Tuesday, April 27, 2010

A Death in the Newari Family

Yes, it was a long day's journey into night on Thursday...

We received a call from Allan, the Lincoln School director, at 10:30 pm at home informing us that Rajendra had passed away from this world about a half hour before that. We'd been at the reception for the Israeli independence that evening and met some friends from Lincoln there who had stopped to see Rajendra en route to the dinner reception. When I'd asked Luke how Rajendra seemed, he said, "He looked so much weaker than when I'd seen him a month before -- but with Rajendra his will is so strong, you can't say how long he will last." Then, within minutes of his death, Shakun and I were driving home from the reception right past Om Hospital to put Leah to bed when Rajendra's spirit left this Earth.

Allan said that they were sending a LS bus to Om Hospital at 4 am to help take the family out to Panauti, a small, historical Newari town an hour outside the Kathmandu Valley, where Rajendra originally came from. I thought about calling Suraj after Allan called, but felt that it was time for their family to mourn and I could imagine the scene of wailing and keening that is so familiar in Nepali society among the women.

Instead, since my mind was already quite disturbed and I was unable to sleep with the knowledge of Rajendra's death, I stayed up to watch the 1 am Liverpool Europa Cup game against Athletico Madrid (blame my sons for this English football addiction...), then thought to go to the hospital to meet Suraj, his sister, Chandni, to see if I could be of any assistance at that time.

About 3:30 am among the world of the living, after a disappointing Liverpool performance, I took a quick shower, put some clothes on, woke Tek, our nightguard, and drove in the dark, empty streets to Om Hospital.

As you know, there is a vacant, odd, malleable sense to darkness. The world seems to have retreated from almost any form of life. There are shells of buildings, silent roads, scattered trash on the streets -- but humanity has disappeared. It's an appropriate time for death. Life seems already to have receded from reach, as if it's an idea that has come and gone, departed from this material world, like dinosaurs of old, vanished, leaving only the remains of our ambitions, hopes and losses.

An occasional motorcyle passed with a few Nepalis getting into vehicles along the way. Besides that, quiet, emptiness, the void.

At the hospital it took some time to locate Rajendra's family. I went to the ICU, where we'd seen him last a week+ ago. There were other families there now, sleeping on the worn benches or on sheets on the floor. They tried to help me, but didn't know of a Rajendra Karmacharya. Already his form was slipping away...

Over in the wards in the main building, even the guards were asleep. I found one nurse moving and she directed me to anothe floor of surgical rooms. I wandered around, not finding the room she'd said, nor Suraj's family. Then, at the end of another vacant hallway, I heard voices and walked down to a small crowd sleeping, lying, resting on the floor at the hallway's cul-de-sac. Before I recognized them, they recognized me and woke Chandni, Suraj's sister who'd come back two weeks before from her third year at BCU in Vancouver. She smiled, tired, but happy to see me and said, "I'll get Suraj. He's sleeping upstairs."

Suraj had found a bench on the third floor to get some rest. We hugged briefly, then the three of us leaned against the hallway walls and chatted while his mother and her close relatives lay nearby.

Although Death had come so recently, both Suraj and Chandni seemed in good states of mind. They'd had months to accept and digest the reality of their Dad's fatal cancer. Even beyond the hopes, they had begun to realize the depth of the disease and the remoreseless of its movement. When Chandni was called back to Nepal, just before her junior year exams, they understood that the message was the messenger and time was limited.

About 5 am, people began to stir. The LS bus had come in right before me an hour before. There were phone calls to Panauti to relatives there and arrangements for the ambulance that would take Rajendra's body out to his ancestral home while the family travelled in the LS bus, generously offered by Allan as a sign of respect for the many years of service that Rajendra had given the school managing these same vehicles that would now take his body back to his natal town, just over the horizon, close enough to find work in Kathmandu, but never so far that he would ever forget his origins or his deep and lasting Newari family roots.

Death may be quick, but life takes time About 5:45 am the stretcher camefor Rajendra's body. Immediately, the Nepali keening began again in earnest as the women of his life filled the room one last time before the men moved Rajendra's remains out to the hallway, a sheet over his body and the women holding each other tight, close and protective.

