Sunday, December 25, 2011

Ke Chha Pokhara?

Pokhara, December, 2011

Last week when I went to attend the Indigenous Peoples (IP) Caucus gathering in Pokhara, I lingered over a coffee at Mike’s ancient lodge along lakeside.

That view is still one of the most beautiful and memorable in Nepal. Phewa lake stretches out toward the distance as cultivated hills and forested ridges gracefully tumble into the reflecting waters while shrouded villagers on their heavy wooden boats cross the lake, a lone boatman sitting behind with his solitary oar paddling them silently toward our shore.

These days, in the sky above, paragliders float like distant, colorful butterflies, wings akimbo above Saranakot with the snow-capped Annapurna massif, like a romantic backdrop at La Scala signifying both limits and horizon, towering behind them.

As I sit and daydream, recalling my purpose for being in Pokhara and the suit jacket I’ve hung on the back of my heavy wooden chair, my memories of Pokharas past come to mind…

Memories of different times and moments since I first came to Nepal in 1979 and have resided here since.

Such thoughts come more frequently these days. Is it because another cycle of my professional life in Nepal is coming full circle, once again?

Or, merely the knowledge that another Gregorian calendar year coming to a close?

Possibly, the imminent return of our sons from ‘bidesh’ (the West) marks more clearly the longitude of time and the necessary separations of a family life?

One wonders…

While meandering in my thoughts over a cold cup of coffee, I hear behind me, “Ke chha, Pokhara?” in this flute-like female voice.

I turn around and see a young, chic, self-conscious attractive Nepali woman speaking into her microphone while a more sanguine, wry, observant Nepali man shoots her with his video camera, Phewa Tal in the background.

After finishing practicing her spiel on “young, vivacious, intellectual students” studying climate change at some campus in Pokhara, she looks nonchalantly over at me looking at her and says  smiling, “your turn is next!

We also want to tape some tourists who visit Pokhara to put on our program, if you don’t mind.” she says. “Just to have you say some nice words about why you like Pokhara so much.”

Do I like really Pokhara so much?’, I wonder.  I hardly had had time to reflect on the dozens of times I’d been to Pokhara since 1979 while nursing my coffee when this TV correspondent had interrupted my quiet reverie...

I recalled the first time I saw Pokhara in 1979, the largest town I’d seen for nearly two months.  We could see the lake and waterfront from high up on one of those nearby ridges as Scott, Dave, Lee and I stumbled out of the high mountains after a six week trek around the Annapurna.  We had spent our last morning in Birathanti after coming down off the magnificent views from Pun Hill.  The night before we'd seen the sunrise on the Dhaulagiri massif one chilly December morning. 

No doubt we were a sight to behold.

‘Ecco homo!'

Behold, the trekkers!

Although among the Western trekking set, we fit in quite reasonably, no more sweaty or disheveled in our pastel pajama pants, wool sweaters and funky caps, than the others.  Although I doubt either the IP Caucus or my UN employers would have recognized their future colleague with his overflowing backpack, flip flops and mass of wild  hair like a Bhote (mountain) child coming out of the mountains to spend the winter months along the Seti river in the lowlands of Pokhara.

Or, some years later, when Mom and Dad came to attend our October 1988 Laxmi Puja Jewish wedding in Kathmandu.  After the ceremony, we went to Pokhara for a few days to share the beauty of the lakeside and mountains with my parents and siblings.  I will forever remember Dad’s awestruck inspiration when we saw the sublime, celestial dawn light cross the snow-dressed Annapurna.  He was touched by the peacefulness and sanctity of those impenetrable peaks.

Although visiting a country in which he felt uncertain and insecure, far from his comforting world in the operating rooms of Upstate Medical Center, all his anxiety about his well-being in the disease-ridden, politically unstable, distant Third World receded for a moment of clarity, wisdom and crystal insight.

If we brought all of the world’s leaders here, to this spot, even for a moment, I’m sure that there would be world peace!

