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Rainbow at Trinco
Tsunami Commemoration –
A Sri Lankan-Swiss
cultural initiative
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Picturegallery here
A
DVD about Rainbow at Trinco is available.
A small sequence of the film can be downloaded from here.
Please note: The movie will be opened as a Quicktime file in a separate
window, as download takes its time, depending on the connection. Quicktime Player
is available free of charge from the Apple server: Quicktime
If
you would like to order the DVD, please click here.
Tricomalee, the port in north-east Sri Lanka. It
is the 26th December 2005. On this bright, fresh morning an
oppressive stillness dominates, the streets are empty, militia
patrol at the junctions. Today the commemoration of the Tsunami
is being celebrated. A year ago, on the coasts of the Indian
Ocean, hundreds of thousands of human lives were wiped out
by an enormous tidal wave; millions lost relatives, their homes
and their livelihoods. In Sri Lanka alone 35,000 people died
and half a million were rendered homeless within the space
of a single hour.
Today the country and the world remember the victims;
the attention of the media and the public is fully focused
on the official commemorative ceremony at Galle, in the south
of the country. In stark contrast to this: long rows of Umbul
Umbul flags on the beach in the bay of the Trinco Harbour stand
as a reminder of the tsunami victims of this region.
The flags send with the wind the many good
wishes across the sea and out into the world – a sign
of hope for the survivors. Painted in the colours of the rainbow,
the flags have been erected in a combined act by tsunami survivors
and relief workers, by children and adults, by layman and artists,
by Tamils and Singhalese, Hindus and Buddhists, Christians
and Moslems – by people who in their daily lives for
the past year have been directly confronted by the effects
of the flood catastrophe.
Even though the response to the destructive tidal wave was
a world-wide wave of solidarity, the reconstruction is far
from complete. Many of those affected, particularly in and
around Trinco, remain empty handed. They live in around 50
temporary camps –
without a home of their own and without work. The very fact that
many helpers in various initiatives and projects have been looking
after them has meant that hope for a return to «normality» has
so far not begun to fade.
The initiative Rainbow at Trinco is a partnership project aimed
at giving further impulse to this hope and to the needed relief
measures. The Rainbow Project and CENT, an amalgamation of
40 aid organisations in Trinco, are demonstrating with this
anniversary that there is still much to do before all the tsunami
survivors are able to take their destiny into their own hands.
CENT stands for Community Empowerment Network Trincomalee and
has coordinated many projects in the past year. The emphasis
of CENT lies in providing psychological rehabilitation to those,
who have been suffering from the traumatic experiences brought
by the flood catastrophe.
The commemoration programme, which will include
a tree planting action, the traditional lighting of oil lamps,
a photographic exhibition and a concluding public concert,
will be overshadowed by the growing conflict between the opposing
parties of the civil war: shootings, calls for strikes, political
demonstrations in Trinco all mean that Rainbow at Trinco between
Christmas and New Year will be a risky undertaking. In spite
of this ominous situation, CENT is mobilising hundreds of
people, who will process through the city with Umbul Umbul
flags, accompanied by a children’s music group and the
vehicles of aid organisatio "Support for the Tsunami
victims should not go under in the face of a new civil war.
We do not want to submit to the dictates of individual interest
groups. It should not be that so many tsunami victims still
do not have their own homes."
The Umbul Umbul flags will be erected for
a final time by the open sea on the 31st December and will
then be taken back by those taking part to where they originated:
to the many camps, to the aid centres, to the volunteers. There
they will stand as colourful and optimistic symbols of partnership,
to encourage and give new strength for the reconstruction effort.
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