It was the Swinging Sixties. Memories of amber
nectar, tall tales and late nights whizz around my head as I recall those years
of long ago. Entry into the Faculty of Medicine was the culmination of years of
preparation and sacrifice. We still had the security of home and our parents
paid the bills. We dreamed it was a passport to fame and fortune. There was
such a great sense of myopic optimism, we lost ourselves in the adulation. Life
always has ways to bring us back to reality!!
The dreaded ‘rag’ began as we assembled at the
Faculty for the registration on that fateful 30th day in May 1962. We
were warned of this ordeal and arrived here in a fatalistic mood. Psychopaths
and masochists rode the thermals, like vultures, blocking off the entrances and
exits for us ‘hapless freshers’. Life in medicine for the one hundred and fifty
students began on the 4th of June 1962. The rag
continued for a further two weeks as we commenced our course and there was more
of it after the ‘Law-Medical’. After a sheltered life thus far, I watched with
numbed disbelief this man’s inhumanity to man. Life at the ‘Block’ was a
baptism of fire. Signatures, revisals and study filled our days and nights. The
threat of having to ‘repeat’ generated a toxic atmosphere and furred up our
coronaries. Dr SS Panditharatne expected much from us. Fortunately, Prof M.J
Waas brought some anatomical humour to brighten up our lives. How can we ever
forget what passes through the foramen magnum, apart from food!! Dr. Lester
Jayawardene earned our respect as a great teacher and an encouraging mentor.
Thankfully, such intensely stressful teaching methods and the ‘fanatical’
study of anatomy have now been consigned to history. Prof. A. A Hoover was
a kind and dedicated teacher who showed us the ‘delights’ of the Krebs
cycle. Biochemistry had to be memorised. It all evaporated as we
climbed down the stairs even before we reached Kynsey Road. Prof A.C.E
Koch and his colleagues gave us a good grounding with their fine lectures and
tutorials. The acoustics of the Physiology lecture theatre were particularly
resonant and the stamping that went on to appreciate the jokes brought jollity
to our lives. Dr Carlo Fonseka did much to help us understand human physiology.
Dr Valentine Basnayake was a kind man. His useful tutorials were held in a
darkened room with all the curtains drawn. It was simply too soporific!!
In the third and fourth years there was a plethora
of subjects. These required hard study and a keen memory. All through the final
3 years, clinical work took precedence with endless clinical appointments and
ward classes. We were such a diverse lot of scholars, saints and sinners.
Despite the stress and the mayhem, Cupid stretched his bow and shot his arrows
in the Faculty. There were many fizzing romances that bloomed and flourished
whilst others blossomed just to fade and perished before our eyes. The trauma
and hardship of the course brought us closer. Little groups and cliques formed
within our batch. Some were from the same school, some lived near to each other
and others studied together. Bloemfontein, Jeewaka and ‘Hopper house’ provided
safe lodgings. Academics, sportsmen, musicians and the jolly types all mingled
well to become friends. Friendships were made and firmed in the canteen and
common room which was the social hub of the Faculty where laughter was endemic.
Although renowned for their la dolce
vita and bohemian lifestyle, medical students’ life wasn’t a bed of
roses. At home or hostel, trapped in solitary confinement, books remained our
constant companion. Our bedrooms were cluttered with slips of paper, stacks of
notes and piles of books. For the first 2 years, Cunningham’s Manuals became my
pillow at night. They had muscle fibres stuck to them and some pages were
glazed with human, fat from the dissections. Samson Wright’s text book looked
pristine but needed a degree in English to understand. Textbook of Physiology
and Biochemistry by Bell, Davidson and Scarborough was a good door stopper.
Muir’s textbook of Pathology required time and patience to comprehend of which
I had neither. The late and great Prof. G.H Cooray was meticulous. He had an
air of gravitas that commanded respect. His comprehensive notes became the
bedrock of my knowledge of Pathology. Although so many years have passed his
mantra of rubor, calor, dolor, tumor and functio laesa will resonate in that
lecture theatre forever. With their fine teaching, Prof S.R Kottegoda and Dr
N.D.W Lionel had the remarkable ability to make that huge mass of knowledge
interesting. But with the ravages of time what remains now is just anorexia,
nausea and vomiting. We had a superbly written text book by D.R Laurence which
was studded with laconic British humour to lighten the load. Forensic Medicine
had tremendous appeal giving us hope to solve gruesome murders, like Sherlock
Holmes. The textbook by Sydney Smith gave us a glimpse of the cloak and dagger
world outside. The subject was well presented by the lectures of Prof HVJ
Fernando and Dr Nandadasa Kodagoda. Such great emphasis was placed on
McNaughten's rules of 1840. Although we appreciate its convoluted logic none of
us ever used it in our working lives. Prof Dissanayake’s enthusiasm for
Parasitology was infectious. We had a room full of students itching and
scratching during those lectures. His superior knowledge, eloquent delivery and
superb notes didn’t require any further reading. With his monotonous drone, the
enigmatic Prof Terence Chapman taught an important but dull subject. Those who
fell asleep in the warmth of the lecture theatre had to read Fairbrother's
Textbook of Bacteriology. Dr JPT Jayasundera from the Medical Research
Institute who had a Hitleresque moustache and a ‘distinguished’ limp supervised
our laboratory work. I am reminded of those bacteriology practicals when the
soups at home looked like Robertson’s cooked meat medium. Public Health
lectures by Prof O.E.R Abhayaratne were light entertainment in memorable
English prose laced with rhyming poetry. His cyclostyled notes (including all
his jokes) were available for Rs.5.00 courtesy of the ‘Marker’. The Dean, with
his large frame was naturally imposing and filled any room he entered. His kind
avuncular manner endeared him to his students. His daughter, Rohini, was in our
batch. Despite her high profile, she had no airs and graces and soon became one
of us. Prof Earle De Fonseka inspired a generation of musicians as the
Conductor of the Symphony Orchestra of Sri Lanka. But his lectures on
statistics was no music to my ears. It just got in through one ear and left
through the other, not much sticking in between. Prof Milroy Paul was a legend.
