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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.
LAST
WEEK AT CHILD HAVEN
It has been an ever changing and eye opening few months
in Nepal. A roller coaster is the best way to describe
it. The last few days at Child Haven were very emotional
to say the least. I completely forgot that I
was at an orphanage. I always felt that I was a part of
this huge family.
It
is sad to say it, but the reality is that each kid in the
orphanage is picked up from a different street or a different
broken home. However, they all, together with the caregivers
(didi's, dai’s and mummy), behave like one family.
The best time to see that family is after supper when we
are cleaning the dining room and watching TV (on an old
black & white set). Within a few minutes, the little
kids start to fall sleep on the laps of the big ones. If
a little one need to be changed, one the older kids normally
just does it. The kids no longer feel victimized or alone.
They actually enjoy a full, complete and simple life here,
unlike some Nepali kids just a few meters outside the walls
of Child Haven. The kids are not spoil at all, they
have a few pairs of clothes and they eat the same dal, bhaat
and tarkarri twice day every day of the week. There are
two rooms for the boys and two for the girls with very simple
accommodations. The kids all do chores – help
make Soya milk, wash clothes, cut vegetables, clean their
rooms and help give the little ones baths. They are
truly a remarkable bunch of kids; some of them are so gifted
and talented. Having a continuous flow of volunteers here
is very important; the main reason for volunteers is to
provide some extra love for to all the kids. And in
return you get this amazing unconditional love. Volunteers
are not disciplinary figures but provide a good source of
love, venting and fun that the children need.
The
last few days were the hardest, kids started to come to
me give a card with a hug and say, "so you are
going away this week and leaving us. You will not forget
us or will you. And you will come again to us".
It is somehow easy to write now but it brought tears to
my eyes each time I heard it or read the cards. It became
apparent that for the last few months I was their big sister.
And now I had to leave them and go back to my "own"
family.
The
last thing at Child Haven was the traditional goodbye ceremony
where they gave me the traditional flower bouquet, fruits
and put a red tikka on my forehead. I cried through the
whole ceremony and during the drive to the airport.
I have to say that it was amazing personal experience and
a huge eye opener to be at Child Haven and experience the
eye camp. I am very satisfied with the combination
of doing something professional but very humanitarian in
nature.
www.childhaven.org
SO
WHAT HAPPENS NOW...
I have been home now for some time now. Aside
from the physical adjustment (jetlag, food, health recovery
and weather), it has been and still is a challenging mental
adjustment trying to understand the experience and how I
can now incorporate all of this into my life. Many
things have changed because of this experience; the need
for constant companionship and material things does not
really exist. I have learned to be content with myself;
I have found a new inner strength and confidence.
For
me volunteering is driven by a combination of deep feeling
of giving, sharing, creating value and duty. Releasing these
feeling is what I have brought back with me. In return I
gave away time, effort, emotions and wealth. By looking
at it that way, it does not make me anymore different to
them but equal to them. It moves volunteering from being
a charity into being a give/take transaction except that
there are no laws to enforce or to evaluate it. The
same applies to foreign aid. It is the way a nation volunteer’s
part of its wealth.
So,
what is next…I was able to combine a nice element
of traveling, adventure, living a different life and exposure
to different cultures, which made in an enriching experience. There
is nothing that I regret. There were difficulties that
I expected and good results that I hoped for. I definitely
do not want this to be my last volunteering assignment.
I
put it out to all you; we only have one life, live it to
the fullest. Take chances and opportunities that come
your way. You never know what those opportunities will
lead too or open up to you. You do not have to
go half way around the world to help others there are many
organizations right at your front door that need you just
as much.
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