Features
Crowded agenda includes Cricket but no visit to Chemmani
The President goes to Jaffna!
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake made yet another visit to Jaffna last week. With all good intentions, he may be on course to set a record for visiting Jaffna more times than all his predecessors combined. There is no Lyn Ludowyk among us to make a political satire of presidents going to Jaffna, reversing the time honoured old trope – “He Comes from Jaffna!”.
The President’s visit was primarily to launch development projects in the peninsula. There was the launching of the 3rd Phase of Myliddy Fisheries Harbour. Following that the President opened a new Jaffna Regional Office of the central Department of Immigration and Emigration at the Jaffna District Secretariat. He visited the storied Jaffna Public Library to inaugurate its E-Library Programme. The President’s work was not done yet. He found time to lay the foundation stone for the Jaffna International Cricket Stadium to be located at the islet of Mandaitivu. He even made an unannounced visit to Katchatheevu to assert Sri Lanka’s maritime sovereignty.
If there was one omission on this crowded itinerary, it was the failure to visit the Chemmani site of mass graves. This was a lost opportunity in my humble view. The President and his entourage could have walked from the Secretariat to the cremation sites in Chemmani and nearby Ariyalai. The government has been taking a number of meaningful steps since the recent discovery of human skeletons at the two old sites of mass burial. A visit to the sites by the President would have conveyed a heartfelt demonstration of empathy and earnestness.
If the President missed an opportunity to visit Chemmani while in Jaffna, no other government Minister would seem to have made the special effort to formally visit the site. At the same time, Justice Minister Harshana Nanayakkara has reportedly affirmed that the NPP government, whose progenitor JVP had suffered disappearances during its second uprising, is determined to uncover the buried crimes of the past. The government has also allocated LKR 11.7 million towards the Chemmani expenses and has assured that all expenses will be met without limit or exception. A presidential visit to the site would have been a capping confirmation of the government’s seemingly genuine intentions.
In a related development, the government has approved a special project to process complaints of missing persons by the end of 2027. Of the 16,966 complaints received by the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) since its inception in 2016, over 10,500 cases are reportedly pending investigation. To accelerate the process and bring answers to the affected families, the Ministry of Justice and National Integration is set to appoint 25 sub-committees of three members each, comprising retired judges, senior administrators, and lawyers. It will be the task of these sub-committees set up on a geographical basis, to expedite bringing closure and healing to what have been open wounds for many families throughout the island.
The 2016 law (Act No. 14) that created the OMP also provides for undertaking mass grave inquiries including funding, site investigations and the identification of victims. According to the OMP there are 14 mass grave sites in the country that are under investigation. As numbers go, earlier estimates by Amnesty International and the Asian Human Rights Commission indicate over 600 disappearances in the Jaffna peninsula during the 1995-1996 period, and over 16,000 disappearances in the south during the second JVP uprising.
While victims were buried in shallow pits in the north, victims in the south were allegedly burnt on tyre pyres. These victims were victims of State violence. There was no State violence without the violence of first the JVP and then the LTTE and its fellow Tamil discontents. The LTTE is now history and it is an irony of history that a progeny of the old JVP now runs the Executive Committee of the State. It, therefore, behoves the NPP government to make sure that the victims who were disappeared once, North and South, are not disappeared again.
Symbolism and Substance
Life goes on nonetheless even as we pause to pay homage to victims of a bloody past and find answers to assuage their long grieving survivors. Governments have many things going on at the same time and Sri Lanka’s NPP government is no different. While President AKD could be faulted for not visiting Chemmani, he should also be commended for leading the government’s Jaffna initiatives on fisheries, passports, E-books and of course cricket. Each one of these areas has connections to the troubled past and carries positive prospects for a reformed future.
Whether cricket could become the elixir for our ethnic maladies is better tested in practice than in theory. Forty years ago on 26 June 1985, then Principal of St. John’s College Jaffna, CE Anandarajan, was gunned down by the LTTE for allowing his school cricket team to play a friendly match against the army team in Jaffna. I knew Mr. Anandarajan, a brother in law of Silan Kadirgamar. He was the first Jaffna citizen that a visiting MIRJE (Movement for Inter-Racial Justice and Equality) delegation met in 1979 while on a fact finding mission after Jaffna was placed under Emergency Rule. I am the only one alive from that group of MIRJE delegates that included Paul Caspersz, Yohan Devananda, Jayaratne Malliyagoda, Kumar David, and journalist Gamini Dissanayake from the Lanka Guardian.
