The devastating Earthquake of April, that ruined Nepal
within a single minute, was one of the most pathetic catastrophes and
tremendous tragedies for Nepali that we ever experienced in the history. The powerful
Earthquake and the subsequent series of aftershocks caused the mournful crisis throughout
the country. Many lives were snatched brutally while many were trapped in the
rubble, many people got severely injured while many went missing whose
whereabouts is still unreported. It was so irreparable loss for Nepal that the
various cultural heritages including the tallest tower called, ‘Dharahara’, are
no more now as they are just in memories and photographs!
The few initial days turned out to be very gloomy for all of
us. Soon after Earthquake struck Nepal, people started to come out of the homes
to the open-spaces/grounds and spent many days in the tents. Situation was the
same for my family too. We had no electricity, no battery back up in the phones
and the communication channels were very fragile. Our home got severely cracked
and later it got red-stickered (sign of uninhabitable). The things went utterly
topsy-turvy that we were not sure what would be the next thing to do, how our
lives would be patched up and move towards the normal situation again.
Aftershocks were unceasingly striking our minds with fear and uncertainty, our
concentration was just moving to the news of Radio Nepal. The depressing news regarding
rising death toll and the deteriorating situation of earthquake-survivors excessively
saddened all of us. Personally speaking, I was experiencing a kind of numbness,
a weird state of senselessness and dizzy.
We, indeed, spent a week after Earthquake doing nothing,
just counting our days with deep despair lying on the dusty ground, being wet
from the drizzles and trying to comfort each other to minimize psychological
havoc and weariness.
What could we do more than this at that horrible situation?
There was no other way to subvert the loss and casualties. Only the thing we
could do was to have patience and resilient spirit to patch up our hearts and
to pull ourselves from the stresses. The reality was crystal-clear that everybody
was suffering, but only the degree differed. As for the Earthquake and the
power of the nature are concerned,nobody can avert the decree of Nature, and
the mystery and misfortunes brought by the natural calamity are completely
beyond our control or understanding.
Truly speaking, Suffering, whether near or far, has it’s impacts
all around us! The same thing happened to me as well. Many friends who are very
close to my heart contacted me from abroad, especially from United States and
asked how I and the family was, then even asked if they could do something through
us to help in Nepal for Earthquake victims. The amazing love, care and the
growing concerns of the friends from near and far warmed my heart in a great
way, and later, I, my brother Bashudev and the friends of our self-help group
decided that worry wouldn’t do much. We thought that God left us alive to do
something more for our country and communities.
Yes, we then made our minds up to do something, but from
where and how should we start? Again, there lied a bizarre state of confusion. After
a week later, we visited the different parts of Kathmandu especially,
Ratnapark, the central Area of Kathmandu, and to our extreme astonishment,
Kathmandu was calm and quiet, not like that of the past. This was the result of
huge number of people who immediately left Kathmandu city and returned their
nome towns/villages. However, we came to know about the youth’s initiative for
humanitarian response, relief and rescue. Learning and knowing that young minds
began to sow the embryos of humanity, we also got encouraged and driven to come
out with helping hands.
It is believed that trial and tribulations are not
permanent. Yes, this true statement united Nepali very quickly right after
Earthquake. Sharing the tents in the communities helped people strengthen the
friendliness relationship among neighbours. See, while people were sharing a
single tent collectively, there was no caste, no ethnicity, no gender, no
age-limits, no religion and no regional variation, the only things there presented
was humanity and unity among each other. This was really a remarkable note to
be highlighted after Earthquake.
Well, since Earthquake taught us a great lesson of humanity
and altruism, various youth-led groups started volunteering for Earthquake
victims to distribute relief and rehabilitation. And we were one of them!
While we were contacting our friends and circle of
well-wishers as well as relatives to know how they were and how their condition
was, we knew a sad news that the Sanjjiwani school, which is located in
Dhulikhel Kabre where I had learned braille and studied up to grade 6, collapsed
in Earthquake. We further were reported that the 18 blind and visually-impaired
kids there in the school were staying in very difficult condition. Having known
those distressing news, we intended to start our post-earthquake relief
campaign right from that school by providing food, blankets, clothes and
sanitation stuffs to the 18 visually-impaired students.
