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IndigenousTraditional Knowledge in Sri Lanka

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Weed control in paddy. Spreading a thick mat of dry straw placed in the paddy ... Common weeds like Kudumatta and Tunessa are removed and soil is loosened. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IndigenousTraditional Knowledge in Sri Lanka


1
Indigenous/Traditional Knowledge in Sri Lanka
  • Hemanthi Ranasinghe

2
Indigenous Knowledge is.
  • Local knowledge unique to every culture society
  • Embedded in community practices, institutions,
    relationships and rituals
  • The basis for local decision making in
  • Agriculture, health, natural resource management
    and other activities
  • The greatest asset of the poor, helping them to
    shape and control their own development
  • Crucial to an inclusive knowledge economy

3
IK in development helps to increase
  • Efficiency
  • IK is cost effective
  • IK uses appropriate technology
  • Effectiveness
  • IK improves chances of adoption
  • IK is integral to local communities
  • Sustainability
  • IK facilitates mutual adaptation and learning
  • IK empowers local communities

4
Examples of the use of IK in Sri Lanka
5
Agriculture Food Processing
  • IK in agriculture includes
  • Information
  • Practices and technologies
  • Beliefs
  • Tools
  • Materials
  • Experimentation
  • Biological resources
  • Human resources
  • Education

6
Organic Agriculture
  • Organic farming is a system of managing
    agricultural holdings that uses a variety of more
    environmentally friendly crop farming practices
    and involves major restrictions on the use of
    fertilisers and pesticides.

7
Cost effective paddy cultivation
  • Nawa kekulama practiced by farmers in North
    Central Province.
  • Zero tillage in ground preparation
  • Bunds not weeded.
  • Paddy seeds dry sown and then covered with 3 inch
    mat of dry paddy straws to keep the weed growth
    low.
  • With the first irrigation, the paddy seeds
    germinate above the paddy straw

8
Pest control in paddy
  • Use of pest repellent plant material.
  • Practiced mostly in Anuradhapura and Uva
    Provinces
  • Crude paste prepared by crushing Neem and
    Mahapatta leaves, wrapping it in a piece of cloth
    and placing the pack near the canal water entry
    point.

9
Pest control in vegetable cultivation
  • In Lunuwatte, Rahupola in Uva-Paranagama and
    Moneragala areas in Badulla District, rotational
    cropping is practiced.
  • Paddy cultivation is followed by vegetable crop
    such as beans which is susceptible to inset pest
    infestation.
  • Application of organic treatments to repel insect
    pests.
  • Dust the plants with kitchen ash at dawn when
    plants are wet with dew.
  • Spray the plants with a suspension of cattle dung
    in water.
  • Use of crushed leaves and bark of plants Neem and
    Sunflower. The mixture of crushed plant material
    is shaken with water in a large bottle and kept
    aside in the field for several days for
    maturation. The matured water suspension is then
    sprayed over the bean plants.

10
Weed control in paddy
  • Spreading a thick mat of dry straw placed in the
    paddy field after dry sowing to reduces weeds
  • About 3 weeks after sowing the standing water
    level is maintained at about half the height of
    the paddy plant.
  • A log or banana trunk about 5 length is fixed
    with wooden spikes 2 in circumference and set 4
    apart. A short pole is fixed at each end of trunk
    to function as an axle.
  • The trunk is rolled over the paddy plant smoothly
    in one direction. Common weeds like Kudumatta and
    Tunessa are removed and soil is loosened. This
    destroys many paddy pests on leaves.

11
  • Control of weeds through a consistent and phased
    control of water.
  • After 10-14 days of sowing the paddy field is
    kept covered with water for a continuous period
    of 3 days.
  • On the 4th day the water is drained out and the
    field is allowed to dry out for 2 days.
  • After that, water is again allowed into the field
    and left standing for 3 days.
  • When this process is carried out several times,
    growth of weeds is substantially controlled.

12
Integrated crop-livestock farming
  • Use of buffalo as a multipurpose animal
  • For ploughing and threshing
  • Weed control by grazing
  • Tether a pair of buffalo for 10 nights for
    fertilise trees
  • Dung urine (enriched with nitrogen phosphate)
    mixed with kitchen ash when coconut husks are
    used (enriched with potassium).
  • Proportion of this being pair of buffalo heads
    tethered for 10 nights to a tree is adequate for
    2 years.

13
Biodynamic Agriculture
  • Integrates precise observation of natural
    phenomena, clear thinking and knowledge of the
    spirit. This is applied to agricultural
    production as a nature farming method.

14
Ritualistic traditions in participatory natural
resource mgt.
15
Muttimangallaya
  • Practiced in the dry zone especially
    Anuradhapura and Kurunegala Districts.
  • Is a participatory management system founded on
    collective conscience, enshrining community based
    commitments, rights, obligations and decision
    making
  • Cost effective regulatory process for ecosystem
    protection, irrigation, water management and
    organised crop production.

