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A Nepali farmer and his children prepare a field for planting
Why would a poor, disadvantaged Nepali child need a laptop, when clean water and food are a daily goal? Why even a school then in a village where people struggle to etch out a living that can provide enough protein for their families with a few crops left-over to sell or trade for other provisions, such as cooking oil?
People like Mark Pinoli, the enthusiastic founder of the Australian Logged On foundation, and we at HANDS in Nepal, are often asked these questions. At one fundraiser, a man who had been in the Peace Corps putting in wells in villages in Africa so the villagers there could have drinking water, asked if our efforts and money were not better spent doing clean water projects. Another woman at a different occasion, after seeing my slides of beggar children and their parents before and after when the children were able to come to a school for a daily meal and teaching, asked how people in Nepal feel about me exploiting their children for money. This was a baffling question to me, as I was trying my best to show through pictures the struggles the very poor of Nepal endure, and why education can be such a hope for a better future for their children.
Two different types of questions, difficult to sort out the intention behind each, and many more inquiries from those not familiar with Nepali culture or the extreme poverty there, from those who often have not traveled there or been in the villages. Yet these penetrating questions are always on my mind. What is priority for a poor village in the Himalayas? Books or water? A bathroom next to the school so girls can attend, or seed money for the villagers so they can have crops? A generator so they can mill their grain into flour when no electricity is available or a computer lab so their children can get the exposure to the outside world that enables them to expand their horizons?
Mark has a vision and so do we at HANDS. In meeting Mark, it has been refreshing to have someone who also walks our path and believes as much as we do about education, and literacy, being the key to a sustainable and bright future for children in impoverished countries.
A Nepali farmer and his children prepare a field for planting
Why would a poor, disadvantaged Nepali child need a laptop, when clean water and food are a daily goal? Why even a school then in a village where people struggle to etch out a living that can provide enough protein for their families with a few crops left-over to sell or trade for other provisions, such as cooking oil?
People like Mark Pinoli, the enthusiastic founder of the Australian Logged On foundation, and we at HANDS in Nepal, are often asked these questions. At one fundraiser, a man who had been in the Peace Corps putting in wells in villages in Africa so the villagers there could have drinking water, asked if our efforts and money were not better spent doing clean water projects. Another woman at a different occasion, after seeing my slides of beggar children and their parents before and after when the children were able to come to a school for a daily meal and teaching, asked how people in Nepal feel about me exploiting their children for money. This was a baffling question to me, as I was trying my best to show through pictures the struggles the very poor of Nepal endure, and why education can be such a hope for a better future for their children.
Two different types of questions, difficult to sort out the intention behind each, and many more inquiries from those not familiar with Nepali culture or the extreme poverty there, from those who often have not traveled there or been in the villages. Yet these penetrating questions are always on my mind. What is priority for a poor village in the Himalayas? Books or water? A bathroom next to the school so girls can attend, or seed money for the villagers so they can have crops? A generator so they can mill their grain into flour when no electricity is available or a computer lab so their children can get the exposure to the outside world that enables them to expand their horizons?
Mark has a vision and so do we at HANDS. In meeting Mark, it has been refreshing to have someone who also walks our path and believes as much as we do about education, and literacy, being the key to a sustainable and bright future for children in impoverished countries.
Something seldom seen in Nepali villages-computers!
Inside Logged On's Computer lab in the village of Astam, outside Pokhara in the Nepali Annapurna Himalayan foothills
One day, after trekking in Nepal, Mark, who had worked in the computer industry in Australia, had an idea. Seeing the poor condition of many of the schools and lack of supplies for school children, and especially the nonexistence of computers anywhere, he wondered, "what sort of world could be opened up to these children, and what type of educational opportunities could they have, if they were able to log onto the internet?" Imagining how it would open the world to them, as well as build bridges to educational programs and learning opportunities for these children in the Himalayas, Mark returned home to ask friends and business contacts how they felt about donating computer equipment to a village in Nepal where he found two requirements he was seeking-a willingness to try something modern, and electricity.
That village was Astam, where a tenuous strip of electrical cord ran up from the closest city, with promise of more to come. It was enough power to try his scheme out-and with loads of enthusiasm from both sides of the planet-the Himalayan village excited about having the ability to connect with the world this way, and Australians who were keenly interested in how to help by donating equipment, Mark was off to creating his Logged On Foundation and following his dream.
I met Mark one day in Kathmandu at Himalayan Java in Thamel. He happened to be in the big city briefly before traveling on to Pokhara and Astam, but had enough time to share a coffee with me. We found we shared many similarities between both our iNGO;s (international non-government organization) . Both Logged On and HANDS in Nepal feel strongly that education is the path out of poverty and by providing children of the next generation with learning tools, we can help them help themselves.
We both also believe the programs have to be self-sustaining: villagers need to be engaged in the creation of these programs for themselves, not us coming in to dictate our cultural views or norms.
CHILDREN IN ASTAM ENJOYING THEIR BOOKS AT THE NEW HANDS IN NEPAL LIBRARY
So as to the questions of what is most important, computers and books, food or clean water, I take my answer from my Nepali friend Rajan. One day we were discussing the long list of Gods and Goddesses in the Hindu pantheon, and I asked Rajan, how do you ever learn about all of them? He is found of saying " Om Shiva" for just about anything, so I knew he had a special connection to the God Shiva. He did shrug though, and tell me, "Jan, there is no way you can know it all or do it all. You pick your God and that is your focus." Om Shiva.
So, I guess we pick education. As a small iNGO, with a budget under $10k a year, with no operating cost for an office stateside, and many reliances on volunteers and other who believe in education like us, we are able to do a lot of things in Nepal in this area. We have built two schools and two libraries, have supported orphans in their education, and have supplied about 8 sewing machines at last count to a women's sewing cooperative in Jorpati. This is also education-for those who are seeking a vocation.
Logged On is doing their part as well, with their speciality. If you go to Mark's home site, you will see their Mission Statement, neatly worded towards providing education through the internet to the outer world-and all the opportunities that will provide.
Giving a hand to some new friends in Astam
One more little saying that comes to mind, from one of my favorite teachers, the Buddha. "There is enough abundance in this Universe for all things". I do believe that-there's no shortage out there of money, energy, enthusiasm and ideas on how to help others. I choose education and libraries, Mark chooses education and technology-we all believe in the power of education and literacy to help those who need to learn how best to help themselves.
Women in the Sewing Cooperative give a hand to HANDS recent donations of sewing machines
However you choose, which ever path you find yourself on, I hope it brings you great happiness and satisfaction in doing something to make this world a better place, for that seems to be what it is all about. And we can all do it by helping and supporting each other towards that goal, whether it's your family, or a family in the Himalayan foothills asking for a hand.
Please check out our website as well at:
www.handsinnepal.org and you can email me at:
jansprague2@gmail.com
I am always happy to hear comments and ideas from blog readers!