This sound, Nepali women wailing, crying, like waves of sorrow across our souls, mourning their loss and life's inevitable end, never escapes me at such times. It is a sound, like the sweet fragrance of the night queen in the spring, that I will always associate with Nepal. I've heard it from Shakun's relatives when her uncles and father died; I've heard it up the ridges of the Budhi Gandaki river in northern Gorkha late at night in the solitude of a lonely Himalayan village and now, once again, among the Newari women of Kathmandu in the hallways of a modern hospital as the ritual of death occurs, again and again, and again...

Just before 6 am, the LS bus, the ambulance and me along in our aging Suzuki took to the roads, out of the Om driveway, up the hill to Chahabil and then around the airport heading out on the new highway they are slowly constructing past Bhaktapur to the lone road that connects the Kathmandu Valley with the ancient Newari settlements to the east en route to the only trading route with Tibet. I followed the small, van-like ambulance that carried Rajendra, Suraj and a few men of his family. Along the way, we stopped to pick up more relatives who were coming to support the family and mourn, one last time, at the cremation site in Panauti.

About 7:15 am, we drove down the narrow road that filters through the lovely, lush Panauti valley, mud houses on the hillsides and brick homes in the old marketplace. It'd been two decades since I'd been there. One of my early excursions when I'd come to Kathmandu in the mid-80s to see the famous, beautiful temple along a river. Since then, the modernization that has overwhelmed and mutilated so much of the traditional charm of these thousand year old Newari settlements, had engulfed Panauti, as well.

There, we drove through the bazaar festooned with flags and crepe for some celebration that had just passed or was continuing with the immortality that almost describes the profound Newari attachment to their traditions, festivals, jatra and life.

As I parked, the ambulance circled round down a dirt path to the temple by the river where people had already begun to congregate, family, neighbors and friends from his birth, youth and young life. As the nearest relatives came from the LS bus, Rajendra's body was placed on the cold stone surrounding the temple, the sheet no longer covering his face, his eyes barely open, silent, still, staring to the empryean beyond.

As we stood silently to honor and observe, individual women came up to touch his body, bless his life, leave some small rupee notes on his chest and pour some sacred water on his lips and forehead. A piece of what looked like gold was place in his mouth. The living with tears in their eyes or vacant looks, stood nearby, a circular mandala of life, surrounding, protecting one of our own, asleep forever at our feet.

Memories, no doubt, poured into others' minds as they did for me. The Rajendra of life, the living, on the phone, calling to say where the boys may be, what bus they were on, what time they would be coming home. For years, a decade plus, Rajendra was always there on the other end of the phone to reassure us that the kids weren't lost, that the busses had started late or that there was another 'jaloose' (demonstration) going on in the city, so they were delayed and still en route home. Rajendra's disembodied voice was always there to reassure, guide and protect our children through those Lincoln School years.

Now, we stood, unable to protect Rajendra from the vicissitudes and reality of this earthly world. We had offered him our affection and, oaccasionally, our support during his illness. He knew our affection for Suraj, in particular, and his close brotherly bonds with Josh and Ezra. The year Suraj spent at NMH last year brought our families closer together than we ever would have been in the segregated worlds of Kathmandu and Nepal. Suraj, through his gentle intelligence and thoughtfulness, had slipped into our family's karma and American identity.

Fortuitously, through some twist of fate, Suraj had decided to come home to Kathmandu and Lincoln for his senior year, rather than stay at NMH. In retrospect, how wise, karmic and necessary that decision had been.

Yet, Death is finally the Master of us all. I looked around at the scores of milling neighbors, family and friends of Rajendra's. The Newari women, including Chandni in her t-shirt and blue jeans, bent in sorrow among the older women in their red saris and tradtional ornaments, were still wailing. The men more stoic, resigned, emptied of emotion in small groups around the temple periphery. I looked and thought that this, too, will pass for each of us. One day, unlike today, we won't be here to observe, caught in our own thoughts, and feel ths sorrow, the necessity of Death.

One day, we, too, would lie quietly, peacefully, alone at the feet of others who may come to mourn our passing and honor our lives.

One day, we, too, would bid adieu to this curious, sacred and painful world of mist, sunlight and shadows.

One day, we, too, would have to face our own departure, and wish those we leave behind the love we could never fully express in life.

