Governor who served as Cabinet Minister of Communications in Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake's Government and Cabinet Minister of Cultural Affairs under President J. R. Jayewardene's Government. He was also Sri Lanka High Commissioner to Australia, Governor, Central Province and North Central Province.[1][2]

Early days

He was the first child of Tikiri Bandara Hurulle and Alice Bulankulame. His paternal grandfather Henarath Bandara Hurulle had been Rate Mahatmaya of Hurulupalatha in Anuradhapura District. It had been Punchi Bandara Hurulle, the father of Henarath Bandara Hurulle, who had made the move from their original home close to the dam of the Hurulu Weva to Morakewa in Horowpotana. Punchi Bandara Hurulle had built his Walauwa by the Morakewa Reservoir. Subsequently, a palatial two-storeyed Walawwa built by Henarath Bandara Hurulle around 1900 A.D. between the Morakewa Weva and the Anuradhapura - Trincomalee Main Road. This was the building set ablaze by the JVP during the insurgency in 1988.[3]

Henarath Banda Hurulle had married Maningamuwe Weragama Kumarihamy. Edwin’s full name was Illangasinghe Kalukumara Rajakaruna Edwin Loku Bandara Hurulle. Edwin’s maternal grandfather was Loku Bandara Bulankulame Dissava, who was the Atamasthana Nilame (chief lay custodian of Atamasthana) in Anuradhapura.

Education

He completed his primary and secondary education at St Patrick’s College, Jaffna & Trinity College, Kandy where he passed the London Inter - Arts Examination.

E. L. B. Hurulle as Minister of Cultural Affairs in Prime Minister J.R Jayewardene's Cabinet 1977

Government Service and political career

Hurulle for a time served as an acting Rate Mahatmaya and was subsequently absorbed into the ranks of the Divisional Revenue Officers who replaced the Rate Mahatmayas in the Kandyan areas and the Korale Mudliyars in the Low Country. In election of 1956 he, for the first time, contested for the Horowpotana electorate in Parliament and survived the MEP landslide when the UNP was to a (mere) eight Parliamentary Seats. His maternal uncle P.B. Bulankulame Dissava who had served in the Cabinet could not retain his seat in Parliament at this election.

He won three more elections thereafter and in 1965 entered the Cabinet as Minister of Communications. In 1977 he was appointed Cabinet Minister of Cultural Affairs and retired in 1994 after serving as Governor of the Central Province, High Commissioner in Australia and Governor of the North Central Province.

Family

He married Malinee Galagoda, the youngest daughter of Madduma Bandara Galagoda of Galagoda Walauwa, Teldeniya, a Basnayake Nilame (Chief Lay custodian) of the Naatha-Devalay, Kandy and a former Officer of the Department of Forests. E.L.B. Hurulle and his wife Malinee had two daughters Maya and Deepthi and three sons Themiya (ex Project Minister of Science & Technology,ex Member,North Central Provincial Council and former Director-General, Telecommunications Regulatory Commission of Sri Lanka), Vajira and Kanishka.

See also

References

  1. Deshamanya E. L. B. Hurulle. The Island, Retrieved on 17 May 2009.
  2. In victory or defeat he was the gentleman politician. The Sunday Times, Retrieved on 3 May 2009.
  3. Hurulle Walawwa: A piece of history through the ashes of destruction. The Sunday Times, Retrieved on 3 October 2010.
  4. යාල්දේවිගේ උප්පත්ති කතාව. Rivira, Retrieved on 26 April 2009.
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