Tsunami 2004: A survivor's tale of grit, determination and resilience
Discussions with various senior Pakistani diplomats in Colombo as well as Sri Lankan diplomats in Pakistan led to my first visit to Pakistan in September 2023 to participate in the people-centered initiative ‘Enduring Friendship’ events in Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Sri Lanka-Pakistan diplomatic relations.
The day after Christmas, 26 December 2004, changed my life forever. I was 17, happily riding an early morning train from Colombo to Galle in the south with my family. We were excited to meet relatives who were visiting Sri Lanka after a decade – like everyone else, oblivious to the tragedy ahead.
Everything was calm when our train stopped at the coastal village of Paraliya. Then a wall of water hit us. It was 9:28 a.m. I heard screams and saw commotion. Nothing was left undamaged. This was the catastrophic tsunami that struck Sri Lanka twenty years ago.
I survived, and managed to save my mother, her sister and her son. But I could not save my father – my best friend and my pillar of strength. With the support of many, I brought the rest of the family back to Colombo. But I could not stop to rest. I had to go back to Paraliya to find my father’s remains.
His soul had left his body but I felt him beside me, as I always have since then, an invincible source of strength and courage. I had to gather all my strength and courage to find him. I vowed not to return without him.
Finding my father
Growing up with my parents and grandparents, I had been a pampered, somewhat overweight but active child, given the best that a middle-class family could afford. I spent a lot of time with my grandparents, sitting with my grandfather and learning about maps without understanding anything. Those were just words for me then, but not anymore.
As I roamed from hospital to hospital, a policeman at Karapitiya Hospital suggested checking Batapola Hospital. I reached there around 6:00 p.m. I saw piles of dead bodies and people weeping for loved ones. It was 6:48 p.m.when I identified my father. I felt devastated as I lifted his body with my own hands.
The people around me were all strangers, but all so kind and helpful. That was when I understood that humans have no caste other than humanity. I left my father to find a plastic sheet to cover his body, and got one at a nearby store. I hired a vehicle to bring my father home.
I had not eaten since the morning of the tragedy, and it was past midnight when we reached Colombo, a nearly three-hour drive. I had kept my promise to bring my father back. Then I collapsed from grief and exhaustion. I don’t remember much after that.
I believe that every cloud has its own silver lining. This is the point in my story that an adventurer rises from the ashes and tears. I started practicing martial arts and meditation. I felt strong and unbreakable, excelling in multiple areas, while retaining my love for humanity and for animals.
In 2008, I took on a massive challenge, to pursue a degree in Information Technology. My father was not there to provide for me. Working at the Ceylon Electricity Board as the Confidential Secretary my mother was able to help me, and I took on projects to subsidise my studies. There were days when I had to skip meals and refuse to go out with friends in order to save money. I was determined to buy a laptop to support my higher studies.
I went on to obtain my bachelors and masters degrees from universities in the UK affiliated with institutes in Sri Lanka. I was hired as a consultant in a global information technology company. I also became a strong horse rider.
Then I was selected to join Virtusa Corp’s first 11-member team being sent to Australia after the company acquired Polaris. This was a turning point in my professional life. I was with Virtusa for seven years despite offers to join other companies with higher positions. I enjoyed mentoring juniors and feel fortunate to have had that opportunity.
I finally left the company in 2019 to take up a challenge in the IT industry. Meanwhile, I also continued with my passion for outdoor adventure.
In March 2022, I had the opportunity to guide an Indian journalist, Radhika Daga, on a two-day trek on the ‘lost trail’ through the Sinharaja tropical rainforest to the Adams Peak. We were about two kilometers from our destination, a village at the other end of the jungle, when I fell and hurt myself. I did not want to discourage my team, so I bore the pain and continued walking with a badly injured knee.
This was a huge risk. I knew that doing this while carrying a 15kg backpack could have made this my last expedition. However, we made it to our destination, and I was able to recover from my injury with nine months of physical therapy. Radhika later wrote about her Sri Lanka journey for the IIC India Quarterly, published by the India International Centre, Delhi.
The experience provided me with valuable insights into my own determination and physical fitness.
Since my recovery, I have managed to trek 50 kms in 24 hours.
‘The savage mountain’
In early June 2022, I had another life-changing moment. This time it was a photograph in a book, shared by my mentor.
“Dimantha, I have something for you,” he said, showing me the photo. “Can you climb this mountain?”
It was a picture of the K2 in Pakistan.
That day marked the beginning of my deep dive into high-altitude mountaineering.
Once I decided to follow this dream, I also began making every effort to learn about Pakistan, its people, and its relationship with Sri Lanka. I even started learning Urdu.