Om Shanti. Om Shalom.

Such is our destiny on this Earth.

I hope I haven't said too much.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A Son's Cry of the Heart to His Parents

Hey Mum & Dad,

I know we had an interesting conversation last Saturday, and knowing my loving parents, i am sure that you are a little-bit worried about my state of mind. Everything, well at least all that i can remember, was true. I feel very lonely here and i don't really understand what being American entails, and even though I am American there seem to be certain requirements that are needed in order to completely embrace or be embraced in this culture. Unfortunately, I lack and have no desire to embrace these ideals that is, in some ways, required in order to be fully accepted as an American instead of the kid who is a FOB (Fresh off the Boat).

Do not misunderstand me, I do love America, but the America I love is that from the view of a visitor. The large rocks at Yosemite, the serene downward flow of the waterfalls at Yellowstone, and the deep blue of Crater lake. I have been very fortunate in this lifetime to be able to see the country because of both your willingness to show us America; however, i am not American. I may not be Nepali either, i know that, but that is where I feel at home.

The idea of 'home' is a funny idea because it is a state of mind, and to say that a certain place is your home is to deny the force of human migration that has created our globalized world and allowed for dad to meet you mum.

Yet, I also believe in Aristotle's habituation theory, and that fact is that I have been habituated to believe that Nepal is my home. When I came to America, I told people my home is Nepal. When I went to boarding school, I told people my home is Nepal. When I came to college, my home remained as Nepal.

So what am I supposed to do? All i know is what i have told the world, and if I accept the possibility of America being my home then what becomes of the fact that I have stated, throughout my life, that Nepal is my home? It will have been a lie to the world and therefore myself, because, if you really love and believe in your home, then it becomes difficult to run away from it. And, to be honest, i have done enough running.

Furthermore, ever since I have been a kid, I have been told that I should graduate from high school then go to college, and that is what I have done. Actually, I feel that i have accomplished more than that, I have earned the right to go to one of the best schools in America. I have made sacrifices that I do not regret, going to NMH and repeating my 11th grade year. Yet, now I feel that I am making another sacrifice, the sacrifice of getting a college education instead of being in the place that I consider home trying to do something.

I miss you two, my parents, the people who make me feel comfortable for who i am and have accepted all the personas that i have taken up throughout my life (the confused little kid, the athlete in high school, the boarding school student, the stoner, and now, back to my roots, the confused college kid/teenager/adult), and i really appreciate it because you two, when many other parents would have said no, have supported me throughout my life.

But now, i don't know if i really want this anymore, i feel useless. Here i just study and party, but i don't really get to experience the life i want to live. Otherwise i really don't see the point of living, not in a depressing way, just in a matter-of-fact way. Because what is the point of staying in a country where i would make the most negligible amount of difference? That doesn't invigorate me, and neither does money, which seems to be the reason that most people come here to get their Georgetown degree. So what am i supposed to do, continue living for ideals that don't represent me? No. I refuse, and I know this might just be a phase but life is full of phases.

Also, there is the case of Leah, my beloved sister whom i never see but once or, if i am lucky, twice a year for maybe two/three months. What type of brother is that? I do not want to miss her childhood. I don't want to be someone who is just considered a brother because that is what she has been told.

How do you expect for someone to truly love another human being if they don't spend moments together, because, at the end of the day, all that a relationship between two people is, is the moments that have created together. It is the Aristotelian idea of habituation. Love can only be habituated through the creation of moments and memories.

I have lost my faith in the idea of love, not that it doesn't exist, but that our, or at least my, ideal it is wrong. It cannot just occur, there is no such thing as love at first sight, only habituated love that culminates in the use of the word "love" towards another human in order to encapsulate the memories and experiences that you have experience with each other.

I love you guys. I don't say that to many people, but to you, I mean it. And i know, sometimes i don't communicate, and it takes a little bit of a stimulant for me to open up, but that is because i don't feel a desire to connect without another person being in vicinity of my body and mind.

Anyway, i just wanted to write to you guys, so you didn't feel too worried and so my thoughts could have a semblance of clarity without the incoherence that is usually instituted through the use of alcohol.