The end of the war and the privatisation of cricket would seem to have dissolved some of the ethnic rigidities at least on the playing fields. It is a sociological feat that in a country where cricket clubs were founded and managed along ethnic lines (to wit – the Tamil Union, the Sinhalese Sports Club, the Moors and the Burgher Recreation Club, with the Nondescripts Cricket Club being the exception with NM Perera characteristically being one of its founders), cricket is now played as a franchise with teams displaying vibrant ethnic mixes instead of the old and stale ethnic homogeneity. The story of the Jaffna Kings, formerly Jaffna Stallions, is Exhibit A for this metamorphosis.
Seen in this light, the President’s blessing and the government’s support for a new cricket stadium in Mandaitivu is a welcome development. There would be significant spinoff benefits for the area in infrastructure and business opportunities for tourism and recreation. One would only hope that the government ensures that all environmental and engineering considerations are properly addressed. The island is one of the smaller islets off the peninsula, and is low lying and flood prone. It should not be overburdened with excessive construction and the conveniently common recourse to using septic tanks should be avoided at all cost.
From cricket to fisheries, the President and his government should know that before the ravages of war, the village of Myliddy was a vibrant fishing centre on the northern coast of Jaffna. Its hauls were rich and plenty to load daily convoys of lorries carrying fish to markets in Colombo. The curse of war and its proximity to Palali placed the village in the government security zone in the 1990s. With that, fishing stopped in Myliddy, life shut down and the people evacuated the village.
For 27 years the village was a dead zone and it was formally returned to the people on May 3rd, 2017. During the intervening years, the people of Myliddy were placed in camps for the ‘internally displaced’ located within the City of Jaffna. Toddlers spent their entire growing years in these camps, and their fathers forced away from the sea and their traditional livelihood were forced to learn carpentry and masonry to work for their income.
Pual Caspersz, Kumar David, Marshal Fernando, Vijaya Kumar and yours truly visited one such camp in 2002, when we reenacted our 1979 MIRJE visit to Jaffna. We also learnt that it was their absence from the sea that created the vacuum that was promptly filled by bottom trawling boats from Tamil Nadu, and not without some help from the Sri Lankan Navy. Territorial fishing rights have now become a full blown bilateral issue between India and Sri Lanka.
The President’s visit to Katchatheevu dramatizes the issue but is not enough to resolve it. At the same time, the new harbour in Myliddy hopefully would benefit a new generation of its to return to the trade of their forefathers augmented by new technology, facilities and the prospect of export markets.
If I am not mistaken, President AKD is the first Sri Lankan Head of State to visit the Jaffna Public Library. I believe then British Prime Minister David Cameron posed for a picture from the balcony of the library during his visit to attend a Commonwealth Conference in Sri Lanka, but I haven’t seen any pictures showing Sri Lankan leaders at the Jaffna Library. Politics can be as much about symbols as it ought to be about substance, and the symbolism of President AKD’s visit to Jaffna Public Library that was burnt down by security forces in 1981 would seem to have gone unnoticed in 2025. May be the return of Chemmani has taken the political oxygen out of all the other troubling memories.
The government will also have its work cut out for this year’s pilgrimage to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva. Thanks to Donald Trump and Netanyahu, the United Nations has been shut out of Gaza as it is mercilessly razed to the ground with the world watching. But there is no end in sight for the UNHRC’s engagement with Sri Lanka over the aftermaths of the war that ended in 2009. It is logical and even legitimate to ask why selectively pick on Sri Lanka. It is equally possible to see this nagging engagement in Geneva as an opportunity to exorcise Sri Lanka’s haunting ghosts at home, once and for all.
The government seems to be taking a balanced approach that equally avoids the empty human rights rhetoric of Ranil Wickremesinghe and the pseudo patriotism of the Rajapaksa brothers. The government has reportedly briefed the UNHRC and the Colombo Diplomatic Community on what it has been doing over the last 11 months in office, and has asked for time and space in taking the next steps to address outstanding issues.
