On a winding road through Sri Lanka’s southeastern wilderness, an extraordinary local legend has emerged — a wild elephant named Raja, affectionately known by villagers and travelers alike as “the tax collector.”
Each morning, as the sun begins to rise over the Buttala–Kataragama road, Raja takes his post. Towering and calm, the 40-year-old elephant positions himself near a curve in the road, where he waits patiently for vehicles to pass. And when they do, he does something that has made him one of the most beloved — and viral — elephants in the country.
He stops them.
Not out of aggression or menace, but with quiet, deliberate confidence. He approaches slowly, his trunk extended toward the open windows of buses and trucks, as if to say, “Payment, please.”
But Raja’s “tax” isn’t money — it’s fruit, vegetables, or the occasional handful of snacks. Drivers and passengers, both locals and tourists, now come prepared. Bananas, pineapples, coconuts, sugarcane — Raja accepts them all with gentle precision.