Such is the power of the magnificence and scale of these Himalaya.  The same dreams of the ancient Hindu rishis who meditated upon these remarkable mountains thousands of years ago in the pre-Christian Age of the Sanskrit Upanishads affected equally my dearly vulnerable father, an immigrant’s son from the shetels of Eastern Europe to the promising shores of Amrika in the 20th Century.

Some years later, in the early 90s, ‘stately plump’ Lisa, belly full of the future Lily Ellenberg, came with her beloved husband, Dave, one of my dearest friends, the Commander, he of the our earlier 1979 and 1982 gonzo Himalayan expeditions to the Annapurna and then the Khumbu-Everest region. With our dear friends and neighbors, my first and most lasting Nepali-Tibetan friend, Sherab, and his wife, Soilan, their new daughter, Rinchen, and our toddler sons, Joshua and Ezra, we, too, came to Pokhara for a side trip from Kathmandu.

Again, we came for the peace and meditative nature of these Pokhara lakeside shores.  Only a couple hours from our homes in the burgeoning metropolis of Kathmandu, full of wonder, history and politics, yet existing in a time of its own, far (as they say…) from ‘the maddening crowd’. 

A quiet world, a time apart, neither the pre-panchayat poverty of the first decades of the last century nor the dense urbanity of the early decades of this century. 

A lakeside that honors Bob Marley, Cat Stevens and is fond of telling stories of JRR Tolkien visiting to gain inspiration for his mythic, Nordic hobbit tale.

Yet, aloof from the images we foreigners paint, for time immemorial, this uniquely voluminous, shimmering 8,000 m. Annapurna massif perpetually rests only fifteen clicks from our comfortable hotels shielding South Asia from Tibet and China beyond...

With a few dear friends, too, over the decades we have strolled up Sarankot to look across at those dream-like mountains and down on the molten green lake below...

There were moments, as I recall, we thought of buying some land on that ridge overlooking Pokhara, a summer or winter retreat from Kathmandu, a cottage or cabin of tranquility where ‘noon’s a’glimmer and midnight a purple glow'.

But like so many of our life’s day-dreams, this one, too, quickly retreated in the soft cinematic cells of memory and constantly churning alternative realities with which we massage our minds.

There have been many other Pokharas in my life. A convenient overnight way-station to an early morning flight to Jomson.  A few times to take the boys when they were small to Shakun’s native Thakali home in Tuckhe in lower Mustang, along the broad Kali Gandaki plain at 3,000 m. in the deep gorge between Dhaulagiri and the Annapurna

I recall a village just outside Pokhara, Damai Gaon, I believe, where we went to meet some of the young Dalit girls receiving high school scholarships from a new endowment that we'd set up through an established Dalit NGO, NNDSWO, with USAID funds and Save the Children management.

In the late 90s, there was the time I was with my dear college friend, Gary Giorgi, and his wife, Kathy, when they came to visit us in Nepal from Wisconsin.  I spent a day visiting our HIV/AIDS projects in Pokhara with them before driving back in a Save the Children vehicle.

Then, while driving back to Kathmandu, forced to switch vehicles with Santosh Pant, a Nepali actor friend, whose car was stuck on an opposite side of a bridge where young Maoist cadre suddenly came down out of the hills to burn a bus on the bridge right in front of us stopping all traffic all day.  Me trying to calm Kathy’s natural American anxiety (“Are we safe?”) about our security while we watched the youthful revolutionaries pour gasoline on the bus' tires and light the matches that sent the local bus up in flames merely a hundred meters in front of us.

A few years later, we trekked with our neighbors and beloved friends, Karma and Pia with their son, Silas, from Jomson down through the Kali Gandaki valley with Joshua, Ezra and Leah. Observing the changes along the trail with a new motorable road climbing up through the rough rock and solid walls of that river gorge after centuries of isolation.

Seeing the painfully empty villages where the young men and fathers had gone off to fight for the Maoists revolution or for the Nepal Army to protect their native land.  Other men gone, as well, who  traveled to the Gulf or Malaysia with dreams of work and higher incomes to support their families.

