A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, November 29, 2016
Adaptation – Part I
Preparing for the future by looking back. Understanding the issues and options before us.
Sri Lanka like all other nations, is faced with a difficult future in
terms of climate change, we need to understand the oncoming changes very
clearly so that the right options can be implemented. The myth of
growth by consumption has exposed us all to a dangerously changing
climate. But Sri Lanka is unique in being the only nation whose
ancestors had future-proofed our present. If we understand the potential
that we have, we can make the future less impactful for our children
In the article ‘Playing with the Future’
(Colombo Telegraph November 8, 2016), some threats we will have to face
as a consequence of climate change was discussed. The destructive fires
that plagued the mountains during the unusually hot and dry months of
September-October were indicative of future changes.
Now that the rains have come, I watch the structure less soil,
desiccated by periodic fires, pour down the mountainsides on its way to
fill up the small reservoirs and tanks below. A result of poor planning,
that saw the mountain forests disappear to be replaced with fire prone
and desiccating Pinus and Eucalyptus plantations or the Tea
monocultures.
Sri Lankans have lamented on the ignorance of these developers for a long time.
The founding father of this nation the Rt. Hon. D.S. Senanayake wrote the following words in his book Agriculture and Patriotism.
“It is of importance to remember the part played in the conservation of
water by the forests of the country. With the evidence daily
accumulating of the wisdom of our forefathers, we need scarcely doubt
that it was not merely the idea of making the mountain country difficult
of approach by the foreign invader that caused them to preserve
unfilled and uncleared the dense vegetation of their mountain slopes. We
may readily believe that they deliberately left these untouched in
order to provide that abundant supply of water on which they might draw
for the benefit of man.”
His statement reflects the words of the great king Parakramabahu I who
stated “not even a little water that comes from the rain must flow into
the ocean without being made useful to man”. He reflected a philosophy
popular from the 3rd century BC to 12th century, which saw the
construction of about 30,000 reservoirs in lowland Sri Lanka. This
amazing engineering effort created sophisticated ‘cascades’ of
reservoirs not seen anywhere else in the world. As observed by Parker in
his book ‘Ancient Ceylon’: “ but as a matter of fact the notion of
reservoir-making appears to have been originated in only one country,
and never to have been invented independently elsewhere, at any rate in
the Old World”. When compared to the lowland dry zone land area of about
40,000 sq. kilometers, it is almost equivalent to one reservoir for
each sq. kilometer. But tragically rather than being managed and
conserved many of these tanks are ignored, filled up or constructed over
in many watersheds.
It has been calculated that a one-degree increase would eliminate fresh
water from a third of the world’s land surface by 2100. This is merely
through evaporation. Most countries in the world are not so lucky to
have a radial drainage system of rivers from the mountain rainwater
catchments that have a massive water retention system represented by the
reservoirs built by our ancestors.
Today we destroy this amazing possibility, to restore and utilize this
gift of ‘future-proofing’ endowed on us by our ancestors, by mindless
‘development’ projects that cut across watersheds and spew pollutants
into our waterways.
Concern for the future should be a fundamental plank of development.
Indeed it has produced a tension between words stated at international
fora and the national policy process. The statement on biodiversity and
the statement on Climate Change provide examples.

