SRI LANKA, AN INDIAN WITHOUT THE HASSLE
SRI LANKA, AN INDIAN WITHOUT THE HASSLE
By : Kate Allen
Dec 1993
This week Caledonian Airways began flying charter planes to Sri
Lanka - years after the charter companies pulled out of the
route - after unprecedented demand from leading tour operators.
The announcement underlined the fact that, after a decade of
civil war, this beautiful island is once again attracting
tourists in abundance . . .
The Galle Face in Colombo must be the world's bossiest hotel.
Signs on every stairwell preach against smoking and sloth, or
hector residents: 'Don't take the lift - for your health's sake,
walk down.'
In its cathedral-high marble lobby, an honours board brags a
strange mixture of celebrity guests such as George Bernard Shaw,
Lady Olga Maitland and Bo Derek.
But despite its pomposity, peeling plaster and Victorian plumb-
ing, I wouldn't swop the Galle Face for all the slick hotels in
Asia. Built in 1864, it is that most endangered of species - an
eccentric, fading colonial hotel, untouched by icy air condition
ing or corporate colour schemes.
Barefoot waiters in white livery, some of whom have worked there
since Sri Lanka was Ceylon, serve gin and tonic on the broad
verandah while you recline in your Dutch planter's chair, listen
ing to the wind in the coconut palms and forgetting you are in a
capital city.
Sleepy Colombo. It is not hard to imagine wild elephants wander
ing the city limits when British rule began in 1815 or the
tangled forest which stretched from its central hills to the
coast.
Today, it is still preposterously beautiful and unspoiled; so
lush that Leonard Woolf - future husband of Viginia and then a
colonial administrator - observed how the wooden props for his
washing line would sprout green shoots.
Yet throughout the 1980s, the vicious civil war between the majo-
rity Sinhalese Buddhist community and the Tamil Tigers deterred
tourists. Now the conflict, although bloody as before, is con-
fined to Jaffna, the northernmost peninsula, well away from
tourist areas.
Indeed, southern Sri Lanka is as safe and as uninterested in its
civil war as southern Ireland. We visited after a major battle
and found little sign of strife beyond army road blocks which
waved us through and white flags outside shops, a Buddhist sign
of mourning.
So, surprisingly, what Sri Lanka offers is a sense of tran-
quillity - it is, if you like, India without the hassle, a
country in which the tourist can indulge in Raj-era nostalgia
without being daunted by extreme poverty or the sheer size of a
subcontinent.
For the British visitor, there is a disconcerting combination of
the bizarre and familiar. Taxis are ancient Morris Minors,
bicycles are cast-iron pre-war Raleighs and railway platforms
are frozen in the 1950s, brass-plated relics of when the station
master was God.
Even the food has nostalgic echoes. Ginger beer, lashings of it,
is delicious with 'short eats', a SriLanka meal of puff pastries
and sandwiches, directly descended from the British high tea.
Yet Sri Lanka can be disconcertingly strange. Our first night in
Bentota was disrupted by a weird cacophony. The following
morning, we discovered our villa was next to a temple where
Buddhist monks were celebrating 'poya' - a full moon festival -
with singing, clanging bells and firecrackers. So much for
silent meditation.
That same night, further along the moonlit beach, turtles came
ashore to lay their eggs. Too many were ending life as omelettes
until a conservation scheme started paying locals to bring them
to be hatched and released back into the ocean.
From Bentota we travelled by train - 120 miles in comfortable
second class cost a pound - to Kandy, a jumble of antique shops,
gem dealers, hotels and vegetable markets around a vast arti-
ficial lake.
We stayed high above the town at The Chateau, the guest house of
a retired English-speaking couple. While Mr Abeywickrema, an
amateur poet, penned verses about nubile maidens tending paddy
fields, his wife Doris prepared food to die for.
Unlike India, there is no great national cuisine, but Doris
produced delicious string hoppers - steamed mats of thin rice
noodles with plantain curry, spicy dahl and whole garlic cloves
fried until caramelised.
Properly refuelled, we set off for the tourist magnet of
Pinnewala Elephant Orphanage, about 20 miles from Kandy, where
deserted or orphaned calves are raised freely. Their only
penalty is to assemble every morning at 9am to meet fawning,
cooing foreigners who pay @1 to camcord each other feeding them
with bottles.
After the last of the tearaway toddler elephants have been sated,
the whole herd, followed by an equally portly herd of tourists,
heads for the river to wallow.
We rented a driver and air-conditioned car - about @100 for four
days - to take us north to Sri Lanka's lost ancient cities. The
rock fortress at Sigiriya was built in AD473 to fend off the
persistent South Indian invaders. But the reason most people
climb 200 metres up precarious metal steps is to see the
gorgeous, pouting temple dancers painted in the caves 1500 years
ago.
At Anuradhapura, once Sri Lanka's magnificient capital, pilgrims
visit the sacred bo tree, grown from the original under which
Buddha preached. Nearby are many temples and extraordinary
'dabobas', domed structures around which devotees walk, always
clockwise, in prayer.
But the ancient kings' most enduring achievements were the
'tanks', huge reservoirs which still irrigate the dry northern
regions. We cycled around the largest after a monsoon downpour
at dusk, watching children play in the water meadows, when a
double rainbow arched across the lake with such paintbox clarity
that monks spilled out of the monastery to stare.
Sri Lanka is still quixotic and surprising, not yet smoothed
into Westerner-friendly blandness. But there are bad omens; over-
development threatens the beautiful west coast and, worst of all,
the Galle Face Hotel will be revamped next year. Let's hope the
creaky waiters and bossy signs survive.
Thanks :: The Daily Mail