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Help Send a Nepali Child to School
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Many people think of Nepal as magical and mystical, which it certainly is. But it has a dark side; it is also one of the poorest countries in the world. During my stay, I saw hundreds of homeless orphans sleeping on temple floors among the stray dogs at night. Many children and homeless are plagued by disease, are missing eyes or limbs, crippled or scarred by leprosy.

Below are the two Kathmandu children Sophie helped send to school with her own funds. She has set up her own nonprofit, School for Kids of Kathmandu, to help raise more funds for children affected by extreme poverty or homelessness, gender inequality or the caste system in Nepal. About $200 pays for tuition for one child per year. And $150 pays for books, supplies and a uniform. An education will not only give the child a chance out of poverty, but the chance for a new life. Girls, especially, are prisoners of gender inequality. I was horrified to see children smiling and laughing in the streets, who would turn to reveal one side of their face hideous with the rotting flesh of leprosy. In fact, Nepal has one of the highest rates of leprosy in the world. There, the much-feared disease continues its scourge among Nepal’s poor, who cannot afford modern cures. Kathmandu has a leper colony and clinic called Shati Sewa Griha (meaning “Peaceful Helping Home”). But, the Nepal government recently dropped funding for this clinic and colony. The children at this colony, especially girls who are disfigured by the disease, are the most desperately outcast in Nepali society. Yet they can still smile. There, I realized the resiliency of the human spirit. .

One of the most rewarding experiences I had in Nepal was visiting a local school and enrolling two homeless children there with my own money. My host mother, Rama, had taken them in and given their single mothers house jobs. School was the children’s only chance to escape homelessness, grinding poverty or, for the girl, being essentially sold off in an arranged marriage.

Girls especially are prisoners of gender inequality. When I met with Ambassador Powell, she told me that one of her greatest hopes was to educate and empower girls and women in Nepal.

Below are the two Kathmandu children Sophie helped send to school with her own funds. She has set up her own nonprofit, School for Kids of Kathmandu, to help raise more funds for children affected by extreme poverty or homelessness, gender inequality or the caste system in Nepal. About $200 pays for tuition for one child per year. And $150 pays for books, supplies and a uniform. An education will not only give the child a chance out of poverty, but the chance for a new life. Girls, especially, are prisoners of gender inequality.

I left Nepal vowing to help these children, especially girls, go to school. I set up my own nonprofit, School for Kids of Kathmandu, to help raise funds for homeless children victimized by poverty, disease, gender inequality, and the caste system.

About $200 pays for tuition for one child per year. And $150 pays for books, supplies and a uniform. An education will not only give the child a chance out of poverty, but the chance for a new life.

If you would like to help a Nepali child, please send a check (tax-deductible) to:

School for Kids of Kathmandu
c/o Ms. Sophia Hufford-Jones
4920 N. Woodburn Street
Whitefish Bay, WI 53217

 

 

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The Karma of Kathmandu
A small-town Iowa schoolteacher-turned-U.S. Ambassador and a 16-year-old aspiring international journalist cross paths in Kathmandu through an amazing fluke of fate

By Sophia Hufford-Jones
Age 16

April 2008
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“The wildest dreams of Kew are the facts of Kathmandu,” British writer Rudyard Kipling wrote in 1895 of Nepal’s exotic capital city at the base of Mount Everest.

Nepal is a small mountain country nestled between India and China. Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, is located in a lush valley surrounded by the Himalaya Mountains.  The city has long served as the base camp for all who attempt to climb Mount Everest.
Step Stone to the Top of the World

Nepal is a country unlike any other place on earth. A tiny slice of land sandwiched between two giants, China and India, Nepal is an exotic land of deep spirituality and mystic charm. Kathmandu, its capital, is at the base of Mount Everest, nestled in a valley surrounded by the Himalayas. Kathmandu is near the top of the world, on the opposite side of the globe from my home in Milwaukee. So, when I told my parents of my dream to do a summer internship in Nepal, they humored me but questioned how serious I was.

 I knew it would be nearly impossible to convince my parents to let me travel to a Third World country just out of a 10-year civil war, but something about Kathmandu stuck with me, and wouldn’t let go. After six months of research, contacting organizations and international volunteers, my parents began to realize how serious I was about traveling to Nepal.