His excellent common-sense approach to surgery made it all look so easy until I
started reading Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery. The book is an
encyclopaedia that requires a crane to lift and an accessory brain to remember.
Fortunately, Prof R.A Navaratne introduced us to the manageable Text Book of
Surgery by Macfarlane and Thomas. He was a brilliant surgeon with a logical
mind but his lectures were a prolonged mumble. The good Prof treated us with
dignity, a rare commodity in those days. Davidson's Principles and Practice of
Medicine remained our Bible with practical help from the Clinical Methods by
Hutchison and Hunter. Prof K.Rajasuriya was a dedicated teacher and an
excellent clinician. He was a complex person of whom we knew so little except
he was unpredictable and had a volcanic temper. I will also remember him for
his compassion towards his patients and his succinct wit during that eventful
two-month appointment. Obstetrics and Gynaecology certainly needed more than
the proverbial two fingers. Prof D.A Ranasinghe was rather fastidious and
impatient, making his appointment demanding. It was hard to fathom if his ‘side
kick’ of a registrar was a help or a hindrance as I survived with unease and
anxiety. The Professor’s teaching, Dr T. Viswanathan’s lectures and Ten
Teachers textbook gave us a sound grounding to clear the hurdle of the Finals.
The Faculty Library with its unmistakable smell of wisdom was the last resort
to find those pearls of knowledge that had eluded me thus far. By some quirk of
fate those yawning gaps in my knowledge had the remarkable ability to appear in
the examinations.
The pernicious environment of medical education of
the time was not for the faint-hearted. Insults, humiliation and verbal abuse
that were doled out required a thick skin and broad shoulders. We tread
cautiously and endured the arrogance and conceit in silence in the hope of
better times. I will let you to imagine the consequences if any of us protested
against the treatment we received. The monolithic establishment and the
Faculty’s corridors of power conveniently turned a blind eye. With the passage
of time, recriminations have disappeared and what remains is loyalty and
respect. Despite the hardships and the privations, ours was the golden age of
medical education. I still consider our Professors, lecturers and clinical
tutors as some of the best in the world. They were dedicated teachers and were
keen to impart their knowledge. I marvel at their clinical skills and recoil at
their egotistical arrogance. We remember them all with gratitude. To me
personally, Drs Wickrema Wijenaike, Ernie Peiris, D.J Attygalla and R.S
Thanabalasundrum stood out as brilliant teachers of clinical medicine. Prof R.P
Jayawardene with his effervescent personality made learning lively and fun. The
ward classes of Dr Darell Weinman and George Ratnavale were rousing,
motivational and pure theatre. They taught us the intricate logic of Neurology
and the crisp craft of case presentation. I remember less of the surgeons but recall
the brilliant ward classes of Drs PR Anthonis, K.G Jayasekera, LDC Austin, DF de
S Gunawardene and NAJ Niles. Being a brilliant comedian, on his ward rounds, Dr
Niles’ side-splitting jokes brightened up our days. At the new Lady Ridgway
Hospital Prof CC De Silva and Dr WJ Gomes introduced us to Paediatrics with
courtesy and grace. Drs A.M Mendis and T. Viswanathan were excellent teachers.
Their brilliant ward rounds and classes at the De Soysa Maternity Hospital were
a pleasure minus that all too familiar culture of fear. Ours was a
comprehensive training that included Ophthalmology, ENT, OPD and Orthopaedics.
Haematology was brilliantly taught by Drs Willie Ratnavale from the Glass House
and Doris Peiris from the GHC. Training in Venereal Diseases was done in a
seedy corner of a dark alley near the GHC. It was conducted by Dr C.S
Ratnatunge and Mrs. Indrani Jayawardene. They taught us everything we needed to
know of the carnal desires and the heavy price of indiscretions. Chancres and
chancroid grew like flowers on the offending organs. Perhaps it encouraged a
generation of students to avoid those illicit pleasures of the flesh.
