By Iain Guest | Project Leader
2,040 Nepali villagers have been screened for prolapse with your help!
This is our fourth report on the Nepal appeal that we launched through Global Giving in June last year following the earthquakes. The money is helping three partner organizations in Nepal which work with marginalized Nepalis hard hit by the quakes - village women seeking medical care in remote eastern Nepal; children who work in the brick kilns; and wives of those who disappeared during Nepal’s internal armed conflict.
Up to now we have raised $11,824 through 128 donors, bringing us close to our target of $15,000. Two Peace Fellows (graduate volunteers) raised another $1,500 for the appeal last year.
We focus in this report on the work of Care Women Nepal, which screens village women for uterine prolapse in eastern Nepal. You helped to fund one CWN health camp last year and we are pleased to report that Global Giving has awarded $20,000 to CWN, to hold two more camps this year. CWN organized one of the camps recently in Dhankuta district. To date, your support has allowed CWN to provide medical care for 2,040 vulnerable Nepalis over the past year, including the elderly woman pictured in the powerful photo above. Thank you!
Your donation also helped our second partner, CONCERN, to rescue 25 children from the brick kilns last year. On the basis of that, the Global Fund for Children has awarded CONCERN $5,000 to place another 25 child workers in school this year. Our third partner, the National Network of Families of Disappeared and Missing Nepal (NEFAD), plans to spend what is left of its Global Giving donations this coming summer.
We are encourged by these results and will be sending another 3 Peace Fellows to help these three partners manage their funds and tell their story, starting in June. Fellows will also post personal fundraisers through our new (AP) page on Global Giving. You can meet our 2016 Fellows at this page.
In the meantime, this appeal will remain open and we will be very grateful for new contributions.
a) Partner #1 – Care Women Nepal (CWN), combating uterine prolapse
Using funds from Global Giving, Care Women Nepal organized a health camp in the village of Chulachuli, in the eastern district of Dhankuta between April 30 and May 1. The camp attracted 1,035 villagers, almost all of them women. Some were so old and sick that they had to be carried (photo).
Once admitted, they received expert attention from a team of health workers, doctors and nurses, who volunteered their time and screened all 1,035 arrivals. The team offered 10 different services, including free medecine, ultrasound and eye check-ups. They also screened 335 women for uterine prolapse, and gave out 15 ring pessaries.Thirty five of these women were found to have serious prolapse and will undergo surgery at Dharan hospital on June 20. CWN is led by the dynamic Indira Thapa, pictured in the photo with beneficiaries at the Chulachuli camp.
CWN will hold a second health camp in June or July with help from Peace Fellow Morgan Moses, from Tulane University. We have also asked Morgan to collect data on prolapse and help Indira to develop a long-term plan to scale up CWN’s exciting model.
Supporting material: see our coverage of the 2015 health camp. We will shortly post photos from Chulachuli on the CWN Flickr pages.
b) Partner #2 – CONCERN, combating child labor in the brick kilns.
As noted above, the Global Fund for Children has awarded our second partner, CONCERN, $5,000 to place another 25 brick children in school this year. Peace Fellow Lauren Purcell, from Johns Hopkins University will help CONCERN to identify the children, visit schools and follow up with last year’s kids. CONCERN may even open a dialogue with brick employers, in an effort to improve living conditions in the kilns. We will introduce you to the young beneficiaries in our August report.
We hope that Lauren will also help us here at The Advocacy Project to promote CONCERN’s message among schools in the Washington area when she returns home.
Supporting material: Meet the 25 beneficiaries from 2015 on our website and view our photos from the districts of Ramechhap (which exports workers to the kilns) and Bhaktapur.
c) Partner #3 - the National Network of Families of Disappeared and Missing Nepal (NEFAD)
NEFAD’s goal this year remains as it was in 2015 – to develop the first-ever income-generating project for wives of the disappeared. So far we have sent $513 to NEFAD, leaving around $2,500 still to be transferred. Several women have produced embroidered squares, but NEFAD wants to improve the quality of the embroidery and plans to hire an expert trainer this time around.
Meanwhile, Ram Kumar Bhandari, the inspiring leader of NEFAD (who lost his own father to the disappearances) is creating a database of all Nepalis who disappeared, and lobbying the government to provide reparations to all of their families. Ram Kumar was briefly arrested recently while leading a major protest on March 24 – International Day of the Truth. (Photo).
Ram Kumar will be assisted by Peace Fellow Megan Keeling from the Fletcher School at Tufts, a former Peace Corps volunteer.
Supporting material: See our coverage of this project and 2015 photos.
By Iain Guest | Project Leader
By Iain Guest and Emma Miller | Project leaders
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
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