To pay for my trip, I landed a job at one of Milwaukee’s finest restaurants, working long weekend nights as a food runner. Through the wonders of the Internet, I found a Nepali family that rented out rooms to medical interns and I landed an internship at an English publication in Kathmandu. Emails I’d received from directors of international nonprofits, a professional journalist and a chief administrator of a hospital in Kathmandu convinced my parents that life in Nepal was generally far less violent than in the U.S. And, I pointed out, I was already a veteran domestic traveler who had navigated LaGuardia, Los Angeles’s LAX and O’Hare on my own. I was confident that I could handle the New Delhi, Amsterdam and Kathmandu airports. My parents finally gave the OK. Within a few months, my distant dream was becoming reality.

Everything was planned. But the day before I was to leave for Nepal, I was visited by a good omen and an amazing fluke of fate. My grandmother in Iowa was reading the newspaper and noticed an article on Nepal’s new ambassador. The new appointee was an Iowa native and had been a schoolteacher at a tiny Iowa high school. My mother recognized the new ambassador’s name; Nancy J. Powell had been her history teacher 35 years before! So, it seemed, I had already experienced Kathmandu’s strange karma.

From Iowa to Kathmandu

Although Nepal is officially a Hindu country, most Nepalese observe both Hindu and Buddhist traditions and there are thousands of Buddhist temples from the spectacular to the modest all over Kathmandu. The Buddha, born Siddhartha Gautama, was born in Nepal around 600 B.C.

Land of the Temples

In Buddhism, monkeys are sacred. This shrine honors Kala Bhairab,
One of Thousands of Buddhist Shrines all
over Kathmandu

This story takes place in Kathmandu, but it really starts in a tiny town in Iowa 35 years ago. In 1972, a young high school teacher named Nancy Powell was teaching her history students at Dayton High, one of the smallest high schools in the state––only 100 students for four grades. My mother, 16 years old then, remembers Ms. Powell’s salt-of-the-earth teaching style and enthusiasm. At that time, neither teacher nor student could have possibly imagined that someday––35 years later––their lives would intertwine again in Kathmandu.

While Ms. Powell was teaching world history in the 1970s, the brutal dictator, Idi Amin, was ravaging Uganda. Twenty years later, the small-town teacher would, in fact, become ambassador to that African country. After six years of teaching at Dayton High, Nancy Powell passed her entrance exam for the Foreign Service, which today holds over 265 posts abroad. Before she knew it, Ms. Powell was on her way to Pakistan, far from her classroom in rural Iowa. From 1990 until 1998, she would serve in Togo, India and Bangladesh in various diplomatic positions.

In 1998, Nancy Powell took her first oath as a U.S. ambassador––in Uganda. Later, in 2001, when the World Trade Center towers were hit in New York City, Osama Bin Laden escaped to the hills of Pakistan. Nancy Powell was Ambassador to Pakistan at the time and had the awesome responsibility for managing the United States’ reaction in Pakistan and our government’s pursuit of Bin Laden in the Pakistani hills. Two years later, in 2003, Nancy Powell took another oath as Ambassador to Ghana in Africa.

Most recently, on August 10, 2007, Powell took the oath to become the new U.S. ambassador to Nepal. After ten years of civil strife, the country is now a budding democracy, so Ambassador Powell, who is fluent in Nepali, French, and Urdu, starts her diplomatic work at a crucial time in the country’s history.

Only two hours before Ambassador took her oath before Nepal’s Parliament and Prime Minister, I got an early morning interview with her at the embassy in Kathmandu. But how we met was an amazing coincidence and nearly didn’t happen.

Magical, Mystical Tour

Prayer flags, bright saris of Nepalese women, colorful canopies of rickshaws, Buddhist monks in maroon and orange,  paint-drenched temples and statues, and even brightly colored buildings.

Kathmandu, a Cacophony of Colors
and Culture

When I arrived in Kathmandu, after three days of traveling and connections, I could hardly believe I was halfway around the world. Stepping out onto the balcony of the four-story building that was my new home, I peered over the edge. The view was incredible. Colorful, bustling streets lay below, the sounds of Nepali music and laughter spilling from tea shops and temples. Prayer flags and brightly painted buildings. Rooftop gardens brimming with flowers. A misty mountain range––the Himalayas and Mount Everest––surrounding the city.

I immediately fell in love with Kathmandu. I loved the tiny fruit market that I passed on my way to work, with bananas hanging from the ceiling to the floor. I loved the groups of schoolchildren dressed in starched blue uniforms who would smile and yell, “Namaste Didi!” which means “Greetings, Sister” in Nepali. I loved the old man who would always tried to convince me to let him polish my sneakers. I loved the little lizard that lived on my ceiling, And I loved how the sun rose at 5 in the morning, and the fruit man who sang from the street below, my Kathmandu alarm clock.

