|

A destroyed
house in Arugambay |
(Copyright 2005 Salon.com)
Jan.
12, 2005 | ARUGAM BAY, Sri Lanka -- Jan. 11, 2005.
Aboard the Black Hawk helicopter, his ears plugged
against the roar of the rotors, a U.S. Marine in a
flak jacket pencils me a note:
"Destination = 1 Hour"
That's how long it will take us to reach the
shores of Arugam Bay. It would be nine tortuous
hours by car from Colombo, driving along the
twisting southeast road that crosses the mountains
and jungles of the island's interior.
|

Tsunami
Hotel, Arugam, Sri Lanka
photo © 2005 Jeff Greenwald |
Yesterday, along with my work as a communications
director for the relief organization Mercy Corps,
I imagined I would write about the tsunami supply
depot at Sri Lanka's international airport. The
process of getting the Black Hawk and the supplies
we requested, and getting myself onboard, was a
labyrinth that would have maddened Theseus. Two
full weeks after the tsunami, the scene at the
supply depot is still a scene out of "Catch-22."
Trying to get tents, hygiene kits, foam
mattresses, plastic sheeting or even bottles of
water to the people who need them is something
approaching comic opera.
But that's behind us, now. The Black Hawk lifted
off at 1 o'clock this afternoon. We were supposed
to bring 10 boxes of tarpaulins to Arugam Bay on
Sri Lanka's southern coast, but we ended up taking
half as many after an NBC "Dateline" crew wrangled
its way onboard. Now we sit together in the
cramped cargo bay, squeezed between the boxes of
supplies.
Sri Lanka is still a beautiful country and the
area between the coastlines was untouched by the
disaster. We fly over gorgeous green hills, lakes
and rivers, as the shadows of clouds move across
white Buddhist temples and palm groves. Then the
mountains flatten and the hills undulate toward
the coastal area -- which appears, from above,
like a stagnant and littered swamp.
Prior to the tsunami, Arugam Bay was considered
one of the 10 best surf spots in the world; the
British held their surfing championships here in
2003. Aside from a thriving tourism industry, the
community included thousands of fishermen and
their families. But the three waves of December's
tsunami struck this region with apocalyptic force,
killing an estimated 3,000 people, flattening the
fishing villages, and turning the strand of
beachside hotels and restaurants into a scene of
Hiroshima-like ruin.
Five boxes of plastic sheeting seems a pathetic
offering, but a team from Mercy Corps and the
Sewalanka Foundation, one of the country's most
important community development organizations, is
waiting in the rain with flatbeds. Quick as a
wink, the Black Hawk touches down and the supplies
are unloaded. The "Dateline" crew gets a few manic
shots -- barely leaving the chopper -- and the
helicopter is off again. We watch it bank east,
wondering when, or if, we will see it again.
Jim Jarvie, a high-spirited and compassionate Brit
with a shaved head and King Tut goatee, is Mercy
Corp's man in this area. His fields are forestry
and conservation; he was living in Colombo,
writing "The Natural Guide to Sri Lanka," when the
tsunami struck. Somehow, he's ended up
choreographing the complex dance between Mercy
Corps and the regional NGOs, a task he handles
with impressive élan.
We ride on the back of the tractor to a cement
warehouse, where Jarvie introduces me to Harshanan,
the energetic young team leader for Sewalanka. The
boxes are unloaded and stacked with other supplies
-- mainly "family hygiene kits," which,
ironically, were delivered yesterday morning,
entirely by accident. (The agency that delivered
them had the audacity to call Jim and ask that
they be reloaded on a helicopter and sent back;
Jarvie recalls the moment with hilarity.)
The kits are fairly basic, containing shampoo,
soap, toothbrushes and toothpaste, shaving razors
and sanitary napkins. We carry 270 kits in all.
For half an hour, the tractor churns along a
mud-holed track, passing shallow lakes created by
the tsunami. Pied kingfishers perch on tree
branches; goats poke through trash; a mongoose
skitters into a brush. A lone computer monitor
sits on a patch of grass, as if someone has set up
an office in the wilderness.
After the supplies are stored, Jarvie takes me on
a tour of the beach. The devastation is complete.
Everyone we see has lost loved ones and friends,
and even now, two weeks later, they stand in the
rubble of their homes and businesses as if trying
to decide which way to turn.
"Some 1,500 families lived here," Jarvie says.
"Everyone was affected. There are about 3,000
dead. Surprisingly few injuries, though. One of my
friends here put it this way: 'If you were caught,
you drowned.'
"The problem now is psychological," he continues.
"Just today, people are starting to talk; and
they're starting to cry. Their stoicism is
collapsing. A lot of them lost everything. One
woman tried to hang herself yesterday; two men
have gone mad. We're at the point now where the
shock is wearing off. These people are just
realizing what hit them."
As we walk, numerous people approach Jarvie. They
speak quietly, sometimes showing pictures of lost
friends or family, sometimes asking for money.
Jarvie treats each of them with extraordinary
respect, explaining that while Mercy Corps cannot
help individuals, everything is being done to help
supply essentials and rebuild the community. "Bear
with us," he says. "Arugam will come back." He
never fails to ask how the victim's family has
fared, listening intently before expressing his
sympathy.
