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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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, September 26, 2016
Sri Lanka: Ancient innovations combat water woes
In a village of abandoned wells, ancient water management techniques are throwing a lifeline to desperate villagers.
A
resident of the small village of Puhudiwula stands beside her neglected
rainwater harvesting tank [Tharuka Dissanaike/ UNDP/ Al Jazeera]--Children
in a village near Horowpathana can only drink from this tank, which
must be refilled frequently. The water from their well is unusable
[Tharuka Dissanaike/ UNDP/ Al Jazeera]
The
restored bund is so broad it is now a main point of access for this
Galgamuwa village. It is used to transport crops and bring materials to
the fields. [Tharuka Dissanaike/ UNDP/ Al Jazeera] --A
father and daughter go to collect water. These are the thirstiest
months in the dry zone, and the family travels several kilometres twice a
week to a shop. [Tharuka Dissanaike/ UNDP/ Al Jazeera]
by
Smriti Daniel
Puhudiwula, Sri Lanka - In the district of
Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka, Puhudiwula is a village of abandoned wells.
Though new and well-built, these wells can be found in every garden,
costing around 100,000 rupees ($700) to build. The villagers, however,
will not drink or even cook with the water, which they believe is
driving an epidemic of the deadly Chronic Kidney Disease of Unknown
Etiology (CKDu) in this area. While the illness is not the end of the
community's troubles, many of their woes are tied to water.

As a former border village on
the frontlines of a nearly three-decade long civil war, the villagers
lived with sporadic violence and terrible uncertainty. Now, seven years
after the conflict ended, times are still tough, but the village of
Puhudiwula is about to be thrown a lifeline.
In 2016, Sri Lanka became one of the first 15 countries in the world to
receive a grant from the Green Climate Fund. The Ministry of Mahaweli
Development and Environment, with the assistance of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), procured $38.1m to help communities adapt
to the impacts of climate change. Over the next few years, an estimated
770,500 people in the dry zone, including those in Puhudiwula, will experience direct benefits from this programme.
Somewhat remarkably, the
whole proposal turns on Sri Lanka realising that the best answer to
their modern woes is an ancient innovation.
Scrabbling for answers
A sign in Sinhalese by 40-year-old Bandula Silva's door in Puhudiwula reads "May Buddha Bless this House". Inside, however, its owner has been dealt a death sentence. Eleven months ago, the
40-year-old from Puhudiwula was diagnosed with CKDu. He began treatment
but the disease had already ravaged his body. The father of three is
barely able to walk and cannot keep his food down, except just after a
session of dialysis, when the treatment brings some relief. It is
difficult to predict how much time his weekly visits to the hospital
will buy him.
Just down the road from Silva, G Premawathie has the same disease - the
elderly widow's kidneys have begun to fail her and fluid retention has
left her feet and ankles swollen. She has another neighbour, a
29-year-old farmer who was recently diagnosed. Though the intensity of
the condition can vary, villagers know the outlook is grim: Two days
ago, they attended the funeral of a man who had succumbed to CKDu. The
diseased was a close relative of Piyasiri Soyza, president of the local
farmers' association. Soyza estimates that there are currently more than
100 people battling CKDu in this area. He lost his own father to the
disease.
Since he was diagnosed, Silva and his family have stopped drinking water
from their well. Premawathie and her family also buy their water,
paying by the litre.
"The water from our well tastes of rust," she tells Al Jazeera. Soyza,
who is hale and fit at 57 years old, says for years now he has travelled
several kilometres each week to bring his family water from another
village where there is a spring and no occurrence of CKDu.
CKDu has been reported in many countries, yet the disease remains poorly
understood. In Sri Lanka, studies have explored multiple causes, most
notably the possibility that the heavy use of agrochemicals is to blame. The fact that men are most at risk of developing the condition has led researchers to consider what role dehydration and outdoor farm work might play, though it is likely to be a combination of many factors.
In a presentation earlier this year, Sarath Amunugama, of the Ministry of Health, noted that
there was a need to move away from a single cause explanation to
multi-causal explanations when trying to understand the disease.
According to a Government Medical Officers Association study in 2013, a
total population of 400,000 are affected across the country. Some 1,400
lives are claimed every year, while the death rate in North Central
Province is 19 per month - the island's highest (PDF).
In the face of this ongoing tragedy, everyone is scrabbling for answers.
Providing clean water seems to be the most obvious first solution, and
it is one the affected communities themselves are seeking out.
"The entire population is affected by drought, but the most
disadvantaged and most vulnerable group are women," says AADWS Pradeep, a
divisional officer at the Department of Agrarian Services. "Women are
responsible for providing drinking and household water, and when the
wells and tanks dry up, they have to go far away to find it."
Men often migrate to areas
where there is water, because seasonal labourers are sought to work on
fields. Left behind, women must manage not only the needs of their
households for cooking and sanitation, but ensure their domestic animals
have enough to drink and their home gardens are watered, or they risk
being unable to feed their families.