Then, in a new job and new incarnation in Nepal, after the signing of the 2006 Comprehensive Peace Accord (CPA), I came with colleagues from the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to visit their office in Pokhara.  Time to review procedures on investigations, meet Maoist soldiers who had run away from their cantonments and discuss with OHCHR, the UN human rights agency, how best to handle the growing number of these individual cases.

Each memory offering a different vision of Pokhara, work, pleasure, family, changes, war, peace and the rapidly turning gyre that has been Nepal for the past few decades...

More recently, I came again in 2009 with my good colleague, Christian Clark.  We spent a night in Pokhara after attending one of our ‘Democracy Dialogues’ hosted by the Nepal Magar Sangh.   One of thousands of village-level, grassroots UNDP efforts to encourage greater knowledge about the drafting of the new Nepal constitution, as well as to collect submissions and recommendations for this latest constitutional effort to recreate a modern Nepal more in the image of the people and times of a new country.

Swirling memories floating in my thoughts as I heard her voice, once again, waking me from my rapid reveries: “Ke chha, Pokhara?!” 

“Ke chha, Pokhara?!” 

I’m not sure that this young woman had either the time or the video tape to hear fully the range of my thoughts, my memories and my reflections…

Ke chha, Pokhara?

Actually, Pokhara, I think we’ve shared more of my Nepali life than I’d thought of before.

Your simple question, asked to a supposed foreign tourist sitting lakeside, conjured up more images, friends and moments than I’d brought out of my emotional storage in a long time.

Beloved parents, friends, family, children… postcards of a Nepali life... all united in my life alongside this Nepali lakeside vista.

Yes, Pokhara, I do love this placid and soothing town below the Himalaya. 

I promise I will continue to come back to partake of your beauty, your peacefulness and the memories of moments past that will still illuminate my life and, no doubt, life’s joys for years to come.

Ke chha, Pokhara!  Ke chha, indeed!!!



Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Adieu, UNDP Participatory Constitution Project!

Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes.
Don't resist them - that only creates sorrow.
Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward
in whatever way they like
.❞

— Lao Tzu


Friends,

Every experience adds to the previous ones to create and define a life.  For the past three years I've had the pleasure and honor of working with many of you on our UNDP SPCBN project.  It's been a wonderful, complex and quite political undertaking.  The promises and hopes of a generation are intimately tied up in the promulgation of a new Nepali constitution.  Many people throughout Nepal, of course, are unaware of the details or the individuals involved in this process.

We, however, have been granted a once in a lifetime opportunity to work closely with the Constituent Assembly members, political parties and civil society leaders to assist them in birthing this new constitution.  It's a rare and remarkable occasion.  I've been fortunate, as well, to have seen so much of modern Nepal's history up close and personal.  From my first speech to the SSNCC and Queen Ashwariya in Narayanhitti Durbar in the late 80s to the Maoist attack on our Save the Children office in Gorkha district in February 1996 to working with marginalized Dalits, Tharu, Madhesi and Tamangs in the 1990s amd early 00s to serving as the UNDP Sr. Human Rights Advisor in the National Human Rights Commission after the Jan Andolan in 2006 to joining UNDP SPCBN in November 2008 as the Sr. Civil Society Advisor... it's been a stunning and valued gift.

There are great things, as well, we have all accomplished over the past few years through SPCBN and the CCD.  There are many distant voices who have been able to participate in the drafting the CA thematic papers and monitoring the CA process from every remote VDC of the country including nearly half a million people over the past three years.  That's no small achievement that took many people's assistance, large and small -- not the least our scores of NGO and CSO partners around the country.  The Federalism Dialogues, led by Professors Khanal and Hachhethu reached all 14 of the proposed provinces to discuss in depth the nature of a federal state and the specifics of provincial authorities with over 1,000 local political party and civil society leaders.  The 60 page 'Citizens' Awareness' booklet was published in Nepali, Maithali, Bhojpuri, Bhote, Urdu and English with tens of thousands of copies already distributed around the country.