I also reached out to several Nepali sherpas. Ngaa Tenji Sherpa, Director of Summit Force, agreed to help me on my quest. He has climbed Mt. Everest nine times.
The world’s second highest peak K2 is also known as the “savage mountain”. If I succeed, it will be the first attempt ever by a Sri Lankan to summit the most dangerous mountain in the world.
Discussions with various senior Pakistani diplomats in Colombo as well as Sri Lankan diplomats in Pakistan led to my first visit to Pakistan in September 2023 to participate in the people-centered initiative ‘Enduring Friendship’ events in Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Sri Lanka-Pakistan diplomatic relations.
I took a break from the IT business to follow my passion on a full time basis and am now preparing to conquer my first 6,000-metre peak, Ama Dablam in Nepal, April 2025, with Ngaa Tenji Sherpa. This will be my training mountain before I attempt K2 – an island man’s mountain quest.
The pampered 17-year old who endured extreme conditions while looking for his father’s body amidst so many others has come a long way.
I discovered reserves of grit, determination, and physical strength I never knew I had. I have built up my endurance and am now preparing to climb an almost impossible mountain. I feel my father with me always as I face life’s challenges. I know he will be with me as I attempt the greatest challenge of my life.
(The author is an explorer. climber and an IT professional. He plans to climb Nepal’s Ama Dublam in 2025 to test his limits for a bigger challenge. On Instagram at @dimantha_thenuwara/. Facebook @DimanthaDilanThenuwara. By special arrangement with Sapan)
Cool website!
My name’s Eric, and I just found your site - Southasiamonitor - while surfing the net. You showed up at the top of the search results, so I checked you out. Looks like what you’re doing is pretty cool.
But if you don’t mind me asking – after someone like me stumbles across Southasiamonitor, what usually happens?
Is your site generating leads for your business?
I’m guessing some, but I also bet you’d like more… studies show that 7 out of 10 who land on a site wind up leaving without a trace.
Not good.
Here’s a thought…
How about making it really EASY for every visitor who shows up to get a personal phone call from you as soon as they hit your site…
You can –
Web Visitor is a software widget that works on your site, ready to capture any visitor’s Name, Email address, and Phone Number. It lets you know IMMEDIATELY – so that you can talk to that lead while they’re literally looking over your site.
https://resultleadgeneration.com to try out a Live Demo with Web Visitor now to see exactly how it works.
You’ll be amazed—the difference between contacting someone within 5 minutes versus a half-hour or more later could increase your results 100-fold.
It gets even better… once you’ve captured their phone number, with our new SMS Text With Lead feature, you can automatically start a text (SMS) conversation – immediately… and contacting someone in that 5-minute window is 100 times more powerful than reaching out 30 minutes or more later.
Plus, with text messaging you can follow up later with new offers, content links, even just follow-up notes to keep the conversation going.
Everything I’ve just described is simple, easy, and effective.
https://resultleadgeneration.com to discover what Web Visitor can do for your business, potentially converting up to 100X more eyeballs into leads today!
Eric
PS: Web Visitor offers a complimentary 14-day trial – and it even includes International Long Distance Calling.
You have customers waiting to talk with you right now… don’t keep them waiting.
https://resultleadgeneration.com to try Web Visitor now.
We are strongly committed to protecting your privacy and providing a safe & high-quality online experience for our visitors. We understand that you care about how the information you provide to us is used and shared. We have developed a Privacy Policy to inform you of our policies about the collection, use, and disclosure of information we receive from users of our website. We operate the Website.
Our Privacy Policy, along with our Terms & Conditions, governs your use of this site. By using the website, or by accepting the Terms of Use (via opt-in, checkbox, pop-up, or clicking an email link confirming the same), you agree to be bound by our Terms & Conditions and our Privacy Policy.
If you have provided any voluntarily given information, you may review and make changes to it via instructions found on the Website. To manage your receipt of marketing and non-transactional communications, you may Want to receive fewer emails, or none whatsoever? Update your email preferences.
Emails related to orders are provided automatically – customers are not able to opt out of these. We will try to address any requests related to the management of personal information in a timely manner. However, it may not always be possible to fully remove or modify information in our databases if we have a valid reason to keep it for certain timeframes. If you have any questions, simply see our website to view our official policies.
Our primary goal is to help you with lead generation. These emails are meant to give you advice on that topic, or to promote products that will help you have the kind of business films are written about.
If you'd like to Want to receive fewer emails, or none whatsoever? Update your email preferences by visiting https://resultleadgeneration.com/unsubscribe.aspx?d=southasiamonitor.org
Post a Comment