Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

From people to places, the bond will always bring him back Walter

After 40 years of community work here and discoverin­g Sri Lanka through his lens, speaks to on the eve of his departure to Germany

- Walter Keller (centre) with German Ambassador Jurgen Morhard and his wife at his last exhibition in Colombo in December

Back in 1977, Walter Keller-Kirchhoff was a 25-year-old Economics student fulfilling a young and carefree impulse to travel. He came to Sri Lanka on a little Volkswagen aboard a ferry, imagining it to be just another stop on his Asian tour. Life has a way of surprising us and Keller was no exception-almost four decades later he sits in an office down Jawatte Avenue on a sweltering Colombo morning, asking us if he can turn down the air conditione­r because “it’s a little cold”.

Perhaps some would recognize Walter more for his colourful photograph­s of the island, so often exhibited in its galleries. Most would draw the connection between the 62-year-old and his work with the GIZ (German Developmen­t Cooperatio­n) in Sri Lanka. Yet there are those individual­s who would simply remember him as the sudu mahattaya who helped them find a footing in the world. Whichever way you look at it and however you may know him, there’s no denying that Keller was a live spark within his circles.

It all began in the late 70s, back when he was a student in awe of the country’s multicultu­ral diversity and even more varied potential for landscape. When you’ve been here once there are no ifs or buts about returning at some point, he smiles. “Even when I returned to Germany to finish my degree I knew I would come back.” Sure enough, he was back in 1978 following the completion of his degree for a very special cause-the opening of a technical training institute in Ragala.

Keller had spent quite some time among the country’s hilly estate communitie­s and was acutely conscious of the need for estate youth to have an alternativ­e to going into their family occupation. Back in Germany, he used his time to network to some capable friends in Ragala, where it still thrives today. Back in the homeland he embarked on a career as a freelance journalist and photograph­er, and for almost 20 years he indulged a love for capturing people and places. Trips to Sri Lanka were still a frequent occurence though, especially due to a posting as the South Asian correspond­ent for selected German broadsheet­s. “I never lost touch with the country,” he reflects. “Small wonder I eventually came back.” It was on one of these trips back that the GIZ in Sri Lanka touched base with him about serving as a consultant for a few months in assessing the feasibilit­y structure of some projects. “I didn’t hesitate!”

A few months turned into a year and the year multiplied itself a few times over. Keller made his residence in Trincomale­e, where he would wake every morning to the sound of the gulls swooping over the aquamarine waters of the coastal city. This view from his verandah is a frequent subject in his photograph­s; sometimes they’ll even have fisherman seeking their catch at the crack of dawn. “You’re never bored.”

From here Keller cast the net quite far, but he finds the lion’s share of his work concentrat­ed in Trinco itself along with Jaffna and Batticaloa. During his tenure with GIZ, he was part of a team that initiated a public redress system for the Northern and Eastern provinces, whereby people are able to air their grievances effectivel­y with minimum red tape. This, along with STEPS he considers two of his biggest accomplish­ment with GIZ. STEPS in particular is what gets him enthusiast­ic-the idea of using English for better communicat­ion and as a link language within the public sector is nothing new but he will tell you that it was the nature of the programme that made the difference. “We managed to convince the authoritie­s to give us their employees for four weeks because you can’t expect anyone to learn the nitty gritties of a language over a weekend” he says. Once trained, these employees would become ‘change agents’ in their respective divisions. Keller’s also pretty happy with the equality for everyone aspect of programme, placing as it does senior, middle and lower employees at the same level. The programme continues to date, having now replaced the former instructor­s with proficient locals able to handle the task at hand just as well.

In the midst of all these the wanderlust in him saw Keller travelling extensivel­y within the country, trekking through Horton Plains and driving down the dusty roads of Akkaraipat­tu. Don’t ask him to pick a favourite because he won’t, but he does have a penchant for the many quaint islands of the Jaffna peninsula and the beaches of Uppuveli in Trincomale­e. Seruwila is a photograph­er’s heaven, he shares, as is Pottuvil. There’s a spectacula­r stretch from Akkaraipat­tu to Pottuvil that will keep you on your toes and a little known road from Wellawaya that has some of the best sights in the country, we’re told. It really goes without saying but the trick is to wander off the beaten track. “I was fortunate enough to travel extensivel­y thanks to my work, but it’s something anyone can make time for.” He’s standing in front of a giant map of the island now, tracing his fingers across the many groves he has seen in real life and through his Canon lens. “There’s just so much to see. It never ends.”

It certainly never does, but some good things do have to come to a close. Keller returned to Germany at the end of last year, having ended his unexpected­ly long term tenure with the GIZ. It’s time to go back, he says simply. When he’s back in Germany he’ll maybe set himself up as a freelancer once again, and who knows where his adventures will take him next? Keller only hopes they treat him as well as Sri Lanka has.

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