The story of a Bocuse d’Or Sri Lanka Gold Medallist: From unemployed to culinary role model in 8 mon

Thursday, 20 July 2017 00:02 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

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Every individual has inherent ability regardless of their circumstances; poverty is debilitating, but not disabling, physical disability in most cases is ability in an untypical form. When the unemployed son of a tea picker in Ratnapura used the opportunity of a four-month culinary bootcamp to secure Gold in the Sri Lanka national component of the world’s most prestigious culinary competition, he proved that with knowledge, attitude and an opportunity, anyone can be transformed.

Dinesh was amongst a group of underprivileged and unemployed youth chosen to form the first batch of students to be offered culinary training in Sri Lanka’s finest culinary training facility. We had just inaugurated the Empower Culinary and Hospitality School, Sri Lanka’s only WorldChefs certified culinary training facility. The faculty includes local and international instructors, guided by eminent chefs like Bernd Uber, Peter Kuruvita, Rohan Fernandopulle on the Board of Governors. The course is free – all we ask of the students is discipline and commitment.

DFT-22John Clancy, Education Director at WACS – Worldchefs at Dinesh’s inauguration in February 2017



Dinesh had lost his father when he was younger, and dropped out of school after his Ordinary level exams. As his mother works at Dilmah’s Rilhena Tea Estate, the estate manager nominated him for Empower and in October 2016, he joined the first batch of students at the School. They started with two weeks on the Dilmah Conservation farm, to understand sustainable agriculture, learn respect for nature and the importance of nutrition … and also to dispel any notion the students may harbour from seeing culinary shows on TV, that success involves anything less than passion, dedication and absolute commitment to perfection. The class moved on to learning English, knife skills and completing their bootcamp culinary course in four months.

In February 2017, Dinesh graduated with the rest of his class, many from Dilmah’s Kahawatte Tea Plantations. Two students from his batch passed with distinction, and all received apprenticeship posts in five-star hotels in Sri Lanka. That was an achievement in itself, for the students went from uncertain futures, lacking the ability to do anything but work as unskilled and low paid labourers, to having the choice of most high quality hospitality establishments in Sri Lanka for their apprenticeship.

For Dinesh there was more. He started his training at Dilmah’s Cape Weligama, and went on to Water’s Edge in Colombo, when Chef Rohan Fernandopulle chose him to be Commis Chef in the two-man Water’s Edge team for Bocuse d’Or Sri Lanka, supporting Chef Chamaka Perera. The Bocuse d’Or is considered the world’s most prestigious live cooking competition, with each team comprising a Chef supported by a Commis Chef who must be under 19 years of age. In a very prophetic comment at the time, Chef Rohan who is General Manager of Water’s Edge and also a Governor of our Empower Culinary and Hospitality School, told the Dilmah & MJF Foundation team that ‘he would make a great Chef of the young culinary apprentice’.

At the announcement of the results of the National Selection of the Bocuse d’Or on Friday evening, Water’s Edge won Gold and life changed in that instant for Chefs Chamaka and Dinesh. For Dinesh it was more than the great achievement of winning the acclaim of a prestigious panel of Judges that included Chefs Otto Weibel, Bruno Menard, Alan Palmer amongst others; it was a miracle, for the young man who less than a year ago could not even boil an egg. Dinesh returned to the Empower School the day after, wearing his Bocuse d’Or Gold Medal with pride and joy. He shared words of encouragement with the next batch of students, who are looking forward to their own graduation in a few weeks.

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Every person, whether differently able, impoverished, victim of tragedy or most other situations, has inherent ability. It is a crime for those who have that comprehension and capability, to allow that ability to go waste. That was the principle on which we established Empower. The MJF Foundation was established by my father – Dilmah Founder Merrill J. Fernando – in the knowledge that every business must have a purpose that goes beyond profit. That belief is founded on his own journey from an ordinary background in an isolated hamlet to building a global business, and the knowledge that his success is a blessing from God that must be passed on.

The stories of Dinesh and the other graduates of Empower express the life changing power in the philosophy of making business a matter of human service. In this programme, attitude, knowledge and commitment are nurtured in young men and women, whether they may come from harsh domestic circumstances, have Cerebral Palsy, Down Syndrome or other conditions. In the current batch, due to graduate shortly, one young lady who is an aspiring chef, has Down syndrome; she is different but able. They have all risen to our expectation thus far, transforming their own lives and the lives of their families. 

In each case, it has only taken an enlightened programme that shares the knowledge they need, respects their dignity, instils discipline, shares positive attitude and humility, and requires four months of their time.

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