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A Spiritual Journey: Hiking Sri Lanka's Primeval Peak

A modern pilgrim's guide to Adam's Peak, Sri Lanka's holy mountain

Pilgrims taking a view of the summit Photo: Depositphotos
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Climbing 4,800 steps is not generally my idea of a good time but when you're walking in the footsteps of Ibn Battuta, Marco Polo and other intrepid medieval pilgrims, it seems like a trivial inconvenience. Some legends even suggest that Alexander the Great climbed Sri Lanka's holy mountain, Sri Pada. Sinbad the Sailor visited Serendib and the peak on his sixth voyage, according to the Richard Burton translation of the Arabian Nights. Arthur C. Clarke centred his Fountains of Paradise on the peak. In a recent Time special on Marco Polo, Pico Iyer cited it as a neglected metaphor of unity in a country plagued by persistent civil conflict. Perched at 2,243m on the rim of the Central Highlands, Sri Pada commands a striking position in Sri Lanka's physical geography and rich culture. Popularly known as Adam's Peak or Samanalakanda (in pre-Buddhist accounts), Sri Pada continues to attract old and young, able-bodied and not-so to its pyramid-shaped peak. As a curious newcomer, I too discovered that the many paths to the peak offer a unique communion with humanity, a sublime experience of nature and glimpses of the divine.

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