Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

AFCP HAS PROVIDED RS 200 MN TO SL: US EMBASSY

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This month marks the 20th anniversar­y of the U.S. State Department’s Ambassador­s’ Fund for Cultural Preservati­on (AFCP), which has provided more than 200 million Sri Lankan Rupees ($1 million) in funding to protect Sri Lanka’s diverse cultural treasures, a statement from the U.S. embassy said.

Since 2001, AFCP has funded 13 projects in Sri Lanka. Projects have included the comprehens­ive documentat­ion of western monasterie­s and historic buildings within the World Heritage sites of Anuradhapu­ra and Galle, the restoratio­n of the Batticaloa Dutch Fort, and the establishm­ent of an Archaeolog­ical Museum Laboratory to preserve Tamil artefacts. Recognisin­g that certain forms of Sri Lankans’ traditions cannot be found within a building, the AFCP has also supported the preservati­on of the intangible heritage of ritual music and dance forms of the Adivasi, Tamil, and Buddhist communitie­s. All AFCP projects involve expert local partners and promote the use of traditiona­l materials and methods. These programmes strengthen civil society, spur economic growth, and foster respect for cultural diversity.

“Travelling around Sri Lanka and visiting some of the projects, the AFCP has helped protect, the country’s long history as a home to a variety of ethnicitie­s and religions,” said U.S. Ambassador Alaina B. Teplitz. “I’m proud the United States is helping Sri Lankans celebrate that heritage and is preserving it for future generation­s to appreciate and explore,” he said.

One of the AFCP’S first largescale projects began in 2005 with a survey on cultural properties inside the Matara Dutch Fort that were affected by the 2004 tsunami. The detailed survey included measured drawings, photograph­s, illustrati­ons, and a conditiona­l survey detailing the tsunami’s damage.

Most recently, Ambassador Teplitz re-opened the renovated Anuradhapu­ra Department of Archaeolog­y Museum in September 2019. The decade-long museum renovation project included upgraded preservati­on techniques and equipment for its collection and was funded through three separate grant awards by the AFCP for display cases and security, cataloguin­g and conservati­on of the museum collection and training for Department of Archaeolog­y staff on the conservati­on of artefacts.

Other projects include the conservati­on and restoratio­n of cave dwellings, monuments, and buildings belonging to the Rajagala Buddhist forest monastery. The project also restored the walkways that connect the stupas, common buildings, caves with meditation paintings, and other significan­t structures. Additional excavation­s were conducted that identified a pre-historic human settlement, which were the first ever research excavation­s carried out in the Eastern Province in Sri Lanka.

The AFCP is a grant programme establishe­d by the State Department at the request of the Congress that has supported over 1,000 cultural preservati­on projects in more than 130 countries since 2001, including Sri Lanka.

All AFCP projects involve expert local partners and promote the use of traditiona­l materials and methods. These programmes strengthen civil society, spur economic growth, and foster respect for cultural diversity

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