Hope this helped,

Much love, -J

A Father's Response to a Son's Confusion

Dear Josh,

I'm at work, so can't be long, but just wanted to thank you for your openness and kindness in putting your heart out there in the web of cyberspace to connect w/ me and Mom! Sorry I had to run out yesterday, but a Dad has to do what a Dad has to do and, quite frankly (and with a tip of my hat to Aristotle and those wise ancients...), it was fun to take Ms. Leah to her art class and hang w/ her all morning at class, shopping and having lunch together. As you say, that's the cat's pajamas (depending on her mood, of course...).

And you ain't wrong about life's phases, as you work your way through them, you'll find out there are about as many as there are of the moon. You've gone through some of glife's most trying, endearing and important, but you ain't even half-way through yet, so enjoy the journey! As you note, you've done an exceptional job through the rough and tumble of childhood and youth as you now enter young adulthood. But, this, too, is a trying stage of glife -- at least it was for me, too, when I was your
age (and older, as I've noted...).

Finding one's profession, partner, life-long friends, home is all a demanding mix of growing up b/n 18 and 25. There are many first steps, mis-steps, halting steps and exuberant steps along the way. In a way, it's a testing time. You are forced into so many new situations, new people, new experiences all the while trying to keep your eyes on the prize while, at the same time, trying to figure out what that prize is for you and your glife. Ain't easy, my son, my friend...

Your longing for home, us, Leah, Nepal is all right and joyous and true. We are you as you are us and we are all together. (as the Beatles sang...) Even if we can't just jump into bed w/ each other all the time and pull the covers over our heads and wish that the big, wide world outside didn't exist. It's there, alright and full of riches and risks. Remember Cavafy's poem 'Ithaka'! It's the journey, man! The destination is the same for everyone, no matter where or how they live. You know that.

Georgetown is one stage in the path. It's a good stage for your growing maturity, intellect and worldliness. Drink deeply from this well and enjoy, as much as you can. This too will pass (George Harrison, "All Things Must Pass" -- great album!) and you'll want to look back on it w/ affection.

Nepal, like Ithaka, will always be here for you. It is yours, honestly, as Grammy would say. You come of it, have drunk deeply in it and may return to conbribute more to her some day. But, as much as you want to be w/ us, you also need to form your young and potential life.

This summer we will all indulge our joy in living together as a family for those months here in our home. You'll have time w/ Leah and us. Although, as you'll see, we are also busy in our lives, creating, working, engaging the world as best we can. We can't live each other's lives, but support each other, respect each other and love each other.

Nepal is a gift to all of us, even w/ the terrible traffic, the stomach disease, the air pollution, the selfish and short-sighted politicians. It's a terribly governed state that is trying to break free of its past and create a modern future. Not easy within itself or b/n the twin behemoths who just want to eat from her while so many Nepalis flee to better locales.

You'll see and learn a lot w/ a young man's eager and insightful eyes this summer. Much you'll experience to take back w/ you for your studies and professional growth.

After all, you don't have to belong to America, if you don't like now or in the future. Altho, again quoting Grammy, 'you come by her honestly'. She has her gifts, as well, for you to learn from and indulge. As you note, the magnificent nature protected by the wisdom of its leaders, your cousins who love you and an open society in which to think and critque. For your studies, you are a fortunate young man to have such a fine university in which to learn and grow without all of the politics, lack of resources and unrest that harms higher education here.

All I mean to say in my sober rambling is that we LOVE you (you know that)
and that you have choices beyond your wildest imagination ahead of you. Keep your distant, cool eye on the prize of a quality education upon which you can build a glife and career in which you will find fulfillment. Work provides one of the deepest and most lasting joys of glife (it took me a long time to realize that...). In our modern world, education is the basis for those options. Therefore, tough and lonely and demanding as it is (I'm sure your buddy Aristotle has something to say on this, too..), your quest must lead through this period of study, reflection, learning and growth.

We are there, always, in your heart, especially when you need us the most.

love, Dad

ps: you write beautifully when you write from the heart! if you don't mind me saying, i see so much of my inner confusion and torment when i was at Amherst. Mom wud recognize this letter as being me, as well... We are, after all, father and son, thankfully so... xoxo, me

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Ezi Write as Virginia Woolf w/ Dad as Mrs. Ramsay...

