Among the samanalayo
In late May, another pilgrimage season came to an end at one of Sri Lanka's highest points. Tens of thousands of pilgrims, the very old and the very young, make the journey each year. Most of them climb at night up an illuminated staircase. Refreshments stalls and resting places make the climb easier, though the sacred atmosphere is marred (for some) by the sound of radios carried by young people, and litter is liberally scattered. During the months outside the pilgrimage season the mountain is bleak and rains make the trail treacherous.
Being only 2243 metres high, Sri Pada is not very tall as mountains go. Yet as you approach it from certain angles it appears much higher. Such is its imposing location and angular shape that devotees of a proto-religion invested it with sacred power, perhaps because of the foot-like indentation at the summit. Several millennia ago, these early islanders made it the residence of Saman, one of the four guardian deities of the island, and called it Samanelakhanda ('Saman's mountain').