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In the Wake of the Tsunami
From Rory Spowers of Web of HopeWe had moved into our house one
week before. After six months in houses within the ramparts of Galle
Fort, the renovation of a house we had just rented for ten years were
nearly complete. For the first time in seven years, my wife and I had
all our belongings in one place. A container had just arrived from the
UK and the hallway was stacked with piles of cardboard boxes, ready to
be unpacked as we finally installed our family into our "dream home".
To begin with, being four kilometres inland and perched on a small
hill, we had no idea that anything had happened. A text message came in
from a friend, asking if we were 'OK' and saying that she and some
others were 'safe and high at Wijaya beach', where all of us, and
virtually everyone we know in the area, had been celebrating Christmas
Day only hours before. Initially, we understood this to mean that
Christmas celebrations had extended through the night and the party was
still going.
Then the reality started to strike home. First the power went down.
Then the sirens started, followed by the helicopters, turning into a
steady stream of traffic for the next few days, since we are located
just two hundred metres from Karapitiya, the main hospital for the south
of the island. The landlines and mobile phone network were down for
hours and intermittent for days. Without TV, or internet access, we
turned to the car radio. Builders gathered round and translated as news
came in of rising sea levels around the island, from Trincomalee in the
north-east to Batticaloa, Pottuvil and Arugam Bay on the east coast,
then Hambantota, Tangalle and Galle in the south, followed by Hikkaduwa,
Bentota and Kalutara on the west. Knowing that we had virtually no
petrol in the car, I set out with my three year old son to fill up at
the nearest pumps, just quarter of a mile away.
By the time we hit the junction by the hospital, it was clear that
something huge had occurred. The road was in chaos and an impenetrable
queue had already developed around the petrol station. I turned round
and went back to the house, the sound of helicopters above the palm
trees already creating the air of a war zone and the opening scenes from
Apocalypse Now. For the following three days, the pandemonium which had
struck the whole coastal zone was enveloped in an eerie stillness, as a
hot humid blanket stifled the stagnant air.
For all of us touched by this tragedy, the ironies continue to mount.
After twenty years of civil war, Sri Lanka seemed poised on the edge of
a new era. Tourism in the south of the island was booming, with more
bookings than ever and the mood buoyant amongst all those associated
with the industry. Apart from the habitual rumblings from a small but
vocal minority within the politically volatile south, people were
looking forward to a time of peace and prosperity hitherto unknown on
this island.
For me personally, the ironies are stark. Part of what had propelled
me to bring my family to Sri Lanka was the belief that the island
offered some of the greatest security against what I perceived as the
most daunting global threats of our time. After ten years of working as
a writer and researcher in the environmental arena, the greatest
concerns I had for my sons' future were issues like global warming and
biodiversity loss. With the greatest degree of biodiversity of any
country of its' size in the world, I saw Sri Lanka's natural immune
system as relatively intact. My last book, Rising Tides, was a history
of ecological thought and singled out sea level rises as the greatest
threat facing the globe over the next twenty years. Bizarrely, I had
given a copy of the book to a friend the night before, who was swept
from his bed in a beachfront cabana only hours later by the tsunami.
While looking at land and houses in the south of the island, my
primary consideration was always to look at how this property would be
affected by a sea level rise of say two or three metres over the coming
decades. Of course, I never expected such a phenomenon to occur over
night and, to begin with, I knew of no correlation between the tsunami
and global warming. However, although it has hardly been reported in the
mainstream media, there is now some evidence that rapidly melting ice in
Antarctica has affected the pressure on the tectonic plate system. This
theory is supported by the fact that a much smaller quake was observed
on 24th December between Tasmania and Macquarie Island, on the opposite
side of the plate from the epicentre of the Big One.
So, although it may be right to say that geological upheavals of this
kind have happened throughout history, there is the possibility that the
geo-physical changes we are seeing now can be attributed to
anthropogenic, or man-made emissions, destabilising the climate and the
very foundations of the globe. In terms of a root cause, the massive
increases in greenhouse gases in the earth's atmosphere since the
Industrial Revolution could be providing the catalyst for chain
reactions, or 'positive feedback loops', which feed on themselves and
thereby accelerate the disruption of the global climate and now,
possibly even the system of tectonic plates which formed the world map
as we know it.
Day by day, even hour by hour, the true impact of the devastation
struck home. Everyone was physically exhausted by the sheer trauma of it
all and most of us are still recovering from a state of shock. Many of
those working for us, and many of the builders working on the house,
have lost family members - even whole families. Horrific stories
continue to mount and, in the immediate days following the event, most
of us were exposed to scenes which we could never have contemplated
being confronted with, from bloated bodies floating in inland canals to
small babies washed up in quagmires of mud, rubble, sand and palm
fronds. Many we know had dramatic escapes, from being swept out to sea
and deposited in the tops of palm trees, to being stranded on the top of
water towers clinging to their small children. It seems a minor miracle
that many we know survived at all, since some were asleep in makeshift
cabanas right on the beach.
