Cries of the coast
THE WEEK|June 19, 2022
Kerala’s fisherfolk are facing an existential threat; they can no longer trust the Arabian Sea
CITHARA PAUL
Cries of the coast

PERCHED ON TOP of a cracking wall, Godson, 48, looked silently at the dark sea. He is a security guard at the Madre De Deus Church, Vettucaud. Standing almost in the shadow of the great church, he looked like a statue. When pilgrims tried to cross the rope cordon in front of the wall, he shouted: “Do not cross it; there are no steps, there is no beach....”

To those who were sceptical, he added: “Everything has been swallowed by the sea. This wall could fall at any time.”

Some stepped back after hearing it. Others, who were still suspicious, tried to get a good look at the darkness beyond the walls. “When we came to the church last year, I had seen kids playing football on the beach. The beach was so wide and long,” Gomez Eliaz from Kollam said in disbelief.

Godson did not respond and looked blankly at the sea. “Everything has changed…” he mumbled.

A native of Periyathura, Godson had been an active fisherman till a few years ago. “Ockhi changed my life,” he said. He was talking about the “very severe cyclonic storm” that hit the Indian coast in November 2017, killing 365 persons. “The coast is being eaten up by the sea. There are not enough fish anymore. How long can one see kids go hungry to their beds? So, I stopped going to the sea and took up this job,” said Godson, adjusting his cap. “At times, I miss going to the sea.” He glanced at the lights of the fishing boats in the distance.

This story is from the June 19, 2022 edition of THE WEEK.

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This story is from the June 19, 2022 edition of THE WEEK.

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