Remarkably, it is not only the UNHRC that the government is constrained to engage with. It is also compelled to pay attention to many critical voices at home emanating from all sections of Sri Lanka’s ethnic landscape. Unlike Ranil Wickremesinghe who superciliously ignored criticisms and the Rajapaksas who brusquely stifled them, the NPP government seems to be both encouraging and engaging with civil society voices on human rights matters. There is still a long way to go, but the government has come a long way already from where its predecessors left us as recently an year ago, last September.
by Rajan Philips ✍️
Features
Cinnamon Tea Stick project aims to reprice Lanka’s tea economy
On a humid tea-growing slope in Sri Lanka’s south-western highlands, where mist drifts over the edges of the Sinharaja Forest Reserve, a quiet experiment is attempting to reimagine one of the country’s most enduring export lifelines.
For generations, tea has been both livelihood and legacy for thousands of smallholders across Sri Lanka. Yet beneath the global reputation of Ceylon Tea lies a persistent grievance. Growers say their earnings have remained largely stagnant even as value-added tea products fetch premium prices in overseas markets.
It is against this backdrop that entrepreneur Sarathchandra Ramanayake is promoting a new product he believes could shift more value back to the farmer. The product is called the Cinnamon Green Tea Stick, designed as a portable, bag-free infusion format aimed at premium and health-conscious consumers.
World Tea Day, observed on the 21st of this month, adds context to a wider debate about who benefits most from the global tea economy, the planter or the processor.
Ramanayake’s proposal is ambitious. He argues that while tea leaves currently fetch modest farm-gate prices, a redesigned value chain built around specialty processing could generate significantly higher returns. In his model, a kilo of finished product could translate into substantially improved earnings for growers, particularly through export-oriented niche markets.
He said the aim is to move away from bulk commodity pricing and toward value-driven tea consumption. The concept replaces conventional tea bags with a solid stick format infused with cinnamon, sourced from Sri Lanka’s spice-growing regions.
The Kalawana area in the Ratnapura District, where small tea holdings dominate the agricultural landscape, has been identified as a potential production base. In these communities, tea remains the backbone of rural livelihoods and sustains entire families.
Ramanayake said the initiative is not intended to replace traditional supply chains but to complement them. Farmers would continue supplying factories while also contributing selected high-quality leaves for the new production process.
Regulatory approval has been obtained under handmade tea production guidelines from the Tea Board, and a patent application has been submitted under intellectual property provisions.
Early signs of commercial interest are emerging. According to Ramanayake, small export orders have already been received from markets including the United Kingdom, suggesting tentative international interest in the product’s positioning.
The project also highlights long-standing structural issues within Sri Lanka’s tea economy, where value addition, branding and export margins are often concentrated far away from the farmer who produces the leaf.
Ramanayake’s pitch is both economic and social. By incorporating cinnamon, another of Sri Lanka’s globally recognised agricultural exports, the product also seeks to strengthen rural spice growers and diversify farm-level income.
Still, questions remain over whether such boutique innovations can meaningfully shift earnings at scale in an industry shaped by established auction systems and large processors.
For now, the Cinnamon Green Tea Stick sits at the intersection of tradition and innovation, carrying an ambition to reprice the leaf, reframe the farmer’s role and reimagine Sri Lanka’s iconic tea industry for a changing global market.
Text and Pix By Upendra Priyankara Jathungama ✍️
Features
Admitting a New Investor – Lessons from Dankotuwa – Episode 5
LESSONS FROM MY CAREER: SYNTHESISING MANAGEMENT THEORY WITH PRACTICE – PART 37
In today’s episode, I will relate several incidents from my final years at Dankotuwa Porcelain and the lessons I learned from them. Looking back now, I realise that these years taught me not only about management, finance, labour relations, and corporate survival, but also about human emotions, loyalty, fear, stubbornness, and resilience. They also marked the gradual end of a very long line of executive appointments that had consumed most of my adult life.
The contract labour issue
Because of the uncertainty of export demand, we had adopted a flexible system of recruiting some employees on fixed-term contracts or through labour suppliers. However, unlike many organisations, we took great care to ensure that these employees were not treated as second-class workers. In practice, they enjoyed almost all the benefits of permanent employees. If they served beyond a stipulated period, they were entitled to gratuity as well. We also had to comply with stringent labour and ethical compliance standards imposed by our foreign buyers, many of whom conducted regular audits.
A group of these employees had completed their two-year fixed-term contracts. Due to the uncertain external environment and fluctuating orders, we were unable to offer permanency. Instead, we offered another fixed-term contract for two years.
To our surprise, all of them refused and wanted permanent jobs which were too risky to offer in a volatile environment.
