Just a quick post to let you know I am leaving Kathmandu and heading back to Sydney today. The last 3 months have been amazing with so many visitors, volunteers, great events and progress on all of our projects.
There will be plenty of blogs in the coming weeks to bring you up to date on all of the news so stay tuned...
26 November 2010
19 November 2010
MLC back in Kathmandu Part 4
The day after the fun and excitement of the Dream Centre picnic, the MLC group spent the afternoon at the Wiley Dream Centre in Chandol.
Prior to the trip, a number of senior students from the school had prepared a Dream Book which contained a series of activities designed to assist the Dream Centre students with the life skills component of the program. The MLC girls split up into groups and worked with girls from the Wiley and Baneshwor Dream Centres through the books. As always there was time for some crazy games such as ‘amoeba’, and also some snack boxes for lunch.
It was a fantastic afternoon and gave each girl in the MLC group the chance to really get to know some of the amazing girls we work with here in Nepal. It gave the Dream Centre girls the opportunity to work on their English and to share their thoughts and ideas with their peers in the wider world.
The following day was the final day of MLC’s program and it was time to open the MLC Dream Centre!
The school had raised the funds to sponsor a new Dream Centre including the running costs for the next 2 years. The centre is located in Koteshwor and when we arrived there were 20 excited girls from the local school eagerly waiting to start their Dream Centre experience.
After group leader, Rosemary King, cut the official ribbon so that we could enter the centre, Bec and Chetana led the group through introductions and some welcome speeches. The Nepali girls were shy and a little nervous of course but the MLC students showed the way and before long everyone was laughing and enjoying themselves. We had arranged for 2 girls each from our two other Dream Centres to come and give short speeches on the things they learned from the program. This was a really inspiring moment to see these girls stand so confidently and share their experiences. One of the girls’ mothers also came to talk about the changes she had seen in her daughter and how proud she felt of her achievements.
Brittany, one of the MLC students, performed a beautiful rendition of ‘Hands’ by Jewel. Standing up to sing, unaccompanied, in front of a room full of strangers is not easy and you could see how impressed the Nepali girls were. The local school principal then gave a short speech, the MLC girls gave a wonderful combined presentation with many inspiring messages for the Nepali girls and Bec spoke about the journey these girls were about to embark upon and the importance of having dreams.
After some quick votes of thanks it was time for the party to begin, starting with a special layered sponge cake decorated for the occasion, and cut by Rosemary on behalf of the MLC group. There were also cookies and plenty of soft drink. The MLC girls also presented a number of beautiful big blankets that had been made by students from the school back in Sydney. As we come into winter in Nepal these will be well used! The group also presented some pencil cases fully equipped with pens, pencils and all the things the Dream Centre girls will need to get the most from their studies.
Our immense gratitude and thanks must go to Rosemary, the MLC girls who visited us in Nepal, the wider MLC family who all contributed to this trip and made the MLC Dream Centre a reality, and especially MLC’s principal, Ms Barbara Stone, who personally donated the remaining funds to get the centre started. We look forward to sharing the updates with you of the ways in which the centre will no doubt change the lives of many girls in Nepal.
More photos from the MLC Dream Centre opening can be found on our facebook page.
Labels:
dream centre,
education,
girls,
making a difference,
volunteer
17 November 2010
MLC back in Kathmandu Part 3
The final part of the MLC group’s program in Nepal was working with our Dream Centre girls and culminated in the opening of the MLC Dream Centre.
For the first day we took around 60 graduates from the Dream Centre program to Thangkot for an activities day and picnic. This provided a great chance for the MLC girls to get to know the Nepali girls in a fun and relaxed environment. Breakfast was served as soon as we arrived at the park and then everyone was allocated a team number. It was then straight into team building activities with the first being a getting to know you game in which each team member had to learn the name, age, school and favourite hobby of each of their team mates. Once these new connections had been made the groups had to choose a team name which always brings some fun and unusual results!