In addition, with SPCBN support, the IP, Dalit and Women's Caucuses are now better able to articulate their interests and hopes for the new constitution, as well as negotiate with their party leaders.  Each of these representative Caucuses have had working papers have been published, seminars held and meetings organized with both senior UNDP officials, as well as with the most powerful leaders in their parties.  The influence of these Caucuses has never been more apparent in representing the needs and desires of their historically marginalized communities.  The constitutional drafting process, as a result of their efforts and our support, is more open, engaged and participatory than many had ever hoped or imagined.  Also, our work on citizenship issues, at the core of any nation's constitution, has gained new inspiration and hope due to our recent collaboration with colleagues in UNHCR and UNICEF.  This, too, is no small achievement for the future prosperity and peace of Nepal.

In fact, there is much for all of us to be proud of in this work on behalf of the UNDP "Support to Participatory Constitution Building in Nepal" project.  Without your efforts, the respect of key people in the UNDP Country Office and the earlier backing of our donors, none of this participatory outreach would have been possible.  In truth, Nepal's democratic, parliamentary and constitution drafting processes have achieved village-level and national participation by a more diverse range of citizens than probably ever thought possible before.  This, too, is no small achievement in a relatively short time in the moden history of Nepal.

Yet, all things must pass.  Although the CA process now go into the last extra time before the end of the game, it's time for me to wrap up my efforts and bid you all adieu.  I will still be engaged with some of the CSO/GSI activities we have already initiated and, thus, be in close contact with colleagues over the coming weeks.  However, from next Monday my sons, Joshua and Ezra, will descend back into Nepal and I will spend more time w/ them during the few weeks they are back in the country they most love, before they return to London and California to finish their studies.

Lastly, although I owe a great debt to all the SPCBN staff, present and past, I would like to offer my special appreciation to my CSO and GSI colleagues with whom I had the good fortune to work most closely with these past years: Surendraji, Bindaji, Sitaji, Momji, Santoshji, Machindraji (and already departed Silaji, Arunaji, Basantiji and Yogenji, too!).  I've always received the kindest assistance from the KSK support team of Sakunji, Nehaji, Teekaji, Prativaji, Aneeji, Sriramji and our drivers over the years.

To all of my dear colleagues in the CCD who have offered their generous assistance, wise counsel and good will over the years, each of you, too, will be missed.  It was a pleasure to have met and known each of you through our work!

I wish those colleagues who will continue our good efforts in 2012 only the best for the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.

Jai desh!

Thursday, December 1, 2011

A conversation from 'Lawrence of Arabia', David Lean's masterful film

Good morning, sir.  (Lawrence)
       
Salute.
                  
If you're insubordinate, I shall put you under arrest.  (British Commanding Officer)
                  
It's my manner.

Your what?
                
My manner. It looks insubordinate, but it isn't.
             
I can't make out whether you're bad-mannered or just half-witted.
                
I have the same problem, sir.

Shut up.
                
The Arab Bureau thinks you would be of use to them in Arabia.
               
Why, I can't imagine.
           
You can't perform your present duties properly.

"I cannot fiddle, but I can make a great state from a little city."
                 
What?

Themistocles, sir.

A Greek philosopher.

I know you've been well-educated.

It says so in your dossier.

You're the kind of creature I can't stand, Lawrence.

But I suppose I could be wrong.

All right, Dryden.  You can have him for six weeks.

Who knows? It might even make a man of him.

Come in!

Monday, November 21, 2011

2011-12 Premier League Football: Liverpool 2 Chelsea 1

PRE-GAME THOUGHTS:

Does one game ever determine a season?

No, of course not!


Now, having put that aside, definitely this game will determine the rest of the season. If Liverpool can't come out w/ 3 points (ok, we'll settle for another tedious draw...), then they fall further behind the pack at the top of the table. With Man City coming up next weekend, followed, as coach Kenny Daglish has noted sacracastically a few times, a Carling Cup match w/ Chelsea  48 hours after that -- it's crunch time for the 2011-12 rebuilding of Liverpool's dreams.


