Donna Isabella Koraneliya (Sinhala:??? ?????? ?????????) (a.k.a.
Gajaman Nona) was a Sri Lankan author who was noted for having the ability to write and recite impromptu Sinhala poetry.
She was born in Kollupitiya, Ceylon as the second daughter of Don Francisco Senarathna Kumara Perumal and Francina Jasenthu Graivo.
Gajaman was baptized as Donna Isabella Koraneliya.
She had her early education within her own family.
She was talented and earned her honorific name Gajaman Nona (Lady Gajaman) from her mother.
She grew up in Matara, with a taste for dressing like a Dutch woman, which came from her partially 'Westernized' background.
She had a surprising talent in literature, which was highlighted by the women of her community and status.
Her talents were noticed at an early age when someone hid her water pot, and she wrote this Sinhala poem:English Version:
"Little golden pot, filled with waterAnd left on the edge of the well,The one who hid it is a scoundrel who can't count to five or eight! Will you give back my little pot, so that I can go home?
Later in life when married, Gajaman Nona was left almost destitute by the death of her husband.
She couldn't get a proper job.
As she had several children to take care of, she asked the then Fiscal Collector for the Matara district, D'Oyly, for some kind of assistance.
D'Oyly granted her Nindagama (An area of land in which one is able to live and farm for one's own needs).
In gratitude, she wrote poems with Sir D’Oyly.
Today, a statue of her stands at Ambalantota, Nonagama Junction (the name derived from Gajaman Nona).
However, historians have highlighted the fact that D'Oyly was just a civil servant working under British governor and it would have been a tough task for him to grant a 'Nindagama' just for one person.
Therefore, some historians assume that there could have been a strong relationship among D'Oyly and Gajaman.