Peace Corps

Asian Tsunami

Returned Peace Corps Volunteer Amelia Sparks spent three months in Sri Lanka as a Crisis Corps Volunteer, working on everything from database entry to construction projects. Gain a unique perspective on the effects of the tsunami from her own words and pictures. (The Crisis Corps has been renamed “Peace Corps Response.”) Lesson plan

Amelia Sparks, Sri Lanka
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Photographed, written, and narrated by returned Peace Corps Volunteers who were on the ground in Sri Lanka after the tsunami.

Asian Tsunami

Amelia Sparks
Crisis Corps Volunteer
Sri Lanka, 2005

On December 26, 2004, an earthquake off the west coast of the island of Sumatra, in Indonesia, created tsunamis across the Indian Ocean that devastated parts of Indonesia, Thailand, India, and Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, alone, the tsunami killed 30,000 people and displaced 400,000.

About 6 months after the tsunami, my colleague Darren and I went to Sri Lanka as part of the Crisis Corps to help with post-tsunami relief and development.

My name is Amelia. I had been a Peace Corps Volunteer in Morocco. For this assignment, I was in Colombo, the capital and—with about a million people—the largest city in Sri Lanka.

I worked with a local nongovernmental organization called the Consortium of Humanitarian Agencies or CHA. Immediately after the tsunami, so many agencies came to Sri Lanka to help that it was difficult to coordinate their efforts. I assisted in putting together a database of all the agencies by district to track what was being given and to whom.

Darren, previously a Peace Corps Volunteer in Nepal, was assigned to Kalutara, a small fishing village about an hour south of Colombo. He was working with the people directly affected by the tsunami, often in the Internally Displaced Persons camps, making sure that people were getting what they needed—from housing, to bicycles used for transportation.

Many people lost everything they owned. Temporary housing was built for people who would not be able to move into permanent housing for a long time—perhaps years.

People are rebuilding all that was destroyed. Many people lost their only means of earning a living. For people who do not want to go back to fishing, or cannot go back because they no longer live near the sea, various organizations and trade schools are providing training and tools to start a new trade.

Young men at a trade school are learning carpentry skills. Sri Lanka needs a lot of carpenters to help with the rebuilding.

In a community center at one of the camps, women sew products to sell.

Sri Lanka is a beautiful country, and we enjoyed traveling around the country in our free time. We especially liked taking the train to explore the beaches, jungles, mountains, and tea plantations of Sri Lanka. The people are warm, friendly, and highly educated .

We have high hopes that the people of Sri Lanka will be able to overcome both the after-effects of the tsunami and the ongoing civil conflict, and that they can become once again, as Marco Polo said, the best island of its size in the world.

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