After all, December is just around the corner.

Yet, it's been a desultory November for the Reds with a tedious run of draws against recently promoted teams -- while their competitors don't do much better against these brash upstarts, their one goal winning difference adds up to 3 points, while Liverpool has had to settle for 1.

Alas, 6 points gone so carelessly... or, is it 8 points now (including the Man U game...).

Time for the new look, invigorated, youthful Reds that cost $100 m of Boston Red Sox money over the summer to finally show up at play time. Not that they haven't been bursting w/ energy. They have! But, the number of their chances, goal-scoring shots NOT turned into the back of the net, is painful and flagrant to recount. Yes, Liverpool is second ONLY to Man City in shots on goal this season -- but they've put away three times as many of those shots as Liverpool.

QED.

That's the storyline to now.

Tonight is time to put those spectacular runs, crosses, twists, turns, nutmegs and corners of Luis Suarez into the f---in back of the net.

I'm not sure my heart or mind can take more rattling of the woodwork we've seen more than any other team this year.


Nonetheless, I'll be glued to the tube tonight under a blanket in the TV room, so I'm sending prayers to all the g-ds, saints and divinities, high and low, to please (please...) return a smile to King Kenny's visage, and ours.

After all, that Champions League game against Milan in Istanbul is getting to be ancient history...

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

POST-GAME THOUGHTS:

What to say about last night?


First, FANTASTIQUE!!


What a brilliant and essential result. My Merseyside fears were put to rest (for a week...). Liverpool were good. Quite good.  Serious, intent, relentless, aggressive...


The first goal was sublime, exquisite, clever teamwork.  Charlie Adams boldly cutting the ball out from the Mikel John Obi's previously steady feet on the right side of the pitch, passing quickly near the penalty box to Suarez who slotted across to Craig Bellamy who then unselfishishly passed along the far post to Maxi Rodriguez, given his first start this year, to dramatically, clinically angle the ball over the keeper and into the net in the 33rd minute. 


Ballet on the pitch!  'Poetry in motion', as they say.


But that was all in the first half. The second put my heart in my stomach once again. Strangely complacent, messy, sloppy and on their back heels most of the time.


In truth, Chelsea were bursting with a second goal for much of the second half. They were unlucky not to get it -- particularly w/ Reina's brilliant save of Ivanovic's header on the goal line when Terry was a mere meter away ready to push the ball back in the net.


Whoosh!

Then, again, let's be fair.  We, too, know something about the lack of luck this year. She can a harsh and unrelenting mistress on the pitch.

But not last night for us, at least. The Liverpool defense held (wobbly, but resourceful...). Then, Charlie Adam's magnificent pass as the light was waning in London, the 87th minute, to an even more magnificent run against the play of the game by Glen Johnson (who seems to have woken up after a long slumber...) with a cool, deliberate, exquisite, professional finish. Beautiful!

Besides seeing Glen step past Ashley Cole on the way to the penalty box, watching the momentum of John Terry's outstretched body, a few seconds later, stretching him away from the ball at the goal mouth was probably the most dramatic and enjoyable moment of the game.

Ha! Monsieur Terry, go back to captain the England team!

For that precious and rare moment, it almost seemed that Liverpool could be "a contender again".

(Remember the line spoken by Marlon Brando in the back of the taxi to Rod Steiger in 'On the Waterfront', one of the greatest McCarthy era political classics in American film history.)

Or, as Humphrey Bogart says in 'The Maltese Falcon', such games are:

"the stuff dreams are made of..."

 Premier League dreams, my child,

Liverpool Premier League championships, once again...

Friday, November 11, 2011

Lumbini, Nepal: Indigenous Buddhist Concerns



logo 1.jpg                            
                            Buddha is Omnipresent

             
Co-ordination for Preservation of Buddhists' Concerns, Nepal
                    
                               National Co-ordination Council, Kathmandu



Mr. Ban ki Moon
Secretary-General
United Nations
New York, NY 10017                                                                              Date: 8th-11-2011

Issue:   Deprived and endangered humanitarian crisis in Nepal for Buddhists.

