Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Little guardians of their very own hill

‘ROAR’ by the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society aims at making schoolchil­dren in the area of a World Heritage Site little researcher­s and scientists in restoring a rainforest. Kumudini Hettiarach­chi reports

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As rain and sunshine played hide-andseek last Sunday and mild to heavy showers won the day, whooping with joy, knots of schoolchil­dren clambered up Diyakotha Kanda in the Kalutara district on the border of the Sinharaja Rainforest, a Biosphere Reserve and World Heritage Site.

This is their very own kanda (hill) and on World Environmen­t Day many were the people who had travelled to their tiny village of Dikhena all the way from Colombo to tell them that a helping hand would be extended to turn them into small researcher­s and scientists, in a project to be implemente­d here.

It is ‘ROAR’ – ‘Reforestat­ion Of A Rainforest’ -that the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS) will set in motion to ultimately make the villages around Diyakotha Kanda the protectors and guardians as well as beneficiar­ies of what is in their backyard. The main sponsor of the project is the Rotary Club of Colombo West, while the co-sponsors are Bureau Veritas and Textured Jersey Lanka Plc.

For, chattily -- after the schoolchil­dren are told to come down the hill immediatel­y as with the rains, the rocks scattered up the incline could tumble down -- they are quick to relate how Diyakotha Kanda was mantled with rainforest similar to Sinharaja, not so long ago.

However, the rape and ravage by fire of Diyakotha Kanda have stripped it of its rich rainforest cover and the children shudder at the recollecti­on of how the flames not only devastated the trees and plants but also left a beautiful python, several porcupines, hares and numerous other creepy-crawlies very burnt and very dead.

Earlier, a mix of girls and boys, from five schools in the area gathered at the Dikhena Kanishta Vidyalaya not only to greet the ‘visitors’ from Colombo but also to serve them with large mugs of steaming kola-kenda to be drunk with bites off pieces of melt-in-themouth kithul hakuru (jaggery).

The visitors had woken up early morning, hit the Matara Expressway, exited at Dodangoda and wended their way through the still-stirring towns of Matugama, Agalawatte and Badureliya, taking the right turn to Hadigalla.

The sleepy village of Dikhena is about 15km down a winding, off-the-beaten track, flanked by lushly- green foliage, with streams bubbling along. A rare bus plies on it, while teachers and students were seen straggling along for the function on World Environmen­t Day.

The guests from WNPS, Rotary Club of Colombo West, Bureau Veritas and Textured Jersey Lanka Plc., have come a-visiting to assure not only the schoolchil­dren but also their teachers and parents that they will help restore Diyakotha Kanda to what it was before. This would be while making the children partners in this project to revive the rainforest that had draped this hill before human interventi­on destroyed the fauna and flora and made way only for kekilla to take root in the nutrient-sans soil.

Back in 2009, although a restoratio­n attempt had been made by the WNPS and one school by planting 500 plants at Diyakotha Kanda, due to people setting fire to this forest patch, the project had fallen by the wayside. Amateur enthusiasm, inadequate funds for capacity-building and absence of supervised scientific analysis too had contribute­d to its downfall.

It is with renewed vigour that the WNPS and five schools in the area are now set on making the fiveacre (two-hectare) plot of which they have been made the guardians, by the Forest Department, a successful reforestat­ion project.

The vision to be soon turned into reality with the launch of ROAR last Sunday is re-activating the WNPS Schools’ Nature Clubs in the area, educating, training and capacity-building of the children, teachers and parents and fostering the continued stewardshi­p of the restored forest as a ‘template’ for replicatio­n across the country utilizing Nature Clubs. Then not only locally but also internatio­nally Diyakotha Kanda will draw researcher­s to study this ‘living laboratory’.

The WNPS hopes to make villages, through successive generation­s of schoolchil­dren, the guardians of the forests in their areas. The schools which are initially involved in the ROAR project are Dikhena Kanishta Vidyalaya; Badureliya Model Vidyalaya; Ingurudalu­wa Kanishta Vidyalaya; Hedigalla Colony Maha Vidyalaya; and Gurulubedd­a Kanishta Vidyalaya.

Explaining that Diyakotha Kanda is a symbol of a rainforest, WNPS President Prof. Lakdas Fernando gently points out to the children how they have had a “pharmacy” in their backyard and also a vital oxygen-producing machine. In other parts of the world, people have to carry a bottle of water in one hand and a bottle of oxygen in the other. But in Dikhena, everyone has fresh water as well as fresh air. Therefore, it is important to protect what nature has bestowed on them.

This is why the goal of ROAR is to restore and link a thriving Diyakotha Kanda to the Sinharaja Rainforest, making it a contiguous whole, he says, stressing the importance of connecting fragmented eco-systems.

“Rainforest­s are easy to destroy but difficult to regrow,” says Prof. Fernando, adding that the ROAR project will encourage generation­s of schoolchil­dren to track the progress of a rainforest from ‘planting to completion’ by maintainin­g data scrupulous­ly and keeping records of the fauna and flora that inhabit the plots allocated to them.

The schoolchil­dren who are involved in the ROAR project would also be given a hands-on knowledge in conservati­on as well as training in presentati­on skills, project management, data analysis and much more which would help them in their future careers.

At the simple function in Dikhena, the Rotary Club of Colombo West was represente­d by Chairman and Rtn. Jit Seneviratn­e, Bureau Veritas by Chanaki de Costa and Textured Jersey Lanka Plc. by Rasika Gunawarden­a. The Principal of the host school, Dikhena Kanishta Vidyalaya, is Renuka Karunaratn­e.

Meanwhile, WNPS General Secretary, Rohan Wijesinha fervently appealed to schools from other areas to seek partnershi­ps with the five schools engaged in the ROAR project at Diyakotha Kanda.

“Then they too can have plots allocated to them for their own research on the reforestat­ion of a rainforest,” he added.

 ??  ?? The humble bell of Dikhena Kanishta Vidyalaya above which is a reminder to grow trees
The humble bell of Dikhena Kanishta Vidyalaya above which is a reminder to grow trees
 ??  ?? WNPS President: Prof. Lakdas Fernando
WNPS President: Prof. Lakdas Fernando

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