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The multicultural people of Galle Fort
Galle Fort is consistently and constantly changing. Everyday new shops appear and tragically old historic families leave, new projects are embarked on and old buildings restored from ruins to palaces. This ever-changing place has been the cause of much exacerbation as gaps are noticed and interviews chased up, all the while trying to persuade people of the benefits of this book, a reality that many rightly debate and discussing its impacts as well as its benefits.
In a country like Sri Lanka, where 10 minutes really means several hours and a few cups of tea, having to conduct over 160 interviews in roughly eight months was no mean feat and that is not to mention pounding the streets for the guide section, talking to Galle Heritage Foundation and checking facts over and over again.
Around the galle Fort book |
Shooting from every angle just to get the perfect shot
Driving force
The communal feeling within the Fort is the driving force behind its success and the huge tea party held on 18 December for the launch was indicative of that. It is a feeling like this one that is at the heart of every interview conducted.
The Fort has become the very definition of cosmopolitan, an attribute the authors have attempted to convey in the extensive variety of characters whose stories they are telling, people who come from all walks of life and each one of them with important life changing lessons for us all to think about and learn from.
Many-layered
Sri Lanka is a phenomenal land with such rich diversity that has only led to the creation of a culture so layered that even the oldest generations cannot really tell you what it is made up of in its entirety. The authors have tried to show these many layers in different and interesting new ways.
They have eaten wattalappan during Eid-ul-Fitr, the festival to celebrate the end of Ramadan; they have sat in silence listening to prayers while looking in awe at the Fort’s huge reclining Buddhas and have watched the Fort kids battling it out on the rampart home run cricket pitch.
Galle Fort is a hub of multi-cultural minds, an assortment of creeds, colours and caste. But the one fact that was stressed by every single person interviewed without exception was that this doesn’t matter.
Sri Lankans are famous for their hospitality and welcoming attitude. But unfortunately sometimes this is not extended by many of those international residents who have chosen to spend their lives in this country to all and this is something the authors feel is not deliberate, but simple as a result of a lack of opportunity to meet one another.
The magic behind closed doors |