Steve has just returned from a week in the mid-western hills of Nepal, visiting Tearfund partners and projects in the districts of Surkhet and Dang. Below are a few highlights of the trip.
I took the early morning Yeti Airlines flight from Kathmandu to Nepalgunj, for much of the way flying parallel to the majestic snow-covered ridges of the Himalayas which were crystal clear in the low morning sun.
In Nepalgunj I was met by staff from Tearfund partner, International Nepal Fellowship (INF) – Kamal, (the driver) Pratibha and Sajeeta. Pratibha is INFs outgoing Donor Liaison Officer; my main contact person in INF for the last four years. Sajeeta, a recent graduate whose studies have been supported by Tearfund as part of our professional leadership development programme, is taking over her role.
Three hours in a landrover took us to Surkhet where we had meetings with staff from the community development project that Tearfund supports. We discussed ways in which INF could better measure the impact of their work, and help encourage a more reflective ‘learning culture’ among staff. I also carried out some spot checks on the INF office’s financial management systems.
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| Surkhet valley |
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| Meeting a SHG |
Yavraj Sunar, one group member in the community of Laskare said 'We have had NGOs in this area before but they come with their own agenda that they want us to work to. You [the Tearfund-supported INF project] take a different approach and help us to follow our agenda. This means that we all really believe in what we are doing, even if it takes longer for us to see the end result.'
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| Path to the village of Maikal |
I first visited Ghorahi, the Dang District HQ, four years ago. It was a depressing experience. The town centre was filthy - full of rubbish, cows wandering freely and defecating in the streets, virtually no greenery - and the small overgrown central park was fenced off as it had become the preferred hangout for local alcoholics and drug addicts. But over the last few years there has been a dramatic transformation. So much so that last year, Ghorahi was awarded first prize in Nepal’s Cleanest Municipality competition!
I met with the Town Council to find out more about this dramatic turn around. They told me 'We always had the idea of cleaning up the town, but it was CATS and the local churches that spurred us into action.'
CATS has been mobilising the churches to carry out mass cleaning campaigns and the example of the minority Christians in their predominantly Hindu society has clearly had a huge impact.
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| Cleaning up the streets |
The result was a dramatically changed church-community relationship and they are now working together to improve access routes and repair the damaged community water system. The church has been raising funds from its own congregation to spur the local government and non-church community members to make their own contributions towards tackling these community needs.
Chitra, one of the Hindu community leaders, said 'Whenever the church initiates something with the community, it always holds together. But if the church isn't involved, it tends to fall apart.'





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