16
  • Carried out in 2 stages
  • Vow making get the blessings of the Gods for
    commencing the planting season, save the natural
    resources eg. tank, people, livestock etc.
  • Fulfilling the vow after harvesting
  • Significance
  • Collective decision making
  • Desire for the protection of both biological and
    physical resources
  • Ensuring harmony among the villagers

17
Food processing and storage
  • Technologies include drying, dehydration,
    fermentation, smoking, salt treatment and
    submerging in cold water
  • Sun drying grains such as paddy or rice thinly
    spread over large mats with a sprinkling of
    crushed or whole leaves of rampe or Karapincha or
    citrus to repel insects and prevent fungus
    formation.
  • Grains stored in bissa which is a large basket
    shaped storage bins made of cane.

18
  • Wrapping or packaging material specific to
    particular food product intended to reduce
    spoilage. Properties of material such as
    absorption of moisture, permeability to oxygen
    and light also being considered.
  • Shelf life increased by burying under soil (lime,
    cassava etc) or dry sand plus dried saw dust.
  • Fish smoking/sundrying smoking fish with
    specific types of firewood eg. cinnamon gives a
    special flavor to the product.
  • Ripening of matured fruits delayed when the whole
    fruit is submerged in cold water ie jak
  • Processing of components of the fruit eg. jak
  • Bulbs, seeds and pericarp. Processing can be done
    after boiling and including different stages such
    as slicing, blanching, draining, sun drying and
    storing in smoke racks. Jak seeds also processed
    and stored in sand.

19
Home Gardens
  • Multi tiered cropping with a variety of trees,
    food crops, herbs and some animal life in small
    land holdings in the Central Province and few
    other localities in North Western and North
    Central areas.
  • It is a natural, self-contained heterogeneous mix
    of plant forms providing the landowner with food,
    vegetables, fruits, timber, fuel, herbs and
    medicines whilst contribution to conservation of
    biodiversity.
  • Land holdings small (average about one hectare in
    extent). Accommodate as much as 400 different
    species high biodiversity.
  • About 1.33 million homegardens in the country
    spreading on 367,800 ha of land.
  • Provides about 70 of the timber requirement of
    the country and important sites for conservation
    of germplasm.

20
Inland Fishery
  • Used in early Anuradhapura period and some
    continued thereby to present times too.
  • The techniques used are hook, net and long basket
    (kumina)
  • The long basket (fish trap) is placed in flowing
    water in small streams. Fish entered into these
    is trapped and then collected by hand.
  • During times of drought, people had introduced
    various toxic inedible fruits into water holes to
    make them insensible which facilitated the catch.

21
Holistic approach to health care
Universe
World
Body
Mind
Soul
22
Medicine and Animal Health
  • Most comprehensive storehouse of indigenous
    knowledge.
  • Encompass medicinal, psychological, cultural,
    religious and philosophical phenomena with a
    holistic approach towards a long and healthy life
  • .
  • Deshiya chikithsa
  • Immersion therapy in medicinal troughs made of
    metal, wood or stone for fever, rheumatism etc.
  • Snake bits and fractures therapy is based on
    the identification of nature and virulence of
    toxic substance/time of incident

23
Traditional midwife in childbirth
  • The labour room is swept, sprinkled with tumeric
    to disinfect.
  • Application of oil prepared from margosa,
    gingelly and castor oil from loins towards the
    eppigastria to give more flexibility and
    elasticity to muscles for easier contraction.
  • Application of snuff to induce sneezing to help
    push
  • Postures and positions adopted according to the
    frame of the pregnant mothers body.
  • Placenta is severed with a sharp knife that has
    been previously treated with tumeric water and
    held over the incense several times.
  • Wound dressed with a medication made from ash of
    fund of a calf mixed with pepper and a herb
    (vasambu).
  • Castor oil is given to drink after the ejection
    of the placenta which is then burnt outside the
    entrace of the house. A stone is placed on top of
    the placenta and a rope to which mango and
    margosa leaves are tied is wrapped around it. -
    to prevent evil sprits in entering the house.
    people who see this do not enter the house so
    that mother and the infant are free from
    communicable diseases and infections. This is
    retained for 30 days during which period midwife
    assisted by older women would attend to the baby
    and the lactating mother.
  • After a month of after care (diet management,
    primary health care, purification and ritualistic
    or spiritual events) to mark the entry of the
    mother and newborn to the community fold.