Despite repeated discussions and assurances from the Head of Human Resources, they insisted on nothing short of permanency. They would not budge. Finally, and very reluctantly, I instructed security not to permit them into the premises from the following day, because technically their contracts had expired.
The next morning, the entire group gathered outside the gate. They remained there until around ten o’clock before dispersing. Later, I heard that they were gathering at the residence of a Member of Parliament who lived nearby. This continued for several days.
The MP telephoned me repeatedly and urged me to make them permanent. I refused. The company simply could not absorb that level of rigidity at such an uncertain time. Then matters took an ugly turn.
One morning, some members of the group harassed the Chief Operating Officer while he was entering the premises. They sat on the bonnet of his car and forcibly opened the door. Security identified the main culprits immediately. I made up my mind that, regardless of future developments, those directly involved in intimidation and misconduct would never be taken back.
After nearly a month, the MP contacted me again. He said the matter had become a stalemate and that the group was now willing to accept the original contract terms. I replied immediately: “We now have only one-year contracts available. Anyone interested may report for work.” Some accepted. Others stubbornly refused.
Later, a few of those who had not been re-employed met me privately. They admitted they had been inexperienced young men and women who had merely followed the advice of union leaders. They confessed that it was the unions that had encouraged them to reject the original offer and even urged them to obstruct the COO’s vehicle. They pleaded with me to show mercy, saying they had been misled.
I genuinely felt sorry for them. But I stood firm.
Management sometimes requires compassion, but it also requires consistency. If discipline collapses, organisations collapse soon after.
The incident reinforced one of the most important lessons I learned in labour relations: leaders must distinguish between firmness and cruelty. A manager who constantly bends under pressure may temporarily avoid conflict, but in the long run loses credibility and control.
Thoughts of Retirement
By this time, I was just past 60 years of age. The stress of corporate life had begun taking a visible toll on my health. I often recalled my earlier days at the Employees’ Trust Fund under President Ranasinghe Premadasa, when relentless pressure had caused severe gastritis and ulcers. I still remember how those symptoms vanished within days of leaving the ETF.
I began dreaming of retirement, peace, and perhaps a quieter life devoted to agriculture, which had always fascinated me. But the Japanese directors would hear none of it.
They told me that in Japan, life begins at sixty. They pointed out that many Chairmen—Kaicho, as they are called in Japan—continue well into their seventies. One of the local directors was even sent to meet me personally and persuade me to abandon thoughts of retirement.
So I remained. The COLA problem
One of our biggest internal challenges was the Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) system that had been introduced years earlier. During periods of high inflation, it spiralled out of control. In some months, increases amounted to nearly one thousand rupees—a very substantial figure at that time.
No other industry was granting such increases monthly.
The situation became unsustainable. Worse still, the COLA had been incorporated into calculations for overtime, provident fund contributions, and other benefits. The compounding effect was enormous. We were unable to correct this mistake at the current time.
After prolonged discussions with the unions, we finally managed to restructure the arrangement. The frozen COLA and increases were consolidated into the basic salary structure.
I regarded this as a major breakthrough.
The Labour Department admitted privately that mistakes had been made by the company when the scheme was originally designed, but said nothing could legally be altered retrospectively.
This episode taught me another important lesson: poorly designed compensation systems can haunt organisations for decades. A Board and Chairman must examine compensation schemes very carefully before implementation. A benefit introduced during prosperous times may become a crushing burden during difficult periods.
The search for a new investor
The Japanese shareholders eventually made it clear that they were unwilling to invest further funds into the company. A new investor had to be found if the company was to survive.
Once again, my retirement plans were postponed. The Board insisted that I remain until a suitable investor was secured.
One prospective investor came close to finalising a deal but withdrew suddenly due to uncertainty surrounding the GSP+ concession. Another investor emerged later, but with very strict conditions. One of their key demands was a freeze on salaries and allowances for three years. Negotiations with the unions dragged on for days and weeks. At times, it appeared we were on the verge of success. Then suddenly the unions would withdraw cooperation.
Meanwhile, our financial position was deteriorating rapidly. The Head of Finance confirmed in writing that we could no longer meet obligations as they fell due.
I realised we had reached a dangerous legal and ethical point.
Under the Companies Act, if directors continue operating while knowing the company is insolvent, they may become personally liable for further erosion of assets. This was no longer merely a corporate issue—it threatened my own personal assets accumulated over a lifetime.