Subject:  Appeal to caution the marauding of Buddhist cultures, heritage and historical sites by unlawful representation of Buddhists by non- Buddhist representatives seeking the support of the UN.


Dear Secretary-General,

Nepal is the birthplace of Buddha. We, indigenous Buddhists, until 1990 have been discriminated marginalized and persecuted under a Hindu state. After the Peoples’ movement in 2006, having overthrown the Hindu monarch, Nepal was declared a secular state and the Preamble of the Interim Constitution continued to specify Nepal as a democratic, republican, secular, federal, inclusive state.

We, Buddhists of Nepal, are compelled to bring to your attention the unjustifiable and unlawful representation of non-Buddhists marauding our historical, religious and, cultural heritage of profound significance.


Our appeal

However, the four party governments have obstructed and failed in drafting a constitution for the fourth time- seeking extension by holding its multi -ethnic, multi-religious peoples as bondage for the sole purpose of power brokerage. Besides the one-caste, multi-party government has seriously engaged itself in pro-activating ordinances, bills and pogroms unlawfully and unconstitutionally- marginalizing, discriminating and exploiting non- Hindu citizens.
 
At this critical juncture of historical transformation from a feudalistic state to a democratic state, our peoples and communities are deprived and endangered of equal rights and justice. We are continually experiencing the state run government repressing, encroaching and manipulating our historical, religious and cultural rights, based on our identity.
 
Protection of Buddhist rights in Secular Nepal.

Given the exigency of protecting Buddhist civilian rights in Nepal, we urge you to send several clear messages to Mr. Pushpa Kamal Dahal who is headed to meet you on Nov 8th 2011 in the UN to generate foreign aid in the development of Lumbini.

However, the records in the past have shown every pilot projects in Lumbini failed, due to the unwillingness to incorporate the free will of the Buddha, Dharma and the Sangha, without impartiality. Promoting Lumbini continued for the sole purpose of plundering and pillaging our historical religious site of great insignificance to its Buddhist citizens, to Nepal and for all Buddhists globally.

More recently, we are seeing many Buddhist seminars, programs and projects being implemented by non Buddhists without prior information, consultation and approval of the concerned Buddhist communities. The interim government is forcefully following oppressive Buddhist sanctions by unlawful representation.

The Humanitarian Crisis

Although Nepal generates the maximum interest for Mt.Everest and Lumbini internationally; nationally, those communities whose origin is connected in giving value to its importance continue to face humanitarian crisis. As Nepal has entered into an interim period of transformation, and the latest hostilities continue to be based on identity rights governed by discriminatory oppressive rule. 

As a result, such State manipulation in the name of Buddhists will have disastrous impact on the well-being of the Buddhist civilian population, depriving them of their identity rights and justice.
This unlawful process of seeking support for Lumbini projects- both APEC and UNIDO - without prior consultation with the concerned stake holders will not only compound the identity hostilities by confusion but will critically invite the conflict of neighboring states in particular, dragging the peace loving Buddhist civilians to a dangerous geo political crisis and threatening the very sovereignty of Nepal as a nation state.

Solution for Peace Building

To avoid such political manipulation of genuine stakeholders rights specified by -ILO 169,CERD,UNDRIP and UNESCO conventions, ratified by the Nepal government, we insist and urge your wise insight in taking maximum feasible precautions to protect civilians and avoid indiscriminate or disproportionate  ongoing hostilities assuming  under political entities violating the fundamental principles of international humanitarian law, distinction and proportionality .

As the humanitarian crisis deepens, we recommend you make several crucial points: Make clear to Mr. Dahal and his team representatives that any plan to raze Lumbini in the pretext of industrial development will not be tolerated under international humanitarian law by its own people

Non Buddhist Representatives for Buddhist Concerns

The current team does not represent Buddhist aspirations and concerns as they are non Buddhist practitioners; their representation for Buddhists cause is woefully inadequate to deliver and expand Buddhist well being both in spirit and development. They do not express any scholastic aptitude to promote Buddhist knowledge and interest and put at risk our own representation.