An ancient innovation
Though climate change
threatens to exacerbate the situation to a dangerous degree, Ranjith
Punyawardena, chief climatologist at the Department of Agriculture
tells Al Jazeera that people in Sri Lanka's dry zone have always struggled to find enough water.
Some of the small village tanks in
this area have been in operation for more than 2,000 years. The best
estimates place the total number of both functioning and abandoned tanks
in Sri Lanka at 18,387 [PDF].
Over generations, these
tanks evolved into cascade systems connecting these earthen water
reservoirs - resembling ponds and lakes - with each other using a system
of canals.
"The cascades were a
counter for this natural climate variability," says Punyawardena, adding
that without these innovative water management systems, cultivation in
the dry zone would have been impossible.
According to Herath
Manthrithilake, head of the research programme at the International
Water Management Institute in Sri Lanka, the tanks "eventually evolved
into a new kind of hydrological civilisation."
Manthrithilake explains
that some tanks would be water holes, serving as upstream sediment
traps. Forest tanks in the upper catchment area were for local wildlife
and kept animals from competing with humans for water. Others were
especially designed to replenish ground water or support seasonal
irrigation.
The ancients even developed
their own sluice gate design, allowing water to be collected from the
surface of the tank, rather than its murky depths.
Now the funds from the GCF
are going to be invested in restoring a number of these cascade systems
in the dry zone, including the one adjacent to the village of
Puhudiwula.
Experts say rehabilitating
the network of small village tank irrigation systems means protecting
the forests even as farmers get the water they need to cultivate their
crops, ensuring food security in a very vulnerable region. It also means
that groundwater could be replenished and that water quality in the
village wells around the tank would improve as a result.
Villagers would not have to dig so deep to reach the liquid, and pockets
of contaminated water would become less likely, offering some
protection against diseases such as CKDu.
The relatively linear arrangement of these tanks, explains
Manthrithilake, allows for the installation of monitors that can then
function as an early warning system, alerting villages along their
length to the threat of floods.
"Water is the big player in this whole scenario; this is the medium
through which we experience climate change," says Manthrithilake.
It all comes down to water management, both in excess and scarcity.
However, restoring and maintaining these cascade systems in a time of
widespread environmental degradation, poor intergovernmental
coordination, and the ever greater challenges posed by climate change,
is a monumental task.
"The current approach is very sectoral," says Tharuka Dissanaike. A
policy specialist with the UNDP, Dissanaike says that there is a marked
lack of coordination between irrigation and drinking water authorities
from state to village level.
"What we are now coming up with is a transformative model that treats
drinking and irrigation water as a single local resource - much like the
ancients did. It is important to value both uses equally since small
irrigation systems contribute to drinking water availability in these
villages."
Adapting to climate change
Some cascade systems are currently being restored, with heartening results. Sampath
Bandara Abeyrathne, the project manager of the Climate Change
Adaptation Project at the UNDP, has been directing a team of researchers
and engineers, overseeing the restoration of the 28 tanks that are part
of the Maha Nanneriya tank cascade system in Galgamuwa in the
Kurunegala district.
Abeyrathne grew up in these parts and explains
that the de-silting of these tanks must be done very carefully,
ensuring that the natural clay seal remains intact to prevent seepage
and that the holding capacity of the tank is not affected. The ratio of
depth versus spread of the water in the tank is critical to managing
issues like salinity, water evaporation and flow within the cascade.
Abeyrathne points out that a
catchment area is only as good as the forest it relies on. But a drone
he sent up recently came back with images that revealed huge patches of
deforestation and chena, or shifting cultivations, in this stretch.
Despite these issues, one
fully restored tank in the Maha Nanneriya cascade has held its water
during the driest months. Standing on the tank bund, AMA Adikari, a
retired school principal and member of the local farm
organisation, says that for the first time, farmers are contemplating
cultivating through three seasons instead of staggering through just one
- a move that will have a profound impact on their food security and
incomes.
It is essential that the
community take an active hand if the cascade systems that have been
repaired are to survive, emphasises Buddhika Hapuarchchi, a technical
adviser at Sri Lanka's Comprehensive Disaster Management Programme, the
UNDP's national partner on the Maha Nanneriya cascade project.
"Galgamuwa is one of the
most drought-prone divisions in Kurunegala, and in fact, the whole
country," adding that restoring this cascade system is "essentially the
pilot project for Sri Lanka on climate change adaptation. We have to see
how to incorporate climate change adaption into our development
planning process."
The project will also help fuel a quiet revolution in Sri Lanka's approach to water management.
In years ahead, local
farmers say they hope to borrow from ancient systems of labour and land
sharing, which emphasised a community approach in all things.
"We had a very good
democratic system to manage scarce resources as a collective, without
creating unnecessary competition," says Adikari. This generation, he
believes, still has a lot to learn from their ancestors.