Sri Lanka Memon Family Genealogy
GADIT (CHOMASA) - Family #300
The Gadit (Chomasa) Family are said
to have been so called as they were a folk engaged in agriculturla
pursuits and owned bullock carts which they used to transport goods and people
for a fee.
It was in
1937, that Abdul Rahman Abdul Ghany
Gadit alias Chomasa,
arrived in Ceylon. His nickname Chomasa is said to
have been passed down from his father Abdul Ghany Eshak Gadit, who used to work at Karim Dhedhi Seth's bungalow in KKutiyana, as a gardner.
As an employee he was required to work under all weather conditions, be it sun
or rain. On one occasion when he was on his way to work his friends remarked in
jest, "Oh Chomasa, where art thou going?". The name stuck and from that day he and his descendants
have been known as Chomasa. In Memani,
Chomasa means "rainy season" just as "Siyaro" means winter and "Unaro"
means summer.
Abdul Rahman had six sons from four marriages. Among his sons, Yoosuf, semi retired, had four
sons. His oldest son Haroon deals in textiles and
owns a shop on Main Street, Omar Tex, while Abdul Rasheed
is at Haji Iqbal Brothers at Third Cross Street. Haroon, a very demure person, along with Hashim Buddhani, established a Madarasah called Sabeel-ur-Rashad
Arabic College in 1992 housed within the Mohiyuddin Jummah Mosque at Mayura Place off
Havelock Road. The Madarasah has, presently, six Ustads and eighty students.
1 Gadit
2 Abdul Ghany Eshak Gadit
3
Abdul Rahman Abdul Ghany
Gadit (Chomasa)
4 Sattar Abdul Rahman Gadit
4 Yoosuf Abdul Rahman Gadit
5 Haroon Yoosuf Gadit
6 Hamza Haroon Gadit
6 Hanzala Haroon Yoosuf
6 Omar Haroon Yoosuf
5 Abdul Rasheed Yoosuf Gadit
5 son
5 son
4 Abdul Ghafar Abdul Rahman Gadit
4 Abdul Aziz Abdul Rahman
Gadit
4 Abdul Rasheed Abdul Rahman Gadit
4 Yoonus Abdul Rahman Gadit
Compiled by the Webmaster of the Sri Lanka Genealogy Website from
available data in Sri Lankan archives together with data extracted from "Memons of Sri Lanka" - Men Memoirs Milestones, by Asiff Hussein & Hameed Karim Bhoja, May 2006, iSBN 955-1408-00-4, Published by The
Memon Association of Sri Lanka