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Jan 15, 2005 - Toy Story (part II) POTTUVIL, SRI LANKA - To a lot of people, the image of relief agencies in developing countries is the image of giant Toyota Land Cruisers, churning down a dirt road with the windows rolled up and four grim foreign aid workers staring out the windows. That preconception is instantly shattered by Mercy Corps’ official vehicles in Arugam Bay: two three-wheeled tuk-tuks, sporting the Mercy Corps bumper sticker and emblazoned with three of Sri Lanka’s religious icons: Lord Buddha, Lord Rama, and Mickey Mouse. Lyn, Harshana and I spend the morning driving from one welfare center to another, trying to find out where our toys and sport kits would be most welcome. At each camp we meet the grama niladari, or group leader, responsible for coordinating each center’s supplies. These are always men, supervising a governing committee of men and women. Sometimes the GNs are individuals who were prominent before the tsunami, sometimes not. In one camp, the GN is an older man who displayed great heroism and selflessness during and after the flood. Our first thought was that we’d deliver a load of toys to the 102 kids at the camp called Savalai. But as well pull up, the children congregating around us are clutching floppy rabbits and German shepherds. The Red Cross passed through just yesterday, emptying a truckload of used stuffed animals. The GN of Savalai is a 48-year-old fisherman named Miran Lebe. When I first visited this camp last week, Lebe was wild-eyed and raging; I thought he was the village idiot. The fact, Harshana explains, is that he was still in shock. “We have enough for our children,” declares Lebe. “Give what you have to the other camps.” Before we go, though, he corners Harshana. “We could use some kerosene lanterns,” he whispers, “to keep the wild elephants away.” We’ll keep our toys, but we do want to offer a sports kit, for the older kids. In this respect, we face a dilemma: which kit to deliver? We quickly work out a system. The decision will be made by a committee — of kids. A call goes out through the camp, and about two dozen children, boys and girls age 8-12, are gathered together. Prompted by Harshana, they vote with a show of hands: soccer balls, volleyballs and nets, or cricket sets? We expect soccer (or football, as it’s known here) to be the runaway winner, and it is — but there’s also a huge demand for the Frisbees. Who knew? Our second stop is a camp located behind the local mosque, not far from the beach. Our gifts are welcome here, and we hand out stuffed toys and rubber balls in a gleeful but orderly ceremony. Most of the recipients are very young, and there are many babes-in-arms. The baby girls wear beautiful, dangly gold earrings, giving them a look of precocious sophistication. The wisdom of wearing jewelry suddenly seems very clear. Sometimes, the only wealth you can hang on to is what’s pierced through your earlobes, and fastened around your neck. As we prepare to leave, the GN approaches Lyn, and asks for the one item most desperately needed by the camp: cooking kits. As things stand, there are so few pots that ten families must cook their rice in shifts. It’s becoming a serious problem, with obvious repercussions. “If we don’t eat,” the GN says dryly, “we don’t play.” * * * |
Mercy Corps tuk-tuk, Arugam, Sri Lanka photo © 2005 Dwayne Newton |
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When the tsunami receded, one of the few structures left standing — more or less — was a popular hotel called the Siam View. During that first terrible week, after the tsunami, before the first relief shipments arrived, the owner of this place — Fred Miller, who has lived in Sri Lanka nearly 30 years — fed the entire community with provisions from their copious freezers (their generator needed only small repairs to function). Miller is keeping up the practice — providing excellent Sri Lankan curries to the scores of local and foreign relief workers. Soft drinks, ice cold, are included. It’s an oasis of Heaven in a vast expanse of hell — and the cost to all comers is zero (though donations are more than welcome). It’s a terrific example of how the community has banded together, and a good place to see signs of optimism. After lunch we leave Arugam Bay and drive north, heading through spectacular wetlands teeming with egrets, eagles, kingfishers and ibis. Oxcarts heave to the side to let us by. Our destination is the large camp called Komari, settled by refugees who came from a devastated village still further north. We’d heard awful things about Komari — that it was ignored, impoverished, and off the radar of the relief agencies. As we approach, we begin to suspect otherwise. The tents are spacious, and set well apart; there are decent roads into the compound; and the view of the river is spectacular. As we drive in, we see