To the Hill
                        The credits rolled down the screen listing the customary names and positions of the hundreds, if not thousands, of people involved in making the film -- it struck Ezra that ‘credits’ were the perfect visage for an unassuming, simple observance that in reality laid the framework for a calculated, complex ceremony whose purpose was to make the viewer feel splendidly insignificant and incompetent. It was getting late and his homework wasn’t finished. As it was unfinished homework made him feel incompetent (and that was on regular days) the movie only added to his sudden guilty pang of grand incompetence. He sprang up from the old Thai triangular pillow he had been lying on, compelled by his sudden pang of guilt. His parents, his brother, and his baby sister (all of whom had been watching the movie) were still hypnotically glued to the credits -- reflecting on the movie, their musings, the day, thingsthatbabiesthinkabout, dinner (possibly), lunch (maybe), breakfast (probably not).
            The movie’s end panicked him a little; it reminded him of his unfinished work, but now that he had walked over to the computer, calculated the work that needed to be done (and the time he had to get it done), and began composing an email to his ‘future-self’ he felt much more composed. Outside he could hear the light patter of rain falling on the house; these light drizzles were the pebbles that signaled the avalanche of monsoon that engulfed the Himalayan Kingdom every summer. Things would never the same. He peered over the computer and saw that the rest of his family had finally broken free from the hypnotic effects of rolling credits; his father, Keith, his mother, Shakun, and his baby sister, Leah, were now dancing to the Indian-themed music -- he couldn’t help smiling. He glanced over to his (also smiling) brother, Joshua, they caught each others eye, and smiled uncontrollably.
            He was in control now. The work would get done. In fact, now that he thought about it, he had made the right choice to watch the movie with the family. It was what his father wanted, with his brother, Joshua, preparing to go to boarding school in a couple of months, at this point every moment spent together was treasured by his parents (still dancing). He began his email:
Hey future Ez,
just try not to think about how dad was dancing around in the TV room yesterday...haha anyways i’m tired i’ve got to do some stuff so i’m gonna bounce...but just remember you’re probably gonna have some work to do cuz i didn’t do it okay? anyways just do what i don’t...
catch you on the flipsyde...
            He smiled at the thought of his future-self and decided, as a memento to the film, to sign the email: Googol Ganguly. Then he clicked ‘Send,’ said goodnight to Mum, Dad, Josher, and Leah Loo, stumbled down to his bedroom, pulled out his unfinished work, and, with the dying image of his parents and little sister dancing to movie credits, fell fast asleep.
            The book was better, Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake, but it was a wonderful movie nonetheless. The movie had struck close to home tonight, Keith Leslie thought, although his own life had been the story in reverse. He had come from the West (the Land of the Free, Big Stick Democracy, Hamburgers, Home of the Brave) to explore the east (deep seated history, spicy food, governments steeped in monarchy). However, the protagonist, Gogol Ganguly, displayed the same confused idealism and youthfulness that had propelled him to his life here on this six-thousand foot ridge overlooking the Kathmandu Valley. It had given him this life with his wonderful wife (now putting the youngest to bed), his three awe-inspiring children, an amazing home, and of course the garden; reminding him that it was the perfect time to revel in the beauty of the garden. He slipped quietly downstairs and glanced into Ezra’s room -- he had fallen asleep books and papers scattered around him, one was resting lightly on his chin. Keith gently pulled it off, laid it beside him, turned off the lights and headed for the backdoor.
            The door was already locked and in the darkness he fumbled with the latch locks. Finally, he was rewarded by the distinct “kathunk!” of freedom. He pulled on the door handle, pushed the gauze screen wide open, and took a deep breath as he escaped into the peaceful serenity and bounty of nature. The light drizzle blanketed him in a soft cooling rain when the warm glow of lights turned on revealing the exquisitely fragile and beautiful garden, a delicate expanse of green existence.
            Shekhar, the Nepali gardener/guard who had been outside, heard the screen door opening, turned on the lights, and came over, “Namaste, Sir.” It was always a pleasure to walk in the garden with Sahib, together they had helped nurture and build this garden. He had been with the Leslies for over fifteen years now -- he knew that Sahib understood the true beauty of the garden. If everything went ahead as planned though, he would be leaving the Leslies in a few months time to serve manual labor in the Middle East. Although nothing could beat the working conditions here with the Leslies, the Western salary would help earn money -- he wasn’t getting younger.