I informed the Board that we had no option but to seriously consider winding up the company. The local directors agreed. The Japanese directors requested one week to obtain instructions from Tokyo.
Because of Stock Exchange requirements, we made a disclosure to the Colombo Stock Exchange regarding the possible winding up.
That announcement changed everything.
Copies were displayed throughout the factory and office. Over the weekend, I was inundated with telephone calls from employees.
Some pleaded emotionally with me to save the company. Many had spent their entire working lives there and felt deeply attached to the factory. One group telephoned to say they were conducting a Bodhi pooja at a temple for the company’s survival. Another group called from a church where special prayers were being offered.
Those calls affected me deeply. To all of them, however, I gave the same answer:
“The future of the company is in your hands. If the investor’s conditions are accepted, the company can survive.”
The Minister’s intervention
On Sunday, I received a call from Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa asking me to come to his residence immediately.
I went with the COO and found that he had also summoned the General Manager of Noritake Porcelain, whom he knew personally. After hearing my explanation, the Minister called for the union representatives as well.
We waited several hours for them to arrive. During that waiting period, the Minister spoke candidly about politics, privatisation, nationalisation, and the mistakes successive governments had made. It was an unexpectedly educational afternoon.
When the unions finally arrived, the Minister was direct and blunt.
He told them that many workers came from his electorate and that if the factory closed, they should not expect him to find employment for them elsewhere.
The mood changed.
After lengthy discussion, the unions agreed in principle, though they requested a small amendment to the proposed terms. The Minister supported their request.
I said I could not promise anything but would speak to the investor. Fortunately, after difficult negotiations, the investor agreed.
On Tuesday, we met at the Labour Department and signed the settlement. We then informed the stock exchange that an agreement had been successfully reached.
The sense of relief was immense.
The SEC hearing
Even after securing the investor, another obstacle remained. Since the investment involved a fresh issue of shares, approval from the Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka was required.
That process became another nightmare.
The agreed share price had been based on the prevailing market price, but speculation had driven the market upward rapidly. During the hearing, I faced intense questioning regarding the pricing.
I explained that we could not ethically change the agreed terms after giving our word. More importantly, I stressed that this was the only serious investor available. Losing them could doom the company.
I made a detailed presentation supported by charts and figures. I also spoke frankly.
I admitted that I was suffering sleepless nights worrying about the company’s future.
After the hearing, I stepped outside exhausted and had barely begun packing my laptop when I was summoned back in.
As I entered, the Chairman smiled and said: “Mr. Wijesinha, you can sleep tonight. We have approved your proposal.”
And indeed, that night, I slept peacefully.
Retirement at last
The new investors eventually assumed control. Initially there were difficulties because they came from strong financial and investment backgrounds and required time to understand manufacturing operations and export markets. I personally introduced them to foreign buyers to help them understand the realities of the industry.
The Japanese shareholders became minority stakeholders.
At last, I felt the time had truly come to retire. The new investors requested that I remain for another year to help stabilise the transition. I agreed.
Finally, on June 30, 2012, I retired with mixed feelings.
I had enjoyed the challenges enormously, but they had undeniably affected my health. Yet the experiences proved invaluable later when I served on many Boards. I realised that Dankotuwa had excellent systems, disciplined processes, and an outstanding product. The difficulty was not inefficiency. It was surviving intense global competition in a highly unforgiving industry.
Looking back now, I realise that management theories often sound neat and logical in classrooms and seminars. Real life is rarely so tidy. In practice, leadership involves balancing compassion with discipline, ethics with survival, and long-term strategy with short-term crises.
Perhaps the greatest lesson I learned at Dankotuwa was this: organisations are not saved by systems alone. They are saved by people—their sacrifices, emotions, loyalty, courage, and sometimes even their prayers.
More lessons from my Board experiences will follow in future episodes.
(Sunil G. Wijesinha is a Consultant on Productivity and Japanese Management Techniques
Former Chairman / Director of several listed and unlisted companies
Recipient of the APO Regional Award for Promoting Productivity in the Asia-Pacific Region
Recipient of the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Rays – Government of Japan
Email: bizex.seminarsandconsulting@gmail.com)
By Sunil G. Wijesinha ✍️
Features
A Journey Through Time: The Dilmah Tea & Cinnamon Experience at Genesis
At Dilmah, we believe that every cup of tea and every hint of cinnamon carries a story worth telling. The Dilmah Tea & Cinnamon Experience was created to share that story, inviting visitors to discover the heritage, craftsmanship, and culture behind two of Sri Lanka’s most treasured gifts to the world.
