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Anu Kashyap
Volunteering in Nepal
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For
the last four months, I have been living in Nepal and volunteering
with an organization called Child Haven International (www.childhaven.ca).
I would like to share my story and pictures about this amazing
life changing experience.
TASHI
DELEK
My visit to Tibet was amazing - the sights, the sounds,
and the experience. I traveled with our international director
Bonnie, the Nepali home coordinator, Arjun and Ineke (a
volunteer from Holland). I finally got to see Everest,
this time from up above. I was able to see the most spectacular
view of Mount Everest during the flight to Lhasa from Kathmandu. Lhasa
airport was approximately 1.5 hours away from Lhasa. It’s
the drive to Lhasa that was amazing. The concrete roads
divide mountains much like the Rocky Mountains of Western
Canada.
The week was marked by visiting friends of Bonnie's, shopping
for Tibet artifacts, which will be auctioned off at various
fund-raising dinners across Canada, being mauled by begging
children who just walk up to you asking for money. I realized
quickly that you never give anything to the kids because
the next thing you know there will be a million kids around.
Even the monks beg for money, which was really a sad sight.
The street market was the same type of adventure, with merchants
begging us to buy from their stalls.
I was able to do some sight seeing in Lhasa – the
Potala Place (winter home of the Dalai Lama), Jokhang Temple,
Barkhor Square and Gaden Monastery. Gaden Monastery
is situated on the only mountain in Tibet with grass on
it; this Monastery was destroyed in the 60's by the Chinese
and recently was rebuilt. It is know as the home of the
future Buddha. We were able to walk the Lower Kora (ritual
circumambulation circuit), which took about 1 hour around
the top of the mountain at approximately 4500 m above the
sea. I could really say at that point that I was on top
of the world. I could reach out and feel the clouds. The
Kora gave us a superb view of the Kyi Chu Valley and an
opportunity to observe a large number of pilgrims and monks
offering prayers, rubbing holy rocks and prostrating themselves
along the path. All-important aspects of the Buddhist religion.
Child Haven supports a small orphanage in a small village
outside of Lhasa as well sponsors school children that cannot
afford to pay fee etc. They do not have volunteers
at this home but volunteers helping at other location and
are welcome to visit Tibet when Bonnie goes for there. It
was absolutely beautiful, peaceful and probably one of the
few places in Tibet that has not lost its culture or been
changed. A river runs though the village, which has
unpaved roads and small Tibet style homes with lots of Yak's
wandering around. The main source of money for the village
is the barley flour production – the mill is powered
by the river (the river acts as the force used to grind
the seeds into flour). Tsampa or barley flower is one of
the main sources of food for Tibetans.
By the end of our trip to Lhasa, it finally became clear
to me the impact the children in Kathmandu had already had
on me after such a short time. I was not missing home
(Toronto), but I was really missing the kids in Nepal and
new life that I had become accustomed to in such a short
time. My arrival back at Child Haven in Nepal was great;
the kids came running to the gate wanting to know everything
that happened on my trip.
HALFWAY
THROUGH THE TRIP
It has now been about 6 weeks that I have been in Nepal. When
I wake up each morning to a mooing cow and screaming children
I don’t find it distracting anymore. When we
head off for morning walks the puddles, mud and heat don’t
bother me anymore. I don’t miss the morning rush
on the roads instead I enjoy the company of 50 kids on a
great walk through the hills and morning mediation. I
have even started to enjoy eating dal bhat tarkarri every
day twice a day, but there are days that I crave some of
my mom’s or my own specialties.
I have gradually tried to live like the locals, except on
my days off. I use local transportation (foot, tempo (a
little powered bus), bus, rickshaws but no taxi's).
When it doesn’t rain for a few days, I realize that
the water well is low and there will be no water for the
kids to drink, for washing clothes or taking bucket baths. Loosing
electricity for a few hours every day has become a normal
situation but brings alarm, as the water filter runs on
electricity. However, long the electricity is off the
water is not safe.
For
the last few weeks, due to some changes in teaching staff,
I became a substitute teacher for Grades 2-5 math and science
class. My role changed from Anu didi to Anu Ms., I
needed to discipline the kids too (not just have fun with
them). At first, it was great. After a while, I really did
not like it. The kids see volunteers as someone they can
play with and have fun with not as a teacher. Some of the
kids have no desire to learn, they give up so fast without
even trying. But the hardest part was realizing that
their English was not as good as they portrayed in the schoolyard.
Comprehension is a big problem, using words I would use
to teach math at home was not helping me in Nepal. I
had to find creative ways to teach them so that they would
learn what they needed to learn. I even gave them tests
on a regular basis to make sure they were learning.
The
first set of classes at the Child Haven IT Centre began
while I was in Tibet. The classes are running very
well. We were able to hire a great teacher and with a little
help from us (the volunteers) we were able to ensure that
everything was set up before the classes began. The
computers were bought in Nepal through donations from aboard
however, we quickly found that the computers were poorly
built and constantly need repair. However, the biggest
value of setting up this Child Haven IT center at the home
was that we have a captive audience of 90+ kids and staff.
Many students finish high school in Nepal not having touched
a keyboard before. They take an optional computer
theory course but have very little hands on knowledge.
The IT Centre has helped let them know that the computer
is a tool and not a monster.
The younger kids are great to play with they are just a
bundle of energy. After a day with all of them I am completely
exhausted but their high level of curiosity amazes me. The
children are very loving, caring and protective of their
Anu didi
Monsoon
has started but it mostly rains at night, making it wet
for our morning walk. The days are very hot and sticky image
35 degrees without air conditioning. There are lots
of mosquitoes and they really seem to love me. But worst
of all is the leaches that crawl or jump on your lower leg
and being to suck the blood out of you. To take the
big ones off your body, you have to burn them while they
are holding onto your leg. Though I have been lucky and
not been bitten by one yet!!!!
There
is no shortage of good things to do here. I may sound
crazy but I have to admit that I am having an amazing time
and part of me does not want to leave to go to India in
a few weeks. I am the only volunteer here now, and that
means I get all the love give to volunteers.
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