Accountability

We welcome your calls for a thorough investigation into their plans to turn Lumbini or any Buddhist heritage sites into an industrial zone.  This is an alleged serious violation of international humanitarian law. We believe an impartial international investigation is required to look at sanctioning such master plans infringing the rights of the indigenous Buddhists as well as other rightful stake holders.

An international investigation would be an important way of demonstrating that the United Nations is deeply concerned about the fate of the stakeholders’ identity rights to drag us into further conflict. The investigation should look at not only intensifying such projects putting at risk the social, political and economic rights of its rightful stakeholders. A thorough investigation on the intent is of essential concern, as Mr. Dahal expresses his ambitious political strategy in overriding his moral obligation to the sovereignty of the country and its stake holders. Lumbini stands at this critical moment of uncovering key facts and thus encouraging all of us to truly establish peace in Lumbini as a symbolic peace zone where political parties cannot abuse authority.

Appeal to rights and justice

We see your office as the best route to establishing such an investigation. While we recognize that the focus of your intention of Mr. Dahal’s visit is to build peace in Lumbini, equally important is for you to investigate the political/ identity factors of such a visit which will not violate the will of civilian accountability.

We have called on the parties to respect our cultural dignity and rights and warning them that trespassing of our human rights is serious crime against the human spirit and law and will not be further tolerated. We are confident that technically being the Secretary General of the UN, symbolically we would like to consider you as the father of all nations for whom peace is not only a fact but a value of coexistence in Buddha‘s key message to humanity. We would appreciate in your full capacity to be the harbinger of peace.  You would be well advised to send an international team to investigate before such projects are approved. We believe that your announcement of an international investigation of the cause, consequences and effects on national stakeholders would not hinder protection of civilians and accountability for crimes committed.

We are calling on your common sense value to evaluate such unethical and manipulative proposal in our name. We are unwilling to accept any non Buddhist representation for Buddhist programs and projects without prior information and consent of our communities. In doing so, such unethical representation of Lumbini Development Program will be considered as deterring human violation and we will be obliged to take a decisive approach in guarding peace in our respective spiritual/religious sites by organizing our own community security force.

The international community must not only watch dog such predatory acts with diplomatic complacence but send a crucial message of supporting human rights values in protecting wholesale crimes against humanity.  In doing so, such crucial signal may help to deter future state violations.