Actually, we, the group of friends who share the common sentiment
of social works, had firmed a self-help venture few years back with the main
objective of bridging the gap and empowering the persons living with
disabilities and bringing them into the main stream of national development. Through
this platform, we had been saving up some resources out of our own salaries/earnings.
Hence, when earthquake shook Nepal and when we were ready to move with our
helping hands, we used our already-saved own resources and funds instead of
asking other to join our cause.
When we started distributing relief packages to the
visually-impaired students in Sanjiwani school in Dhulikhel, some friends of
mine and some NGOs approached us and requested for collaboration. Dale Davis,
Sagar PrasainTilganga Eye hospital and many other supported our spontaneous
relief campaign.
Despite our own suffering, we travelled many remotest places
where we had never been before. We reached the various hard-hit places helping
people, listening their stories, witnessing their situation and giving our
helping hands to the best of our abilities!
The journey of life sometimes comes to be so difficult,
inaccessible and full of stresses,
however, accepting the reality, compromising witht the circumstances and
getting going ahead is what we all should learn and do by the hearts. Putting these
things in practice, our post-earthquake relief and rehabilitation campaign got
further momentum. Colaborating with Gwahali for Differently Able (GDAP), Blind
Rocks and Engage Nepal, we targeted our relief work especially focusing to the
persons with disabilities. We set up health camps in ore than 20 different places,
distributed food, clothes and sanitation kits in different 11 districts touching and
comforting the lives of the thousands of earthquake victims.
In the second phase, we came up with the mission of building
temporary homes and shelters for the most-affected families with disabilities
in the earthquake hard-hit districts. Monsoon was about to start, and the situation
of people who were staying in the tnets or under the open sky was getting much
deteriorated. Considering the hardships, together with Gwahali team and Engage
Nepal, taking the young volunteers to the spots, we began to build the shelters
in Sindhupalchok district. Completing more than 30 shelters in Sindhupalchok, we
never ceased to wrap up the rehabilitation campaign. As a result, by this time,
we have constructed 65 shelters in Kabre, Sindhupalchok, Dhading, Kathmandu,
Bhaktapur and Nuwakot. More shelters were still on the way of construction. for pace
of tireless relief giving continued.
Along with shelter-construction, we witnessed that Earthquake
made many persons physically-challenged that they were in the urgent need of assistive
tools while on the other hand, we saw many persons with disabilities lost their
assistive tools and devices such as wheelchairs, crutches and white canes in
earthquake. Seeing those needs, we collected those assistive tools, for which,
Help Nepal Network, provided us 120 white canes, Shiva-Shakti Sadhana centre
and Lhakpa Phuti Trust as well as Sagar Prasain helped us purchase wheelchairs
and crutches. Thus by collective efforts, so far, we have been able to
distribute 66 while-chairs, 69 crutches, 351 white canes and 18 hand-sticks to
the earthquake-affected persons with disabilities.
During our spontaneous relief and rehabilitation campaigns,
we encountered different bitter circumstances. Once we were on the survey for
shelter-construction in Sindhupalchok, we, the team of Bright Star Society,
Gwahali, Engage Nepal and Robotic Association of Nepal were heading to Thulo-Pakhar.
our vehicle got hit by a big truck, luckily, if our vehicle was not stopped by
emergency break, we would have fallen off the cliff! Oh, getting new life from
the accident, we sighed with deep
breath!
In this way, despite many challenges, we have been able to
do something, just to contribute a little from our sides, more things are yet
to be done. Still our post-earthquake campaigns are going on with persistence
and innovative approach. Since Earthquake has made people largely dependent,
but we now want to do such thing by which people can be independent and be able
to stand on their own feet. For which we are now promoting local venture and entrepreneurship
via the cross-disability model. Let’s see how much we can do to accomplish our
goal! Together we can carry the greater load, can’t we? Together we can share
and lighten the burden of social responsibilities. I believe that if we light a
candle for somebody, it will eventually lighten our own path as well. So why
not doing something good and meaningful for our society?
Rome was not built in a single day, was it? Japan would not
have been today’s Japan if Japanese had not worked hard overcoming obstacles
that they had to face in the past. With these outstanding examples of the
world, I am pretty hopeful for the future of tomorrow’s Nepal, I see my
country, a new Nepal is waiting for us! If we all keep working hard with vibrant
courage and selfless spirit, this transition will not last long for sure!