Located at Genesis, the original Dilmah office in Maligawatte, the Experience is designed not as a traditional museum, but as a journey. From the moment guests step in, they are guided through an engaging narrative that brings together history, people, and place in a way that is both simple and meaningful.
The journey begins with the origins of tea and cinnamon. Many visitors are surprised to learn about Ceylon Cinnamon, known as true cinnamon, which is native to Sri Lanka and very different from the more common cassia found elsewhere. Its history dates back over 2500 years, and it was highly prized by ancient civilisations such as the Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans, at times valued even more than gold. Its extraordinary worth also drew colonial powers to the island, with the Portuguese and later the Dutch seeking control of Ceylon largely to dominate the lucrative cinnamon trade. It is often a fascinating discovery that transforms how one views a familiar spice.
Tea’s story stretches back to ancient China, where it was first discovered and cherished, before making its way to Europe and Britain, where it grew immensely popular. It was this rising demand in Britain that ultimately paved the way for tea to be introduced to Ceylon. The British had established coffee on the island, even as they were introducing tea in India, and Ceylon soon became a globally renowned coffee producer. This success, however, was short lived, as a devastating leaf disease destroyed the crop, bringing widespread economic hardship. From this period of uncertainty emerged tea, with the pioneering work of James Taylor laying the foundation for what would become one of the world’s most celebrated teas.
To bring this history to life, the Experience includes a short and informative video that sets the stage for what follows. Guests are then taken through the tea manufacturing process using miniature factory equipment, allowing them to clearly visualise each step from leaf to cup. A highlight for many is the opportunity to participate in a guided tea tasting and grading session. This hands-on experience introduces guests to the nuances of aroma, colour, and flavour, offering insight into the skill required to assess fine tea. The journey continues with a curated sampling of Ceylon Tea across Sri Lanka’s diverse elevations, from low grown to mid grown and high grown teas, each with its own unique character.
The Experience is further enriched by a thoughtfully designed food pairing. Guests are invited to enjoy a selection of savoury and sweet items, each paired with a specific tea to highlight complementary flavours. It is a simple yet refined way to appreciate tea in a new context.
Importantly, the Dilmah Tea & Cinnamon Experience also answers a growing need among Destination Management Companies (DMCs) and inbound travel specialists seeking authentic, meaningful, and accessible experiences within Colombo for their guests. In a city where many itineraries are limited to short sightseeing stops or shopping visits, the Experience offers something far more enriching, an immersive journey into Sri Lanka’s heritage, flavour, and craftsmanship, conveniently located within the city itself. Whether for leisure travellers, special interest groups, cruise passengers, corporate delegations, or high-value FIT travellers, the Experience provides a thoughtfully curated cultural encounter that combines storytelling, sensory engagement, culinary pairing, retail, and hospitality in one destination. Its central location at Genesis by Dilmah also makes it an ideal addition to Colombo itineraries for guests looking to experience the essence of Sri Lanka beyond the conventional
Throughout the Experience, sensory elements play an important role. The gentle aromas of tea and spice, the textures, and the visual storytelling combine to create an immersive and memorable visit. At the same time, the narrative highlights the importance of sustainability and respect for nature, as well as the communities that sustain these industries.
The Experience is curated by David Colin Thomé, Editor of the highly acclaimed Dilmah History of Ceylon Tea website, (www.historyofceylontea.com), one of the largest single industry websites in the world, together with veteran tea planter and former head of Kahawatte Plantations PLC, Anura Gunasekera. David was also among Dilmah’s original tea tasters at the time of the brand’s launch and trained under our founder Merrill J Fernando, bringing rare depth, authenticity, and first hand experience to the Experience.
Designed to be accessible to all, the Experience uses clear and simple language, ensuring that both enthusiasts and newcomers can engage with and enjoy the journey. It is an invitation to explore, learn, and appreciate.
In a rapidly changing world, the Dilmah Tea & Cinnamon Experience offers a moment to pause and reconnect with what truly matters, heritage, craftsmanship, and identity. It is a celebration of Sri Lanka’s legacy and a tribute to the stories behind every cup of tea and every touch of cinnamon.
We invite travellers, tour operators, and hospitality partners alike to discover a uniquely Sri Lankan experience in the heart of Colombo, for inquires please call +94 71 217 2238 (News release from Dilmah)
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