about 100 kids sitting quietly under an open-air tent, watching The Lion King on television. Clearly, there’s been an intelligence problem here. This camp seems to have it all; there’s fruit punch, hard candies, everything but buttered popcorn. On discussion with the GN, though, the initial reports are confirmed. The generator-operated DVD player is a special treat, provided by an expat Sri Lankan from Australia. Otherwise, the kids have virtually nothing to keep them busy: no toys, no games, no flying discs. We have no toys for the nearly 600 children in Komari, but we will give them a sport kit. The word goes out for a children’s meeting, and the response is electric. The kids leap up from The Lion King, and form two groups — boys and girls — around us. Harshana takes center stage, and conducts the poll. “How many for cricket!” he demands. The boys’ hands fly up. “How many for volleyball?” The girls’ hands wave. “And how many for football?” This time, every hand in the group shoots into the air. The choice seems clear — but there are hundreds of kids. Lyn, Harshana and I exchange a look, and shrug. Ten minutes later, we witness what must be the most satisfying sight one can see in the world of disaster relief. Scores of formerly listless kids are running and shouting in an open field, their football and cricket games in full swing. Some distance away, the Sri Lankan Army’s Special Task Force is helping set up the volleyball net. We leave before the inevitable happens, and the Frisbee ends up on someone’s roof. * * * |
children with cricket bat, Savalai camp, Arugam, Sri Lanka photo © 2005 Dwayne Newton |
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We haven’t much longer in Arugam Bay; Dwayne and I leave tomorrow, to travel up the country’s hard-hit east coast. It’s tough to go. There are a hundred stories here — but there are hundreds of stories everywhere in Sri Lanka right now. Mercy Corps is doing great work in the Pottuvil area — providing generators, helping the fishing community rebuild their boats (and reweave their nets), setting up cash-for-work programs, and distributing sport kits, school supplies, and other items. But they’ve got enough money, and some of the locals are more concerned about the future than the present. Before she left Arugam Bay to return to her posting in Darfur, Susan Romanski spoke with one washed-out hotel owner. What he said to her seems strange, but I suspect it’s probably true. “If people really want to help,” the man said, “Tell them not to send us money. Better they should put that money away — and use it to come back here, as tourists, next year.” * * * © 2005 by Jeff Greenwald |
AbaY at its Best
Surf Forecast for Arugam Bay in real time on magicseaweed.com
Press Coverage of the situation in Arugam Bay
Link to the old website of the Arugam Bay Hotel Association
Huge and often updated photo collection from Arugam Bay
Former Discussion Forum - now replaced by arugam.info
AbaY Hotel Intro
- # Introduction to all AbaY 'Hotels' To give some idea of their location, all 'hotels' are numbered. Beginning with #001 at the bridge, Northern end of Arugam Bay
- #001 Star Restaurant
- #01 Stardust Hotel
- #02 Rainbow Village
- #03 Galaxy Lounge
- #04 AbaY Beach Resort
- #05 Beach Hut
- #06 Hotel Sea Shore
- #07 Friendship Restaurant
- #08 Tiffany Hotel
- #09 Water Music
- #10 Nishantha Restaurant
- #11 Nestha Resaturnat
- #12 Sam's Hut
- #13 Waves of Love
- #14 Rock View Beach Hotel
- #15 Tsunami Hotel
- #16 Midbay Hotel
- #17 Tropicana Hotel
- #18 Sea Wind Hotel
- #19 Sea Rock Hotel
- #20 Aloha Cabanas
- #21 Danish Villa
- #22 Roccos Hotel
- #23 Food Garden Restaurant
- #24 Nina Cabanas
- #25 Lucky Leprechaun Hotel
- #26 Farath Guest House
- #27 Mermaid Village
- #28 Why Not? Restaurant
- #29 Ali's Restaurant
- #30 Blue Ocean Hotel
- #31 Royal Garden Hotel
- #32 Tri Star Hotel
- #33 Sunrise Hotel
- #34 Orient Beach Restaurant
- #35 Shanoon Beach Resort
- #36 Zara Beach Rest
- #37 Hideaway Hotel
- #38 Cafe del Mar
- #39 Hillton Hotel
- #40 Hello Madam & Gekko Restaurant
- #41 Surf & Sun Resort
- #42 Deen's Hotel
- #43 Home Needs Shop
- #44 East Beach Hotel
- #45 Sooriya's Hotel
- #46 AbaY Surf Shop
- #47 Hawkys Surf Shop
- #48 Sano Hotel
- #49 Perera's Restaurant
- #50 Siam View Hotel -SVH-
- #51 Hangloose Hotel
- #52 Subashi Beer Bar
- #53 Meena's Beer Bar
- #54 Shashni Beach Resort
- #55 Seven Sea Restaurant
- #56 Tharaka Restaurant
- #57 Beach View
- #58 Rupas Cabanas
- #59 Ruwangi Place Restaurant
- #60 Lahiru Place Hotel
- #61 Fishing Net Hotel
- #62 Palm Grove Holiday Inn
- #68 Mambo's Chill Out Surf Cafe A small Hikkaduwa resort at Arugam Bay
- #69 East Surf Cabanas
AbaY Hotel web site links
- Siam View Hotel The only Thai sea side resort in Ceylon
- Hillton Hotel Rahim's Hillton Hotel
- Stardust Hotel A top Danish managed resort
- PottuVille Point Resort Invest and relax nr. AbaY!