Everywhere you turned there were amazing pictures waiting to be taken. Children selling bright pink cotton candy on tall sticks, Buddhist monks in maroon and orange, ancient Buddhist temples two thousand years old and colorful statues of Hindu gods & goddesses.

Rickshaws with colorful bonnets are a main source of transportation in Kathmandu.

Rickshaws with Colorful Bonnets

Naughty monkeys overran the temples, sometimes accosting tourists, and cows––considered sacred by Hindus––wandered freely and snarled traffic. Holy men, powdered a dusty grey and painted in almost hallucinogenic colors, carried orange flowers and wore dreadlocks, some to their knees. Street children played in the Kathmandu rain. Sometimes, I would sit at a temple for hours, just watching, wondering. I understood why Nepal is a country of pilgrims in a constant quest for find inner peace. Perfection? I think so.

One of my most memorable experiences was when my close Nepali friend took me to the holy Bagmati River where I witnessed a Hindu cremation. The body is wrapped in a white sheet and placed on a stone pillar along the river bank. The entire river is lined with these pillars. On one side, commoners are cremated, and on the other, royalty and the wealthy. The eldest son in the family lights the sheet on fire where the face is covered. At first, this was deeply disturbing for me but, as I sat watching, it began to make sense. The face is the source of life and emotion. Hindus believe that, by lighting it, the soul is released to rise into Heaven. The family chants and prays. Then, the ashes are sprinkled into the river with flower blossoms, carried away with the strong current.

Near the river, there was a stone staircase winding through the jungle and the screeches of monkeys echoed within the canopy of trees. Ancient temples lined the pathway lit by torches. Inside the temples, holy men sat cross-legged, meditating.

Expat’s Paradise

Freak Street in Thamel, Kathmandu’s tourist area, first became famous as an international hippies hangout. In the 60s and 70s, famous rock & roll icons were haunts there: The Beatles, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, among them.
Counter-Culture Time Capsule

One of the most colorful areas of Kathmandu is Thamel, a bright bohemian hangout for old-hippies, trekkers and travelers alike. A melting pot of music and culture, Thamel became famous in the ‘60s and ‘70s for visiting rock-and-roll icons: The Beatles, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, the Rolling Stones. And their music can still be heard today, blasting from bars and teashops along the bustling, cobblestone streets. Thamel is a haunt for medical interns, peace workers, volunteers, expatriots, and graying hippies from it seems every country imaginable. At a favorite hangout called the Buddha Bar I met people from England, Australia, The Netherlands, France, several African countries, China and Ireland, all sharing stories of their Nepal adventures. At Buddha Bar, Nepali musicians sang Bob Dylan tunes and other rock classics, as well as their own country’s folk music.

Namaste, Nepal

I had been in Nepal for over a month and would be leaving soon when I finally got word that Ambassador Powell would be arriving for her new post at the U.S. Embassy in Kathmandu, On the very last day of my five-week stay and as my final journalism assignment, I was granted an interview at the U.S. Embassy with Ambassador Powell, my mother’s history teacher in Iowa 35 years before. Two hours after my meeting with Ambassador Powell, she officially presented her credentials to the Prime Minister and Parliament of Nepal.

Ambassador Powell had very graciously given me an hour out of one of the busiest and most important days of her life. And, for all her high-powered titles and globe-trotting career, she was still as down-to-earth and warm as my mother remembered. Proof that you can take the girl out of small town Iowa , but you can’t take the small town Iowa out of the girl… or…ambassador.

Nepali women dress in brilliantly colored saris, Only married women are allowed to wear red.
Women in colorful saris 

Before boarding my plane out of Kathmandu, my house mother, Rama, had smudged a red tika on my forehead as a blessing for my long three-day trip home. Rama’s blessing––and maybe Kathmandu’s karma––stayed with me. Later, while sitting in the Amsterdam airport on another layover, I ran into my childhood friend and next-door neighbor on her way home from Greece! We were booked on the same flights to Detroit and then Chicago. We sat together for the remainder of our trip home, grateful for each other’s company and sharing our adventures.

When I arrived home in Wisconsin, Rama’s tika on my forehead was now a smeared mess, but I refused to wash it off. I just lay in my bed, listening to Cat Steven’s song, “Katmandu” over and over and over. “Katmandu, I’ll soon be seeing you,” he sang. “And your strange bewildering time will keep me home.”

Yes, someday I will return to Kathmandu and my Nepali family and friends, and a democratic country U.S. Ambassador Powell will have helped along the way. But until then…Namaste, Nepal.