Lokubanda Tillakaratne
This past November and December, Ditwah showed us how dark, eerie, and haunting cyclones can be. Past generations have suffered: per PWD records, in 1834, the Mahaweli rose 60 feet above its usual flood level at Gampola, and the Canberra Times reported in 1911 the great flood of Ceylon on December 30 of that year. It killed 200 people and left over 300,000 homeless. Half a century later, on December 25, 1957, a nameless cyclone brought severe rain to the North Central Province (NCP). The Nachchaduwa reservoir near Anuradhapura city breached, releasing its full volume into Malwatu Oya, a mid-level river flowing through the city, nearly washing away its colonial-era bridge near the Lion Tower. A cyclone paid a visit to the Eastern Coast of Sri Lanka on November 17-23, 1978.
Half a century later, Ditwah came with swagger.