- Rupas Hotel Rupas Hotel & Restaurant
- Galaxy Lounge Galaxy Lounge Hotel
- Roccos Hotel Roccos Beach Front Hotel
- Tsunami Hotel, AbaY Est. 1999
- The Danish Villa Colonial style bungalow for rent
- Aloha Cabanas Tom Rieder's Aloha Cabanas
Best Photos of AbaY
- Walk from the Bridge to the end of AbaY 2007 Let us be your eyes and take a stroll!
- Romantic Arugam Bay Love photo selection
- Surf Photos of Arugam Bay Best Surfing photos 2007
- Arugam Bay Wild Life Wild Life selection photos
- Fun in Arugam Bay Having a good time in AbaY
- Is AbaY Dangerous? No Problem!
- Loving Couples are happy at Arugam bay People deeply in LOVE come to AbaY. Why?
- Party at Arugam Bay AbaY: An ideal Party resort!
- Another walk on the wild life Wild Photos
- PottuVille Point Photo Impresions The Point nr. Arugam Bay - Sri Lanka's finest resort to be
Blogs
- Arugam Bay Tour & Travel blog Tourist Services guide and local PR
- CASP rebuild Ampara blog PR on CASP ideas of rebuilding Ampara
- Cerno - A blog by a Sri Lankan in Sri Lanka Cerno. A blog by a Sri Lankan who lived abroad
- Frazer's Blog A UNOPs guys experiences on the East Coast
- Janis Kirpitis Blog - partly in Latvian Janis impressions as he assisted "Help" NGO
- Jessica Lees Blog A US lady's views, vision and experiences
- Jo-Anne Liburd's S.L. Impressions Jo-Anne is a Canadian working for Sewage Lanka
- Lanka Page Inside the smoking gun of Sri Lanka
- Sports sans Frontieres Niccolas au PottuVille - in French
Commercial Attacks
- Arson, murder, looting attacks in Sri Lanka non-political, but commercial dispute stories
Deutsche Freunde
- Excelent Simple Wisdom Simple Wisdom - Florian & Daniella
- German supporters of Ceylon and AbaY SLB - Sri Lanka Board
- Lanka First Web Site Lanka First- Country Information
- Reisespinne Global Travel Forum in German Language
- Saffa Org Situation in Arugam Bay
- Sri Lanka Forum Information & Discussions in German language
- Sri Lanka Info (In German) Neue Version des 'Spider' Forum Romanums
Friends
- Andrea Quintarelli in AbaY Croix Rouge and Italian fund raiser A. Q.
- Arugam Bay Tourist Association Mercy Corps sponsored site
- Cerno - A blog by a Sri Lankan in Sri Lanka Cerno. A blog by a Sri Lankan who lived abroad
- Hilltop Survivor Project Post Dec. 2004 survivor's Group
- paddle4relief Tim's private help for Arugam Bay
- Paddle4Relief Small, effivient private help organization
- Responsible Tourism Partnership Promoting good Tourism in Sri Lanka
- Supporting children through art Kids Card project and other help for AbaY
Home, Cooking, Recipes
- Somlak's Kitchen site Asian Cooking made easy
Literature about AbaY
- Der Krokodil Felsen A Book about Arugam Bay
Religious blogs
- Ancient sites are mentioned Magul Maha Vihara, Lahuga is promoted
- PottuVille Prayer Times Mosque Times at Arugam Bay and PottuVille
Safaries & Wild Life
Sri Lanka's Wild life Experts- Eco Guide Association CEGA AbaY Tour Guides
Surf & Weather Info.
- Elephant Rock Surf Break Info by Wannasurf Wannasurf Info on Elephant Roack
- Okanda Surf Info by Wannasurf Wannasurf Info on Okanda Surf Break
- Peanut Farm Surf Info by Wannasurf Wannasurf Info on Peanut Farm break
- Storms, Typhoons, Clouds Real Time Satellite Views of Asia
- Surf Forecast by Magic Seaweed Surf & Swell Predictions and reports
- Wannasurf Info on Arugam Bay main break Arugam Bay Main Break Surf Info by Wannasurf
- Wannasurf Info on PottuVille Point break PottuVille Point Surf Info by Wannasurf
- Wind Guru Kite- and Wind Surf Information
Weather at Arugam Bay
- INDIA METEOROLOGICAL DEPT INDIA METEOROLOGICAL DEPT
- Weather Satellite Picture in Real time Weather Satellite (India & Sri Lanka)





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