About

Why this blog ?

The history known to the people of Heladeepa (Sri Lanka) was not written by the real sons who were  born in this land. The matters such as Gauthama Buddha is a son of Heladeepa and the great civilizations built by the forefathers of  Heladeepa are not discussed in the existing history in Sri Lanka. Now its time to rethink, to find the path to the real history of Heladeepa which was hidden in thousands of inscriptions, ancient texts, folklores, customary practices and also in numerous archaeological findings.

Key Research Areas

  • the real history behind Gauthama Buddha - he is not a son of India but a son of Heladeepa (Sri Lanka).
  • what we lost as people in Heladeepa due to the conspiracies set up by Indian authors, authors with Indian origin and influences.
  • the sages lived in Heladeepa (Sri Lanka) – their identity and support given by them in uplifting the culture of Heladeepa.
  • shocking information on the relationship between Gauthama Buddha and great king of Heladeepa - King Gāmani Abaya (Dutugamunu the Great).
  • the true identity of Indian emperor, Ahoka the Great.
  • Dambadiva is Heladeepa (Sri Lanka), but certainly not India.
  • the real truth behind the thousands of ‘ruins - pagodas, inscriptions, monasteries, buildings complexes, agricultural monuments, sculptures, royal palaces etc ’ discovered in the land of Heladeepa (Sri Lanka) which was considered as results of the visit of Indian conceptual King Vijaya and the Buddhist monk, Arahath Mahinda Thero
  • the latest, but not the last – the evolvement of the language of the people of Heladeepa (Sri Lanka)

Who is behind this blog ?

Chief Adviser - Venerable Mookalangamuwe Pannāyananda Thero 


Venerable Mookalangamuwe Pannāyananda Thero is an independent researcher who is not influenced by any traditional school of thoughts & any such authorities, he strongly believes in his own researches – visiting the field and reading the inscriptions and his analytical approaches to the subject matter done through the voluminous texts written in relation with the history in Sri Lanka, folk arts, cultural aspects etc.