Weligama after 20 years
by Dr Nihal D Amerasekera
Those were happy
peaceful days in my youth when life was full and in harmony with nature. During
the long University vacation I decided
to travel home armed with some reading material. I can still recall the large
black canopy of the Fort Railway Station and the smell of steam and burning
coal. There was soot everywhere. The trains hissed and puffed and screeched
incessantly. The 3 hour journey was uneventful but for a talkative young
Englishman seated in front who began a long conversation. He indulged lavishly
in the Vadeys and pineapples sold by the vendors at the Railway Stations along
the way. The sight of the stilt-fishermen, with their unique style of fishing
from a perch on a sturdy pole 20-50 meters out to sea remain in my memory
still.
In 1962 my
father was working for the Local Government in Weligama. My parents then lived
on the outskirts of the town some distance away from the sea on the Akuressa
Road. On either side were paddy fields, banana plantations and palm trees.
Across in the distance was the backdrop of purple mountains. Ours was a new
house built on a hillside surrounded by tall jak, breadfruit and mango trees.
It was an idyllic setting with a gravel path leading up to the house. At the
edge of the property was a stream full
of fish. At night the frogs made an awful racket. In the morning the dawn chorus was deafening. During the day I walked in the garden sat
beneath the trees. Sometimes I did some fishing downstream and enjoyed seeing
the village damsels frolicking and bathing in the muddy pool.
In the warm
afternoons I went out for a walk across the fields or through the forest. Every
meal was a feast of mouth watering sea food with a pot of local curd and honey.
The short walk to town was full of greetings from the friendly locals. A retired Apothecary lived in a large mansion
nearby. He was a quiet kind man with a few professional anecdotes which he
related over and over again. In the evenings we went to the old Rest House by
the sea. It was beautifully located at the edge of the Weligama bay . The tall
cylindrical columns of its long verandahs gave it a colonial feel. On many
occasions I had sat on the rocks watching the waves roll in. It was very pretty
at sunset to see the boats go out to sea and the shimmering lights appear
across the bay in the far distance. Heaven and earth seem very near to each
other.
Off the beach
is an extraordinary villa occupying a 2 acre island in Weligama Bay. It was built
in the 1920s by the traveller and gardener Count de Mauny. The island was a famous destination for many notables from
different nations, including the novelist Paul Bowles. Its spectacular tropical
gardens, and octagonal-shaped house is breathtakingly
beautiful. Its early colonial furnishings, large circular verandahs make you step back into the 1930’s
and is a travellers dream. Music from Noel Cowards “a Room with a view” wafts
in the background giving it an “olde world” feel. The Count finally chose to
live his eternal dream of peace and tranquillity close to nature ending his
days in this paradise island. There was a busy main street of small shops and a
fish market. The Railway Station was small and had a quaint grey picket fence. I
still remember its Seth Thomas pendulum clock in the Station Masters Office.
There was just the one doctor working in Private Practice – Dr Nugara a kindly
gentleman of immense grace and charm. He later left to settle in Australia. Sometimes
we visited relatives in Kitulampitiya Galle and occasionally went to Matara to
see the sights. After my vacation I said goodbye to my idyllic home to return
to Colombo and a busy schedule of hard
work.
I left Sri
Lanka in 1974 to ‘make my fortune’ abroad. More exams and hard work filled my
days and nights. Carving up a career took its time and toll. Years whizzed past
and it wasn’t until 20 years later I returned to Weligama the town that has
haunted me since those days of my youth.
.
I made the
journey by car to save time. The roads were no wider than before but the number
of vehicles had increased several fold. The result was mayhem with noise and
pollution. Despite the fast moving traffic people, cattle and dogs cross the
road in gay abandon. Weligama was unrecognisable. The popular landmarks had
disappeared and I found our former home
with difficulty. The many tall trees that surrounded the house had gone perhaps
ending up as furniture in a plush Colombo Hotel. The lovely gravel path to the
house had become a muddy track left behind by lorries and bull dozers. The gushing waters of the stream was now a trickle
without any life being a casualty of intensive farming with pesticides. Worse
was yet to come. An old man seated on the steps of the house looked bemused but
greeted us warmly. The property has been brought by developers and the house
was allowed to decay. The door creaked as it opened. My heart sank to see the
long strands of cobwebs stretch from wall to wall. Wooden windows had perished
and fallen away and the house was a haven for cockroaches and mice. In places
the roof had caved in. The plaster had come off the rain soaked walls. Doom and
desolation filled the air. As I moved from room to room I felt uneasy and
claustrophobic remembering the life and the laughter and the happy times we
have spent there. I spoke little and left the house heart broken to see my home
in ruin and my memories shattered. Many of the neighbours had died and their
children moved away. The main street was packed with people and full of life.
There were many tourists bartering and moving in and out of the numerous shops.
The astrologers and palmists made a quick trade. The buzz of the place absorbed my attention
for awhile. Rest of the town looked prosperous too. Many of the houses had
Televisions Radios and VCR’s. They were well maintained with lovely gardens and
cars in the porch. The people certainly
looked more affluent and healthy. With industrialisation we are losing
touch with mother earth and the rich harvest it brings. The tourists bring us
the valuable dollars and litter the countryside with the products of their own
artificial lives. In the evening I sat on a rock by the Rest House watching the
sea. There have been new additions to the Rest House which was not in keeping
with its colonial past. Snorkelling and speed boating had stopped for the day.
I watched the waves roll in as I had done all those years ago wrapped in my own
thoughts. There were Coca Cola cans and polythene bags rolling in the breeze on the baked
golden sand. I left Weligama with mixed feelings. Sad that my past has been
desecrated but happy to see prosperity has reached that beautiful town of my
dreams. After all I cannot allow the dreams of my youth get in the way of
progress.
In writing
these notes I have tried to give my moods and thoughts as it occurred. To me
the last 50 years have been one rich gift amidst some misfortune. It is politics
and destiny that would decide what the next 50 years would bring for Weligama.
Many
yesterdays of my youth lie buried in this beautiful country of my birth.
I wish to dedicate these memories to
my maternal grandfather Dr DB Weerasekera who accompanied me in the journeys to
this idyll. He paid for my rail ticket, discouraged me from eating the vadeys
and pineapples from vendors due to fear of bacteria and held my hand when I
crossed the road although I was a grown up man. I wish I was there to hold his
hand in his final hour.
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