Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Kumari, The Living Goddess

In Kathmandu we visited the location of Kumari, The Living Goddess.



But howabout a picture of a picture of Kumari?



LinkTV shows a short clip about the Kumari. You can view it by pasting the following link into your browser:

http://www.linktv.org/programs/livinggoddess

Living Goddess is a powerful portrait of a young girl venerated as a goddess growing up in a country on the verge of civil war. This is the story of Sajani, who is worshipped as one of three living goddesses in the Himalayan kingdom of Nepal, and whose peaceful existence is contrasted with violent political turmoil that threatens their traditional way of life. With beautiful imagery and an intimate story, Living Goddess unfolds a world of spirituality and political turbulence through the eyes of a young schoolgirl.
“A tiny girl offering blessings to prostrate adults is intercut with visceral, intense footage of street protests, baton charges and savage beatings."

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Tharu people of the Terai lowlands

The Tharu people are indigenous people living in the Surkhet Valley in the west mountain region, Chitwan Valley, Dang Valley,Deukhuri Valley,Sindhuli and Udyapur in Inner Terai Valleys of Nepal and the Terai plains on the border of Nepal and India.
They work usually as farmers or peddlers.

Recent medical evidence supports the common belief that the Tharu people, having lived in the swampy Terai region for centuries, have developed an innate resistance to malaria that is likely based on an unidentified genetic factor.













An innovative program in Nepal is helping to free young girls that live as modern day slaves.

Unable to make ends meet, many families in western Nepal have been forced to sell their daughters, some as young as six, to work far from home as bonded servants in private homes. With living conditions entirely at the discretion of their employers, these girls seldom attend school and are sometimes forced into prostitution.

PBS NOW traveled to Nepal during the Maghe Sankranti holiday, when labor contractors come to the villages of the area to "buy" the children. There, the Nepalese Youth Opportunity Foundation is trying to break the cycle of poverty and pain with an Enterprising Idea. They're providing desperate families with an incentive to keep their daughters: a piglet or a goat that can ultimately be sold for a sum equivalent to that of their child's labor.

You can view this PBS NOW production, "Daughters for sale", at the link below (you may have to paste it in your browser):

http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/414/index.html