24
Disease diagnosis in cattle
  • Identification of cattle groups (Gothra)
  • Disease identification by visual observations and
    investigations such as behavior, pulse, pulse
    rate, respiration, dryness of the muzzle,
    rumination, defecation, urination, movement and
    posture of ears, changes and reddening of the
    eye, movements of the eye ball, tearing, nasal
    discharge, gestation, lactates etc.
  • Diseases diagnosed in relation to the site of
    origin ie head (nervous conditions), ear,
    intestines, blood vascular and respiratory.
  • Skin opening where the skin is opened at the tip
    of the tail to examine the color of blood
  • Treatment involves incorporation of biophysical
    and spiritual aspects of medication.
  • Prevention from diseases by performing rituals
    (Kem, yantra, Mantra)

25
Biophysical treatments
  • Ingredients used
  • Rhizomes, roots, bark of trees
  • Flowers and seeds
  • Cannabis or ganja
  • Hill mud
  • Whey, ghee, eggs, eggshells, bone meal, bat and
    human excreta, urine
  • Ingredients combined with ginger essence, betel
    juice, thippili juice, lemon juice, salt water,
    coconut milk, king coconut water, young coconut
    water or cold or hot water.
  • These are combined into a fine consistency by
    crushing and rolling a medicinal stone or
    powdered using a pestle and mortar and
    administered in specified quantities.
  • Administration of medicine done
  • through nasal for inhalation of medicinal fumes
    or
  • infiltration of ear cavities by blowing through a
    small bamboo tube,
  • oral where treatment is done as a drench,
  • tongue for powders and pastes,
  • topical for oils and pastes, branding and
  • skin burns on particular nerve points called
    nila,
  • bleeding by stabbing with a pointed bamboo or
    blade (sterilized), rectal where medicines are
    administered to the colon via rectum, hand
    manipulation where medications combined with
    kem to treat difficult births.

26
Weather forecasting
  • Observations of the sky and the movements of the
    clouds
  • Movement of clouds in one direction is a sign of
    rainy weather while the opposite direction is
    meant dry weather.
  • A red sky at sunrise and sunset considered a
    warning for rainless days ahead.
  • Cold nights with mist and dew considered signs of
    impending dry weather while hot and warm feelings
    during the day signaled rainy evenings.
  • By animal behavior
  • A sharp and peculiar sound made by frogs and
    toads a sign for the arrival of rainy weather
    conditions
  • Bees to remain indoors if rain is expected.
  • Buffaloes and cats to appear restless and making
    unusual noises indicating an impending harsh
    weather situation such as cyclone.
  • Onset of the full moon day to break the weather
    pattern

27
Irrigation systems
28
  • Most important components in the village were
    the tank, paddy field, home garden and chena
  • Irrigation depend on micro catchments required
    careful watershed mgt.
  • Ancient kings too contributed to the water
    resource development
  • This hydraulic civilisation in the dry zone
    disappeared in 12th century with foreign
    invasions

29
Legislative and institutional arrangements
30
Local legislative environment
  • The paper on Access to information prepared by
    the Law Commission
  • The Ayurveda Act
  • The draft law on access to genetic resources of
    the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources
  • The draft legal framework on access to
    traditional knowledge relating to the use of
    medicinal plants Ministry of Indigenous
    Medicine
  • The Code of Intellectual Property Law

31
Institutions related to IK
  • National Steering Committee on IK in NASTEC
  • Biodiversity Division of the Ministry of
    Environment and Natural Resources
  • Drafting legislation on access to genetic
    resources
  • Workshops on IK
  • Sri Lanka Resource Centre for Indigenous
    Knowledge (SLARCIK)
  • Research on IK
  • Collection and Documentation of IK
  • Dissemination of IK
  • Incorporation of IK aspects into
    school/university curricula
  • Ministry of Indigenous Medicine and the Project
    on Conservation and Sustainable Utilisation of
    Medicinal Plants
  • Gathering of IK information on medicinal plants
  • Drafting legislation
  • Department of Intellectual Property Rights
  • Work on IPR aspects

32
Some drawbacks of using IK
  • Mostly confined to rural communities
  • Scattered and not well documented does not
    reach the development personnel
  • Modern society does not place much faith in it
  • Modern education and technology claims it to be
    unscientific

33
Challenges to harness the potential of IK
  • Raising awareness identity record
    disseminate exchange IK
  • Validation and Valuation study test-compare
    challenge fund protect
  • Mainstreaming pilot adapt integrate into
    comprehensive development framework
  • Technology transfer adoption of IK in other
    locations requires validation eg. testing herbal
    medicines for efficacy and safety
  • Building Local Capacity train facilitate IK
    exchange

34
Areas which needs improvement
  • Policy and legal frameworks for incorporating
    traditional knowledge practices in place
  • Collection and compilation of traditional/indigeno
    us knowledge scattered in the country.
  • Information, communication and educational
    strategy to be operational
  • Research in traditional knowledge programmes that
    can be implemented
  • Capacity building of stakeholders using existing
    traditional knowledge
  • Institutional mechanism for incorporating/mainstre
    aming traditional knowledge

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