Sri
Lanka has seduced travelers for centuries. Marco Polo described it as the
finest island of its size in the world, while successive waves of Indian, Arab
and European traders and adventurers flocked to its palm-fringed shores,
attracted by reports of rare spices, precious stones and magnificent elephants.
Poised just above the Equator amid the balmy waters of the Indian Ocean, the
island’s legendary reputation for natural beauty and plenty has inspired an
almost magical regard even in those who have never visited the place.
Romantically inclined geographers, poring over maps of the island, compared its
outline to a teardrop falling from the tip of India or to the shape of a pearl
(the less impressionable Dutch likened it to a leg of ham), while even the name
given to the island by early Arab traders – Serendib – gave rise to the English
word “serendipity”.
Marco
Polo’s bold claim still holds true. Sri Lanka packs an extraordinary variety of
places to visit within its modest physical dimensions and few islands of
comparable size can boast a natural environment of such beauty and diversity.
Lapped by the Indian Ocean, the coast is fringed with idyllic – and often
refreshingly undeveloped – beaches, while the interior boasts a compelling
variety of landscapes ranging from wildlife-rich lowland jungles, home to
extensive populations of elephants, leopards and rare endemic bird species, to
the misty heights of the hill country, swathed in immaculately manicured
tea plantations. Nor does the island lack in man-made attractions. Sri Lanka
boasts more than two thousand years of recorded history, and the remarkable
achievements of the early Sinhalese civilization can still be seen in the
sequence of ruined cities and great religious monuments that litter the
northern plains.
The
glories of this early Buddhist civilization continue to provide a benchmark of
national identity for the island’s Sinhalese population, while Sri Lanka’s
historic role as the world’s oldest stronghold of Theravada Buddhism lends
it a unique cultural identity that permeates life at every level. There’s more
to Sri Lanka than just Buddhists, however. The island’s geographical position
at one of the most important staging posts of Indian Ocean trade laid it open
to a uniquely wide range of influences, as generations of Arab, Malay, Portuguese,
Dutch and British settlers subtly transformed its culture,
architecture and cuisine, while the long-established Tamil population in the
north have established a vibrant Hindu culture that owes more to India than to
the Sinhalese south.
It
is, however, this very diversity that has long threatened to tear the country
apart. For much of the past three decades the island was the site of one of
Asia’s most pernicious civil wars, as the Sri Lankan Army and the LTTE, or
Tamil Tigers, battled it out in the island’s north and east, until the final
victory of government forces in early 2009. The island is now experiencing peace for
the first time in a generation, and although the physical, political and human
scars of war remain raw in many places, most Sri Lankans are now once again
looking to the future with guarded optimism.
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