The sites, sounds and people of Sri Lanka


December 12
We woke up around 7:00. One of us slept well then there was me. We showered and went down to an English breakfast of toast, tea, and scrambled eggs. We called Mr. Kularathna (Mr. K) and off we went. Today we wanted to visit some more of the places we are familiar with in Colombo. Great photo opportunities for Ron. But first, we made a coffee stop at Cinnamon Grand Hotel and had our first coffee since Monday morning in Thailand. We enjoyed Americanos and pain au raisin. 

We went downstairs by the koi pond to see if one of our favorite restaurants still was there. Nope. It is now a Chinese restaurant and not our fave cuisine.  






We headed next to Pettah, an old area of Colombo where you can experience a chaotic market place. Ron has some great pics showing the traffic (OMG), merchants, shoppers and workers. 

Please note the men pushing wooden carts loaded with merchandise.






A Hindu Temple
The red Moque
Most of the businesses in Pettah are dominated by Muslims who specialize in trading of goods and the Tamil traders from India who specialize in gold and jewelry shops.  Sri Lanka is dominated by Sinhalese who are Buddhist, followed by Tamils who are Hindus, followed by Arabs who are Muslim and there are Catholics due to the Portuguese invasion several centuries ago.


Traditional Indian Saris
Women Police
The people of Pettah represent all classes and ethnicities.  Note the various styles of dress.


A Muslim couple

Men in sarongs rather than pants

Buddhist monk

So. Indian Kurta

More traditional Saris


The First tourist hotel in Sri Lanka
The Cargills Company Building
Sri Lanka was colonized by the Portuguese in 1505.  Dutch Ceylon existed from 1640 until 1796 The British ruled from 1815 until 1948. 


After weaving our way through traffic, we went to the Old Dutch Hospital shopping development. We picked up three gifts for friends back home then ate a simple lunch at a café there.

We have been awed by the number of huge upscale developments in progress here. I have no idea who will be living in these very expensive large apartments overlooking the India Ocean but there are numerous high rises under construction. We asked our friends here about who lives or will be living in these apartments and they said they have no idea but many of them are vacant. They also felt there isn’t the class of people here who can afford to live in these luxury apartments.

We came home and rested briefly then went to The Asia Foundation. Ron did a project here in 2004-05 and he was based at The Asia Foundation. Our friend Suba worked on the project with Ron and today he had arranged a gathering there of people who had worked on the project. It was a great reunion with lots of funny stories to share about things that happened at the time. Our favorite was the story about one of the workers who had put the air conditioning remote in his pocket by mistake and tried to make a phone call using the remote, thinking it was his cell phone. Short eats and tea were served. Short eats are various small fried wraps containing either ground meat or veggies, usually spicy as most SL food is.
Suba

Anton

Don Brownell


Anton and his wife Dushy gave us a ride home. Later we caught a trishaw and ate at our favorite Indian restaurant. It was as good as we remembered.

Comments

  1. Tricia, as always, thanks for bringing us along for the ride. Love the way you capture the diversity of people, your descriptions of the food and cultural observations, such as "Who's going to live in those fancy new apartments?" And Suba's answer that they're mostly vacant. I was excited to see there are women police in Sri Lanka.

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