The first ‘serious’ activity of the day involved each team having to design an outfit made entirely of newspaper and dress one team member in it. We gave each team some small strips of crepe paper to add a little colour and the craziness began. We saw everything from dresses, skirts and shoes to handbags, watches and earrings! The girls had so much fun and really had to work as a team to achieve a good result. It was a good chance to illustrate how creative you can be even with minimal and inexpensive resources. They knew the stakes were high as there was to be a fashion parade with prizes for the best outfits. Once all of the entrants were complete we lined them up on a pathway in the park and had everyone else stand on each side and then the girls paraded their teams’ designs up and down the ‘runway’. We had everyone clicking the cameras furiously to create the fashion parade effect and the entire group were in stitches of laughter. Winners were chosen, the prizes (chuppa chups and chocolates) were presented to the winning teams and everyone was congratulated on a fantastic effort and some great entertainment!
With no time to rest the groups were then split with half going to play ball games while the other half played a crazy version of fruit salad. All of these games had been prepared and were led by the MLC girls. The ball games – captain ball, tunnel ball and under/over – were complete chaos as the teams frantically raced to be the fastest. Fruit salad was not much better with the numbers hidden in a ‘story’ so that the girls really had to listen carefully to see if their number was called. At times it was hard to tell whether games were being played at all or whether there were just 70 girls running around screaming – the sign of a great program!
By now with the sun high in the sky the girls were thoroughly exhausted and it was time to sit and enjoy some dahl bhat for lunch. This was the que for some very well-fed looking dogs to start hanging around, but they didn’t have much success as everyone ate all of their lunch and many went back for seconds.
Now replenished it was time for all the groups to come together for some larger games such as ‘bang’ and bull rush. I don’t know how the MLC girls or the Dream Centre girls had the energy but they went on running, screaming and laughing for another 2 hours. I think they would have continued into the evening but as the shadows began to grow longer it and the day became cooler it was time to return to the buses for the trip back to Kathmandu. No doubt all involved would sleep well that night!
The day was a great success and a fantastic opportunity for the MLC group to meet Nepali girls from a variety of different backgrounds and see the importance of programs such as the Dream Centres’ ‘skills for learning, skills for life’.
To be continued…
Labels:
dream centre,
education,
girls,
making a difference,
Nepal,
volunteer
08 November 2010
MLC back in Kathmandu Part 2
Following the two days at Bal Mandir the group from MLC spent a day in the small town of Panauti, about 35kms south-east of Kathmandu. Three of the girls from Project Snow Leopard joined us as official photographers for the day, giving them a fantastic chance to test their skills. The photos in this blog were all taken by them so thanks to Jalpa, Sabitri P and Asbini.
Panuati is a very old town perched between two rivers and is believed by many to be a particularly sacred spot. There are a number of ancient but well maintained temples there and a walk through the laneways is like a step back in time. We first took the group on a walk down to the confluence of the two rivers, passing many people drying grain and herding their ducks along the way.
I shared some stories on the history of the formation of Panauti and the rivers before we continued on to a bamboo swing that had been erected for the Dashain celebrations. Dashain is one of the main festivals in the Nepali year and giant bamboo swings are put up everywhere for the children to enjoy. Each of the MLC girls were eager for their turn on the swing, much to the amusement of the locals passing by.
After visiting the Indreshwor temple, believed by some to be the oldest original temple in Nepal, the group made a quick visit to a local school where a number of our Dream Catchers scholarship girls studied. Four of these girls then joined our group as we moved on to our house where everyone enjoyed some refreshments on the roof terrace and some lively debates about the status of women and girls in Nepal started! It was the perfect opportunity for the girls from both countries to share their ideas and experiences with their peers and we saw many points of view change as other perspectives were considered. I then shared the story of our house being haunted(!) and the bizarre ritual we had to perform to exorcise the ghost which caused great amusement and some looks of concern amongst the group.
It was then time for a quick lunch followed by some games and activities as well as some impromptu dancing and singing. All too quickly the afternoon came to an end and the MLC group had to board their bus for the drive back to Kathmandu. I’m sure the day provided them with a wealth of cultural and religious information about Nepal that they would not have seen in the metropolis of Kathmandu. As well as this, meeting their peers from a rural government school would have provided them with another aspect to the lives of girls in this part of the world.
To be continued…
Labels:
education,
girls,
making a difference,
Nepal,
scholarships,
schools
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