Sincerely,

Coordinator
Shakun Sherchand

   Council of Buddhist Organizations:
1. Nepal Buddhist Nagarik Samaj- Swayambhu
2. Nepal Tamang Boudha Samaj-Swayambhu
3. Manang Samaj Sewa Samiti-Swayambhu
4. Tamang Ekta Samaj – Swayambhu
5. Rastriya Karuna Pratistan
6. Pavitra Pyaldor Samaj
7. Nepal Helmu Samaj
8. Akhil Nepal Himali Boudha Sangh
9. Dharma datu Foundation
10.  Hariviya Varna Mahavihar
11.  Himali Helmu Cheli Beti Sangh Samaj
12.  Dolkha Tamang Ekta Manch
13.  Boudha Jagaran Kendra
14.  Tamang Saling
15.  Thakali Sewa Samaj
16.  Kungram Foundation
17.  Gyang Ghuti Hyopen
18.  Dharmadhara
19.  Rinzesan Foundation Ghumba-Pharping
20.  Samdeybing Gumba –Boudha
21.  Manang Bikas Samiti
22.  Dolpa Ekta Samaj
23.  Buddha Kala Kendra
24.  Nepal Tamang Rastriya Mahasang
25.  Thupten Ghagailing Ghumba-Swayambu
26.  Nepal Sherpa Sangh
27.  Bhalwadi Maitrik Sewa Samiti
28.  Kunsadling Bikash Samaj-Kavre
29.  Swayambu Sewa Samaj
30.  Tharu Kalyankari Sava
31.  Tamu Sewa Samiti
32.  Helmu Samaj Sewa Kendra
33.  Tharu Adivasi Gairsarkari Mahasangh
34.  NepalTamang Boudha Samaj-Swayambu
35.  Sherpa Sewa Kendra –Boudha
36.  Sindhupalchowk Sherpa Samaj-Sindhupalchowk
37.  Sindhupalchowk Sherpa Sangh –Sindhupalchowk
38.  Bardiyali Tharu Bikash Manch
39.  Shanti Vidyalaya Boudha
40.  Jhaipung Chokpa-Sindhupalchowk
41.  Nepal Helmu Mahila Sangh Boudha
42.  The Unity of  Damfhu
43.  Mailung Tamamng Sewa Kendra
44.  Nepal Ahamshibadi Boudha Dharma Bishwa Shanti Chakra Sangh –Nawalparasi
45.  Kiti Bihar Ghyanmala Samuha
46.  Siniyo Nepal Boudha
47.  Ningma Fondation of Nepal –Jorpati
48.  Sailung Samaj Sewa Kendra-Dolakha
49.  Nepal Tamang Lama Ghedung
50.  Choi Phelkundaling Gompa  Lisankho
51.  Adivasi Mahila Uthan Samaj-Pepsicola
52.  Boudha Sampadha Sangh-Bhaktapur 
53.  Dipankar Gyanmala Bhajankhala-Bhaktapur
54.  Parampara Boudha Dharma Sangh- Bhaktapur
55.  Indarbana Mahavihar – Bhaktapur
56.  Munivihar- Bhaktapur
57.  Samtenling Gompha-Boudha
58.  Jyapu Samaj-Lalitpur
59.  Tamang Lungdtok Dechan Gompa-Lalitpur
60.  Vajrakirti Mahavihar- Ombahal
61.  Siddhimangal Boudhavihar- Lalitpur
62.  Nepal Boudha Parisad
63.  Meh Yubha Samaj-Kathmandu
64.  Manjushree Mahavihar-  Kathmandu
65.  Mahayana Buddhist Society
66.  Kopan Ani Gompa
67.  Dharmashila Boudhavihar-Pokhara
68.  Nagadesh Boudha Samuha
69.  Nepal Boudha Samaj-Tahachal
70.  Nagi Gompa-Budanilkanta
71.  Tamu Boudha Samiti Nepal
72.  Yubha Boudha SamuhaSangaram-Pokhara
73.  Boudhavihar Akcheswar-Makwanpur
74.  Yeshodhara Samaj Sewa Parishad-Lalitpur
75.  Kanching Sedep Singha Seto Gompa- Boudha
76.  Kendriya Dayak Parisad- Kathmandu
77.  Budhha Jayanti Samaro Samiti-Lalitpur
78.  Buddha Jayanti Samaro Samiti- Kathmandu
79.  Ananda Kuti Vihar-Kathmandu
80.  Akhil Nepal Vikchu Mahasangh-Kathmandu
81.  Chesum Pancho Konjyo Gompa-Kavre
82.  Parampara Gompa Rmaechap (Podi)
83.  Acharya Pujabidhi Lalitpur
84.  Punyadaya Vihar –Harisidhi –Lalitpur
85.  Mayurvarna Mahabihar- Lalitpur
86.  Pragatishil Gramin Mahila Bikash- Nuwakot
87.  Yubha Boudha Mandal- Lalitpur
88.  Nepal Boudha Parishad- Jyobahal
89.  Mehtok Choling Gompa-Makwanpur Dadakharka
90.  Rinchin Phodel Gompa-Pharping
91.  Vajrachariya  Samrakchan Guti-Lalitpur
92.  Nagarmnadap Shree Kirti Bihar-Lalitpur
93.  Dharmakirti Adhyan Gosti- Lalitpur
94.  Samyak Dharma Samaj- Kathmandu
95.  Swayambhu Sarsafai Samiti
96.  CChesang Gompa  -Boudha
97.  Antarastriya Bhabana Kendra-Buddhanagar
98.  Helmu Kagyu Sangh Latok- Boudha