            Together in mutual silence and respect they walked along the bank of the brook that runs alongside the ten ropanis (acre)  of property that Keith had bought with Shakun twenty years ago. The house, built seven years ago, represented how far he had come since he arrived in this Himalayan Kingdom, a simple Amherst graduate from Upstate New York who left America seeking enlightenment, but never came back. Leah was born into this house, Josh and Ezra had grown from boys into men here, and even he had gone into his fifties in this house.
            Shekhar was now kneeling over the bank, the moonlight shining upon his short and thin, but strong, frame as he peered into the cool, flowing water. “Aunus, Sahib,” he said pointing into the water. Keith walked over and gazed at the ten-inch river crabs digging up the streambed. They both gazed on in wonder at the richness of life that thrived around them. After several minutes of wandering thoughts and gazing at the crabs, Keith glanced up, Shekhar had already walked on ahead. Standing underneath the willow tree that swayed slowly under the patter of rain, amidst the otherwise humid spring night, they both turned towards the wire fence (many years since covered in vines, ivies, and plants) at the sound of leaves crunching.
            A horse had wandered over to the fence from nearby grazing pastures to eat at the other side of the property fence. “We must all leave our own grazing pastures at some point,” Keith mused thinking back on his own travels away from the West, Gogol’s less physical (more emotional) departure from his past, and Joshua’s imminent geographic departure halfway across the world to a boarding school in Northfield, Massachusetts (of all places). At the thought he felt a deep remorse rise up in his throat, feeling the physical and emotional distance that would soon separate him from his son. Knowing his two sons it would probably be Ezra leaving next year. “It is funny,” he thought, “I spend the majority of my adult life worlds away from my own parents, and now I feel the pain of a parent as Josh prepares to spread his wings.” He knew it was for the best though, the type of opportunities lay in wait for his son that students at their International school in Kathmandu could only dream of.
            Shekhar and Keith now had slowly made their way along the fence (they let the horse graze) around the stream, across the pond, and into the front yard. The maple tree they had smuggled over from America ten years ago was thriving. It was a wonder to observe the often arbitrary nature of survival for the plants -- some survived, some didn’t -- this maple was already nearly ten feet tall. He stepped forward, the moonlight suddenly revealing the intricate intertwined gossamer web of a spider spun throughout the limbs of the maple. “Hopefully, the spider is more of a Charlotte than a Shelob”, he thought as he smiled to himself.
            What was this Northfield Mount Hermon? This mystical hill ten thousand miles from Kathmandu, this self-professed educational institution of “the head, the heart, and the hand.” What webs would Joshua spin for himself at Mount Hermon, where would they lead him to? These questions rolled through Keith’s mind like the credits at the end of the film making him feel strangely insignificant and incompetent. There was really no way of knowing what his experience would be like in Massachusetts, but whatever happened Keith knew that few kids had grown up in the cosmopolitan, worldly setting that Kathmandu had offered Josh and Ezra (Leah still had time).
            The rain was beginning to fall in larger and more concentrated flurries now, it would soon be time to go in. It must already be 1 am in the morning, but there was one last stop he would have to make. Shekhar had already gotten there. Just beyond the maple, across the other side of the property, lay the bamboo grove. Keith’s love for bamboo encapsulated his passion for his children -- wonder, awe, and immense pride. No stroll in the garden was complete without contemplating the beauty of at least a couple of the forty some-odd bamboo species on their property. Particularly in the spring, as it was now, they were rewarded by the multi-inch sprouting and growth of bamboo’ tusas’ (shoots) daily. Their powers of growth never ceased to amaze him. Together, Shekhar and Keith, caressingly removed the fallen leaves from the roots of the bamboo unearthing new ‘tusas’ and revealing growing ones.
            Keith sighed looking up at the house, the TV light (forgotten to be turned off) still glowing through the window, “Never again will they be the tusas they once were.”  The rain was pouring now -- it was time to go in, he turned to his companion “Namaste, Shekhar.”  “Namaste, Saab,” Shekhar called out, already disappearing off in search of shelter.
            Inside, the house was quiet -- everybody was asleep and staying put, although not for long. Quietly, Keith closed the screen door closing his garden palace behind him. He tiptoed slowly upstairs where Leah had fallen fast asleep in Shakun’s arms (or the other way around, he never could quite tell). The TV and computer were still on, gently bathing their features in the day’s activities.
            Keith silently turned off the TV and sat down at the computer, peering over the top smiling at his daughter and wife softly dozing in each other’s warm embrace; his smile grew as he saw Ezra’s habitual email to his “future-self” in the Outbox. Slipping on his glasses he prepared an email to his son:

            “hey, future once, now past easy ez, what's cooking?  ya missed a splendid stroll in the midnight garden w/ sheks et moi.  great visuals of ten inch crabs digging up the stream bed, a horse out the fence munching on the grass, magnificent gossamer charlotte's webs on the maple tree, the massive tusa coming up in the bamboo groves and the drizzle becoming a slight downpour telling us it was time to turn in.  i know it's no comparison to chemistry or mystic literature... but what's an olde guy to do when he doesn't have classes anymore... just go out and watch the natural world do its amazing thing...  have a lovely morning, son.  love you, you know, your once and future dad

            Outside, the rain fell unabatedly on the ten inch crabs digging into the river bed, on the horse grazing away from its pastures, on Charlotte spinning her webs, on the ‘tusas’ growing without respite, on Shekhar dreaming in his room, on the young and the old, on the awake and the sleeping, on the staying and the going. 

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

RDN and A Dalit Honor...

I was thinking of my distant yet not forgotten Save the Children friends today when I was invited to attend a ceremony at the Staff College by RDN, a serious Dalit NGO working primarily in the Mid/Far West of Nepal.  For some reason, they decided to honor me for my work with the Dalit communityin Nepal over the years -- of course, most of that with  many others (Gary Shaye, Krishna Sob, Bharat Devkota, Lilamani Sharma, Nar Maya Thapa, Shiva Dangol, Durga Shrestha, Gopal Sunar, Angie Brasington et al...) through SC/US in the 80s and 90s.  

It was a seriously odd feeling to hear our past three decade history including: the early terai Dalit studies we did in the late 80s in Siraha (remember Prof. Krishna Khanal and Khagendra Sharma's reports?); the early 90s USAID Basic Education for the Least Educated (BELE) Project for Dalits; the start-up of the Nepal Children's Scholarship Endowment Program (NCSEP) w/ the NNDSWA; our national agenda on Dalit issues with the INGO and bilateral community in the 90s; the Dalit student from Kailali who we supported to become an MD in Bangladesh years ago; and the "Is There Room Enough?" report on Dalit recruitment in national and international development agencies remembered and reviewed by people who lived and had not forgotten some of that special history with us.  

To be honest, at times I felt like I was listening to someone else's funeral peroration...  and smiling to myself on the dias...

With the personally inscribed RDN certificate and a pashmina shawl, there was also a cash award of 5,000+ rupees.  I'll put that $$ (and my own contribution) into the Nepal Children's Scholarship Endowment Program, if it still exists and is being co-managed by SC/US.  

In fact, I'd be thrilled to see a recent report on the Endowment to see how this Endowment has grown over the years or reached more and more deserving children in the 15 districts where it was implemented.  It's been too many years since I last saw an NCSEP annual report and, it was always one of my favorite mini-activities of our SC/US work -- because it offered such promise for those young kids' lives.  

Throughout the three hour ceremony, my past memories of my SC/US world were deep in my thoughts -- especially while listening to political leader Bam Dev Gautam rant on about armies and war, then Kedarnath Upadhaya, the NHRC Chairperson, speak more eloquently about the issue of Dalit rights in modern Nepal followed by a slew of Dalit leaders speak of their pain and longing.  

Of course, I got my 'duetah subda' ('two words'), as well, and used them to remind the audience of some of the schools Save the Children constructed decades ago in Gorkha District at a time when the Vishwakarmas, Sarki and Pariyar (all Dalit) fathers built the schools, but their children were rarely able to attend them.  

Fortunately, times have changed for Dalits and other marginalized communities in Nepal.  Not the least because of the work of Save the Children colleagues a long time ago...