Away from the books and the Faculty bubble, there
were many events and social functions. They helped us to bond. We started with
the infamous Law-Medical match whose legend still lives on. Our Block Concert
was an epic with unbridled erotic humour and sensational performances which
have now entered the folklore of the Faculty. There was a large gathering of
medical students at the Health Department Sports Club to listen to Prof. HVJ
Fernando and Dr WDL Fernando, sing in forensic detail, the grim and grisly tale
of “the officers daughter who hanged and died”. Some of our clinical
teachers gave us memorable dinners at the end of the appointments. One such
dinner by Dr Oliver Medonza is fondly remembered for the sumptuous meal,
plentiful booze and the spontaneous songs. This raised eyebrows and plenty of
smiles inevitably livening up the occasion. Then there were the Public Health
field trips to the Labugama reservoir and the smelly sewage works at
Mattakkuliya. There were visits to the Mental Hospital at Angoda and also to
the Infectious Diseases Hospital. Travelling together in groups was such great
fun. We sang and danced at the memorable and raucous evening booze-ups in the
Men’s Common Room. There was a Dance with great elegance and grace held
annually at the King George’s Hall of the University’s Science Faculty at Reid
Avenue. We called it the Colours night. Amidst the glitz and the glamour, the
compulsive beat of the Harold Seneviratne Combo lit up our amorphous
yearnings!! It was that kind of night. We kept to the Faculty tradition of a
Final Year Trip. Even now, this legendary trip and its many jolly romps never
fails to raise a smile. That was a fitting farewell which none of us will ever
forget.
Although in the Faculty and in our own batch
females were well represented, it was not so in the previous generations. The
Faculty then was a Gentlemen’s Club and was changing, all but slowly. Despite
the new-found freedom, hippie culture and the prevalent permissive society,
compared to nowadays, the girls and boys lead separate lives. They cherished
the old-fashioned concept of modesty. There were some gallant lads and liberal
lasses who mixed freely. Many of the lads could just about pluck up courage for
a wolf whistle from afar. The girls would have brought elegance, charm and
glamour to the Men’s Common Room, the Law-Medical, “Block Nite” and the Final
Year Trip. Their presence would have prevented the embarrassing excesses. When
we were students, there were very few female consultants and senior lecturers.
I recall just a few who were brilliant in their own fields - Drs Priyani Soysa,
Stella de Silva, Rajeswary Rajakariar, Doris Peiris, Dr Mrs Yoganathan and
Daphne Attygalla. We salute their intellectual brilliance, tenacity and
courage.
Thus far, endless examinations and revisions had
usurped our youth. After a gruelling five years we saw the light at the end of
the tunnel. But there was a problem. We had to pass the demanding Final Year
examination. The ‘Finals’ hit us like a typhoon. Its trauma was soon forgotten
as we emerged as doctors in 1967. When the results were published, that was a
defining moment. As the sunset on our student days, there was a new dawn of a
career in Medicine. Although we left the Faculty it never really left us. After
the brief year of internship we went our separate ways. While some remained in
our motherland, others moved to the far corners of the globe. Then events
intervened and the grim reality of getting on with life took over. Our careers,
marriage and bringing up families usurped our energies. It gave us great
satisfaction to see our own batch-mates reach the dizzy heights in their
selected fields. The spotlight of success brought its own challenges. Time
ticked on and decades passed swiftly. Then our children flew the family
nest. But we overcame that emptiness by immersing ourselves in the profession.
After a lifetime in Medicine, retirement appeared in the horizon. The fateful
day came all too soon. We bade a sad goodbye to our professional life for which
we had worked so hard for so long. That was never easy.
Life and times and the profession has changed
enormously. Laborious history taking is now a lost art. Pharmaceuticals,
laboratory medicine and diagnostic imaging have made tremendous strides.
Patient’s’ rights have come to the forefront. During our working lives despite
the ructions caused by the human failings of greed, avarice and selfishness,
thankfully, some of the niceties of doctoring has survived. We are now at the
receiving end of healthcare. In our sunset years it is the friendships, family
and medicines that sustain us. We are grateful for every hour of everyday. Time
has stolen the life and the energy we possessed in our youth. Now our every
action is taken over by gravity. We all have changed so much. The many reunions
have brought us together giving us tremendous joy. Each reunion now is also a
farewell for some. Those years in the Faculty have changed the course of our
lives and helped make us who we are today.
Despite life’s vain tumults, none of us is here
forever. Our time will come. Now we are in the grip of events much of it beyond
our control. Meanwhile, we must enjoy life, family and friends. Farewells,
Reunions and Get-togethers are invaluable. Do make every attempt to keep in
touch.
I reach for the wisdom of Omar Khayyam in the
Rubaiyat:
“Ah, make the most of what we yet may
spend,
Before we too into the Dust descend;
Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie
Sans Wine, sans Song, sans
Singer, and--sans End!
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