Soon the stench became pervasive and we watched in horror as convoys
of trucks brought piles of bodies to the hospital and left them lying on
the ground awaiting identification. By lunchtime on Tuesday 28th, with
over five hundred corpses still decomposing outside the hospital, the
government gave the orders for them to be buried in mass graves before
the risk of disease became too high. At the same time, we realised we
could no longer keep two small children in the vicinity of the hospital
and were saved by someone driving down from Colombo with the fuel we
needed to get out.
Now, ten days after the event, and having had to consider every possible
immediate, medium and long-term possibility, from leaving the country
altogether to sitting tight in Colombo, we have returned home to Galle.
An inspirational relief effort is already underway, involving many
members of the ex-patriate community, and many are committed to doing
whatever possible to be of assistance, both in the immediate and longer
term. This is their home now and the thought of uprooting and, once
again, starting a new life somewhere else, outweighs the immediate
dangers of staying. For all of us though, especially those with young
children, the risk of disease epidemics weighs heavily, and could at any
moment call for immediate and evasive action.
Three local initiatives run by friends of ours will now be the focus
of our energy. Jack Eden and Robert Drummond started a charitable
association here three years ago, Friends of the South, and are already
raising substantial sums in the UK and elsewhere for medium and
long-term community and grass-roots project. Project Galle 2005 is a
more immediate effort started by a young and energetic group, co-ordinating
the distribution of aid to about 20 camps in the Galle area. Lanka Real
Aid has developed as an extension of Lanka Real Estate, a local property
company run by Giles Scott and Viren Perera who started the Ulpotha
Sanctuary, an exclusive yoga retreat in a traditional village within the
centre of the island, where they have rehabilitated ancient irrigation
networks, initiated reforestation schemes and developed sustainable
agriculture systems. With their charitable arm, the East Pole
Foundation, their energy will be directed primarily to the east coast
and some of the worst affected areas. (Details for making specific
donations to any of the projects are listed at the end of this article.)
The Web of Hope (www.thewebofhope.com),
a UK registered charity and on-line database of role models for positive
change which I founded three years ago, is also launching a UK appeal to
direct funds to all three of these projects. The Web of Hope highlights
any initiative, project, mechanism or technology which is a proven
success, from a grass-roots community level through to corporate and
global governance, offering them as inspiration for others struggling
with similar challenges.
For example, in Sri Lanka, we already list the simple rainwater
harvesting technologies introduced to the dry zone by the Intermediate
Technology Development Group (ITDG) and which could be so effective in
the wake of this tragedy; the grass-roots rural development model so
successfully run by Dr Ariyatne and the Sarvodaya movement over the last
forty years and some of the micro-credit schemes which could help
revitalise the local economy. The most pressing and immediate work
however is the desalinisation of wells, the constant monitoring of
sanitation in the camps and ensuring that latrines do not contaminate
water sources. Clean and safe distribution centres for food will need to
be established, along with easy access to medical supplies and
expertise.
In the longer term, we are devoting much of our time and energy to
developing the Web of Hope's eco-village and learning centre about
twenty kilometres inland, where we are rehabilitating a 60 acres tea
estate, planting organic paddy fields and starting some agro-forestry
schemes to intercrop a wide variety of fruits, vegetables and medicinal
herbs. Although I hate to sound alarmist, we have to make provision for
the fact that this may not be an isolated incident, but merely sets the
precedent for what might be in store for us, not only here in Sri Lanka
but in other parts of the globe as well, as we move deeper into what
many see as the defining decade of human history. On a more positive
note, there is a widespread belief that the enormity of this tragedy
could overcome the inherent jealousies and divisions within Sri Lankan
society, bonding previously conflicting groups and ultimately moving the
country to a new level of unity. Let's hope so.
Rory Spowers is the author of Rising Tides - the history and
future of the environmental movement, published by Canongate, and
Founder/Editor of The Web of Hope, the world's first on-line resource of
best practice role models for sustainability -
www.thewebofhope.com
To make on-line donations to all three of these projects from the UK,
and collect the Gift Aid, please go to
www.thewebofhope.com
For more information on Friends of the South:
www.friendsofsouth.org
For more information on Ulpotha, the East Pole Foundation and Lanka
Real Aid: www.ulpotha.com and
www.lankarealestate.com
© Rory Spowers
5th January 2005
Dear All
Does anyone know anyone, who knows anyone, who has had experience of co-ordinating
NGOs and local initiatives in a disaster zone who we might approach to
help work with us in southern Sri Lanka over the coming months?
Although there is tremendous goodwill and energy here, none of us have
done
this work before and one person with experience and those organisational
skills could a huge bonus to making sure our efforts achieve the maximum
possible benefit.
Contact Rory Spowers
rory@thewebofhope.com
(Source: Positive News:
http://www.positivenews.org.uk/index.php)
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