"There's nothing I can do for these people on a
one-to-one basis," Jarvie explains, "except listen
to them. And many of them, I've learned, need very
much to be heard."
I find myself unprepared for the emotional impact
of walking through the leveled fishing village and
obliterated tourist strips. The roads have
disintegrated into ragged ribbons and the bridges
are shattered as if by a giant hammer. Toyota vans
and pickup trucks lie smashed against trees or
half-buried in sand. Bodies wash ashore nearly
every day; scores are feared to lie beneath the
mucky silt. Entire houses, with cement foundations
and masonry walls, are literally torn in half. The
body of a German resident -- a friend of Jarvie's
-- was torn from his hotel office and carried 3
kilometers inland; his wife, who had been on the
structure's second floor, survived.
Some people are wandering around with vacant
stares, while others have already begun the
process of rebuilding. "The first contribution
Mercy Corps received," says Jarvie, "was 10
shovels and a wheelbarrow – from the Arugam Bay
Surf Club." We walk by its headquarters. In
contrast to the rubble-strewn yards around it, the
clubhouse grounds seem eerily well-groomed.
At the refugee camp of Atimule, 107 families wait
for supplies. Distribution is polite and orderly,
the families taking numbers and receiving their
kits before moving away with a word of thanks. I'm
taken aback by the graciousness of the process.
One man approaches Harshanan with a shy request;
he'd like to know if he might have the cardboard
box the kits arrived in. This causes brief
confusion; there's no real policy for this.
Watching the distribution, I ask Jarvie a
convoluted question: What can Sewalanka actually
do better, now that Mercy Corps is here?
"On their own, they'd have goods from individual
donors," Jim replies, "but not these immediate
relief supplies, like the hygiene kits and
tarpaulins from USAID. But you might also ask,
'What can Mercy Corps do better, working with
Sewalanka?' The answer is, almost everything.
They're our eyes, ears, and often our legs on the
ground."
Jim and I walk through the ruins of Ullai, the
fishing village annihilated by the waves. We sink
to our ankles in soft mud. Sewing machines and
broken wall clocks emerge from the silt like
fossils from a tar pit. I remove my boots and
gingerly ford a stream, terrified of stepping on a
human limb. Luckily, such encounters have become
rare.
For our final errand of the day, I join Jarvie at
a meeting with a local businessman named André
Tissera. His hotel, the Hideaway, is nearly
intact, one of the least damaged structures in
Arugam Bay. Even the bookcases are untouched, the
volumes stacked with surreal formality behind
leaded glass doors.
Tissera is in his late 40s, a wiry character with
graying hair and fast-paced, ironic English. He
describes his surname as an acronym -- "T for
Thailand, I for Italy, S for Spain, S for Sweden,
E for England, R for Russia, and A for America."
He reminds me of a young, somewhat darker Lenny
Bruce. He confers with Jarvie about the most
essential priority -- cleaning up the village --
and shares his exasperation with some of the
relief efforts.
"We received an entire shipment of miniskirts," he
moans, "and ties. Ties! And not a small number!
Someone should tell these people to stick their
old clothes in an attic, instead of unloading them
on us." But the lion's share of his wrath is
bestowed upon a humane society based in Colombo.
Tissera says he could hardly contain himself when,
opening up one of its relief packages, he found a
shipment of dog food.
Mercy Corps will soon begin a "Cash for Work"
program in this area, paying 100 local people for
21 days of full-time cleanup. Jim and André
discuss the situation, trying to determine which
100 of the thousands of eligible workers they'll
hire. The hierarchy, both agree, should start with
those who have lost their entire houses. The next
layer, Tissera suggests, should favor people "who
will come back."
Not everyone will. Earlier, I'd spoken with a
fisherman who had lost his son; his home was also
destroyed. When I asked when he'd fish again, the
man shook his head in a panic and clapped his
chest in the universal gesture of fear.
"Never," he said. "I will open hotel, or make
other business. I won't ever go into the sea
again."
Tissera, in contrast, is determined to demonstrate
that people can reclaim their traditional lives
and vocations. Just 36 hours after the tsunami, to
the slack-jawed astonishment of his neighbors, he
piloted one of the only surviving boats into the
lagoon. He has since made a project of rounding up
vessels scattered by the killer wave and repairing
their damage. Tissera reckons that a third of them
can be saved. (It's estimated that 80 percent of
Sri Lanka's entire fishing fleet was destroyed.)
His motive is simple: If the people of Arugam Bay
cannot overcome their fear of the ocean, their
community will never recover.
"I'm going fishing at 6 a.m. tomorrow," he says
defiantly.
When I ask if there's anything left to catch -- a
question that not even the marine experts have yet
answered -- Tissera replies with absolute
confidence.
"The fishing should be brilliant," he says.
"Nobody's been out for 10 days."
About the writer
Jeff Greenwald’s latest book, "Future Perfect: How
'Star Trek' Conquered Planet Earth," was recently
released in paperback by Penguin.
Copyright 2005 Salon.com
Reproduction of material from any Salon pages
without written permission is strictly prohibited
|